
More from Michael Paul Mason
Private Manning Speaks
(00:03:51)
From: Michael Paul Mason
Private First Class Bradley Manning is currently our nation’s most notorious whistleblower–the man many believe was behind Wikileak’s largest disclosures. Manning has ...
Inside the Mutter
(00:10:22)
From: Michael Paul Mason
A provocative tour into one of America's most curious museums, The Mutter Museum of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia.
Goodbye Oral Roberts
(00:06:58)
From: Michael Paul Mason
In this controversial piece, attorney Gary Richardson recounts a run-in with the famous televangelist that has left him questioning ever since.
The Guardian of the Murder House
(00:22:27)
From: Michael Paul Mason
A riveting and haunting journey into one of America's most sensational murder mysteries.
Inside the Glore
(00:13:47)
From: Michael Paul Mason
An otherworldly visit to one of America's most bizarre museums, the Glore Psychiatric Museum in St. Joseph, MO.
Piece Description
New York has its Coney Island; Tulsa had its Bell’s Amusement Park. Founded in 1951, Bell’s rapidly became the city’s must-visit attraction. Over the years, it accumulated some fifty rides and attractions, and it became one of the only amusement parks in the country to conjoin itself each year with a state fair. In its fifty-six years of operation, it’s safe to say that Bell’s achieved a place in the collective unconconscious of native Tulsans.
While the park’s closure in 2005 remains blanketed in political controversy, the memory of Bell’s still haunts its most recent president, Robert Kiwanis Bell III. In this special episode of Goodbye Tulsa, you’ll hear Mr. Bell himself tell you about the park’s founding, the construction of the rides, and its operation.
While Bell’s Amusement Park no longer stands, Bell himself is hopeful that it may re-open one day, perhaps in a new location. Until then, we Tulsans will have to content ourselves with the stories the park left behind.
*Please note that this show was originally produced for a Tulsa-based project. Intro to show should place subject geographically for the sake of context.
Intro and Outro
INTRO:The owner of an amusement park in Tulsa, Oklahoma recollects the birth and death of his family business.
OUTRO:




