Check your 1962 park map for the location of the Fantasyland Depot.
|
The Santa Fe & Yesterland Railroad has a station conveniently located near the Midget Autopia, the Motorboat Cruise, and Skull Rock.
On the park map, its labeled as the “Fantasyland R.R. Station,” but the sign on the station reads “Fantasyland Depot.”
|
The Fantasyland Depot is right behind the Midget Autopia.
|
The festive little Fantasyland Depot has a striped roof that suggests a medieval tournament tent.
Its really not much more than a canopy to shelter guests from sun and rain.
The little structure draws attention to the fact that the train stops here.
|
The citrus groves of Anaheim, with their eucalyptus windbreaks, are off in the distance.
|
If you start your train ride at the Fantasyland Depot, be sure to ride the train all the way around the park.
Youll get a great view of the Burning Settlers Cabin.
The Santa Fe & Yesterland Railroad is a good way to see the Living Desert without having to use one of your valuable tickets for the Conestoga Wagons, the Stagecoach Ride, the Rainbow Ridge Pack Mules, or the Rainbow Caverns Mine Ride.
|
|
When Disneyland opened in 1955, there were two train stations and two trains.
The Passenger Train offered nonstop round trip rides from Main Street Station, while the Freight Train provided round trip rides from Frontierland Station.
For more information, see Passenger Train, Santa Fe & Yesterland Railroad.
In 1956, Disneyland opened a third railroad station, the Fantasyland Depot.
|
1959 aerial photo of Disneyland, with the Fantasyland Depot in the yellow circle.
|
The original railroad route from 1955 had a long, straight stretch on the north side of the park.
It went along the edge of the Living Desert and passed just north of the Storybook Land Canal Boats.
In 1966, just ten years after it opened, the Fantasyland Depot disappeared.
It was a victim of progress—or actually a victim of “the happiest cruise that ever sailed the world.”
|
1970 aerial photo of Disneyland, showing the 1967 railroad route around the park.
|
The railroad track was rerouted when its a small world was built.
This provided room for the loading area of the ride and a future expansion area.
The area between the Storybook Land Canal Boats and the new track was eventually used for Videopolis (1985), the dance club, which later became the Fantasyland Theatre, home to such shows as The Spirit of Pocahontas.
Railroad passengers lost the great view of the Living Desert because there was now a large meadow between the train track and the Living Desert.
But the narration still pointed out the Living Desert and the space for expansion:
“Across the open grass meadow, you can see part of the colorful Living Desert and Old Unfaithful geyser in Natures Wonderland.
Walt Disney once said, ‘Disneyland will never be completed as long as there is imagination left in the world.’
And here in Frontierland there are still wide open spaces for imagination to conquer someday.”
|
The Fantasyland Depot returned in a new location.
|
After an absence of almost 20 years, Fantasyland once again had a train station in 1985.
The Videopolis Station opened along with the Videopolis dance club.
It was little more than a concrete platform and some landscaping, just west of its a small world.
|
Mickeys Toontown Train Depot is more elaborate than the Videopolis Station.
|
In 1993, Fantasyland once again lost its train station—even though the station didnt move.
Fantasylands Videopolis Station became Mickeys Toontown Train Depot.
|
Mickeys Toontown Train Depot sign
|
At first, Disneyland park maps continued to list the station under Fantasyland, but eventually it joined the new land, Mickeys Toontown.
Train stations dont last very long in Fantasyland.
|
© 2008-2013 Werner Weiss — Disclaimers, Copyright, and Trademarks
Updated Febraury 7, 2013.
Photo of Fantasyland Depot with Monstro the Whale: Charles R. Lympany, circa 1958, courtesy of Chris Taylor.
Scanned image of a small section of the 1962 Disneyland souvenir map: Copyright 1962 Walt Disney Productions (The Walt Disney Company); included here for historical illustration.
Photo of Fantasyland Depot behind the Midget Autopia: Charles R. Lympany, circa 1958, courtesy of Chris Taylor.
Photo of Fantasyland Depot behind the Storybook Land Canal Boats: Charles R. Lympany, circa 1958, courtesy of Chris Taylor.
Aerial photograph of Disneyland, March 24, 1959: Courtesy of the Orange County Archives, Santa Ana, California.
Aerial photograph of Disneyland, July 27, 1970: Courtesy of the Orange County Archives, Santa Ana, California.
Photo of Videopolis Station: Chris Bales, 1988.
Photo of Toontown Train Depot: Werner Weiss, 2013.
Photo of Toontown Train Depot sign: Allen Huffman, 2004.
|