The New Tomorrowland, Disneyland, 1969

Vintage slides of Disneyland are among my favorite finds – especially old slides of Tomorrowland. It’s the least photographed land in the Magic Kingdom – which leads me to the SLIDE-OF-THE-WEEK: THE NEW TOMORROWLAND, 1969.

When I was a kid in the 60s and 70s I thought that Tomorrowland was the coolest place to be — inside or outside of Disneyland. My two favorite attractions were there – America the Beautiful and Carousel of Progress. Now that I think of it, America the Beautiful is my favorite movie ever. And it was projected in the round! How amazing was that? The circle-vision effect of the film being projected all-around, together with the blaring optimistic arrangement of America the Beautiful – the song – was literally dizzying. It was a great high. The Carousel of Progress trip through time was an even better high. Yes, I still can’t get the theme song out of my mind. I’m humming it right now! When I was six I watched man land on the moon live on a giant monitor in Tomorrowland and then rode Flight to Mars.

The most eagerly anticipated and fondly remembered days of my childhood were spent at Disneyland. A trip there became the standard from which I judged the experiences I had everywhere else I went. I remember thinking Southern California was the greatest place on earth, not because our beautiful snowcapped mountain peaks, wildflowers in the desert and waves crashing on the sandy seashore. It was because we had Disneyland. When I was about five some relatives came out to visit from Oklahoma. I thought we were superior to them because we had Disneyland and they didn’t.

Here’s to you and Disneyland’s 50th!

3 Responses to “The New Tomorrowland, Disneyland, 1969”

  1. qt says:

    “There’s a great big beautiful tomorrow, shining at the end of ev’ry day!”
    What a wonderful outlook for all of us to share!

  2. LA in the 60's says:

    My favorite Tomorrowland ride was Monsanto’s journey into Inner Space – everybody got amazingly smaller as their little bubble carts journeyed into the beam of the microscope and fell under the panopticon eyeball of the scientist. Way cool and oddly retro even when new.

  3. retro gal says:

    I remember looking and studying the real people in line to see if I could recognize them when they got tiny. I loved that ride. You didn’t even need a ticket.

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