(optional atmospheric sounds for Morrison Farm)
Morrison Farm, just down the road and across the covered bridge from Maple Grove, was the “breadbasket” of the town. The rich soil and hard work of the Morrison family coaxed a remarkable harvest of wheat, corn, and oats from their farm’s fields, and their herds of cattle, pigs and sheep were a vital source of meat for the tables of Maple Grove. Like Maple Grove, this farm was bypassed by the invading Union Troops, and life on Morrison Farm continued as it had for generations until Americana 1900 welcomed it into its family. Hundreds of acres of fields that are directly adjacent to the Township and that are included in the Farm Tour (to be discussed later) are still farmed in the traditional way- by horsepower and horse-drawn plow, occasionally by one of them new-fangled steam tractors, and by hand. The crops planted are traditional heirloom varieties, and only chemical-free, all-organic fertilizers and insect-control methods are used. The cattle, pigs and sheep are all heritage breeds, the chickens are free-range with no artificial chemicals additives in their feed, and the fruits and vegetables grown and served in the restaurants of Americana 1900 are all raised and harvested using the time-honored traditions of nineteenth-century American farming. The Morrison family even sells seeds for many of their heirloom varieties of grains, flowers, fruits and produce to allow American farmers and families from across the nation to rediscover the natural flavors and innate hardiness of these early, non-GMO varieties of traditional American agricultural bounty.
Grandma Morrison was famous for her good old-fashioned cooking, and snagging an invitation to Sunday dinner at her farmhouse was both a social coup and a culinary delight. She decided to open her home as a restaurant, and it immediately became so popular that crowds of people were willing to wait hours for the chance of enjoying her State Fair-winning pies, cakes and home-style pot roast. Grandpa Morrison decided to cash in on this, and invited a traveling carnival to set up permanently in some of his barns and other outbuildings. Soon Morrison Farm became not only the most popular destination for families in Maple Grove looking for good old-fashioned family dining, but also the location of some of Americana 1900’s most popular family rides and attractions.
Grandma Morrison was famous for her good old-fashioned cooking, and snagging an invitation to Sunday dinner at her farmhouse was both a social coup and a culinary delight. She decided to open her home as a restaurant, and it immediately became so popular that crowds of people were willing to wait hours for the chance of enjoying her State Fair-winning pies, cakes and home-style pot roast. Grandpa Morrison decided to cash in on this, and invited a traveling carnival to set up permanently in some of his barns and other outbuildings. Soon Morrison Farm became not only the most popular destination for families in Maple Grove looking for good old-fashioned family dining, but also the location of some of Americana 1900’s most popular family rides and attractions.
America in 1900 was an agricultural nation. 38% of American laborers worked on one of the nearly six million farms that fed over seventy-six million Americans. The Industrial Revolution was just beginning to reach these farms, and it seemed that just as many horses as tractors were seen in the fields, pulling the plows and hauling the wagons carrying the harvest to market.
Morrison Farm is a tribute to the impact that agriculture had on the history of our nation, a tribute that is both educational and entertaining. The buildings housing the rides and attractions that make Morrison Farm such a visually interesting place are constructed using traditional building designs, and in many cases original materials that came from barns and other farm buildings found throughout the nation were used in their construction. These buildings surround a large open plaza, the Barnyard, where several antique John Deere tractors, plows and early threshing machines are sitting on display as if ready to head out into the fields to bring in the harvest. Nearly every farm building is painted in one of the traditional farm colors- red, white or blue.
The main entrance to Morrison Farm is from the west side of Century Plaza, where three roads (Morrison Road, Century Lane West and Green Springs Road) converge and lead guests into the heart of the Barnyard. A small side lane, Bisby Lane, connects Morrison Road past the Critter Corral Petting Zoo to the northeast end of the Barnyard. While walking down Morrison Road towards the farm’s main entrance, with the beautiful vista of Century Plaza on their left, guests might be distracted and not notice the barn on their right, a barn painted a rich navy blue in tribute to the famous “Mail Pouch Tobacco” barns that once stood in thousands of farms across America. However, since Americana 1900 is a tobacco-free park, this barn has painted on its side the phrase, “Eat Morrison Farm Tomatoes- Treat Yourself to the Best” in white across its blue background. At the far end of the barn, directly beside the main entrance to Morrison Farm Township, is a towering silo wrapped in what appears to be scaffolding…or coaster track...but more about that later. We’re about to enter Morrison Farm.
Morrison Farm is a tribute to the impact that agriculture had on the history of our nation, a tribute that is both educational and entertaining. The buildings housing the rides and attractions that make Morrison Farm such a visually interesting place are constructed using traditional building designs, and in many cases original materials that came from barns and other farm buildings found throughout the nation were used in their construction. These buildings surround a large open plaza, the Barnyard, where several antique John Deere tractors, plows and early threshing machines are sitting on display as if ready to head out into the fields to bring in the harvest. Nearly every farm building is painted in one of the traditional farm colors- red, white or blue.
The main entrance to Morrison Farm is from the west side of Century Plaza, where three roads (Morrison Road, Century Lane West and Green Springs Road) converge and lead guests into the heart of the Barnyard. A small side lane, Bisby Lane, connects Morrison Road past the Critter Corral Petting Zoo to the northeast end of the Barnyard. While walking down Morrison Road towards the farm’s main entrance, with the beautiful vista of Century Plaza on their left, guests might be distracted and not notice the barn on their right, a barn painted a rich navy blue in tribute to the famous “Mail Pouch Tobacco” barns that once stood in thousands of farms across America. However, since Americana 1900 is a tobacco-free park, this barn has painted on its side the phrase, “Eat Morrison Farm Tomatoes- Treat Yourself to the Best” in white across its blue background. At the far end of the barn, directly beside the main entrance to Morrison Farm Township, is a towering silo wrapped in what appears to be scaffolding…or coaster track...but more about that later. We’re about to enter Morrison Farm.
Layout
When entering Morrison Farm from its main entrance, where the three streets converge on the east side of the farm, visitors see the massive Barnyard spread out before them, surrounded by the barns, sheds, chicken coops and farmhouse of a successful farming enterprise. Proceeding clockwise around the Barnyard, the first major attraction seen, occupying most of the left (south) side of the Barnyard, is Hog Jam, a wet ‘n’ wild family water ride. Just past the main barn of Hog Jam (which contains this Township’s restrooms) is Saladworks, a salad bar restaurant. The western end of the barnyard is a sight that almost looks incongruous with the carefully-maintained farm structures of the rest of Morrison Farm. This is Vulture, with its faded, rotting barn and crooked silos that appear to be standing upright simply because they are too dilapidated to bother falling down.
Proceeding down the other side of the barnyard, visitors come across a square wooden shed painted quite differently from the rest of the buildings in Morrison Farm- it’s green. Bright green with yellow trim. John Deere green, appropriate because this building contains Haybaler, a spinner ride sponsored by John Deere. Beside Haybaler is a huge wooden barn painted bright red. Here lives Barn Cat, and beside it, entered from a white chicken coop, is Field Mouse. On the visitor’s right, standing in the center of the barnyard, is a large, open-sided shelter with food stands and picnic tables- the Barnyard Picnic Grounds.
Continuing down the left side of Morrison Farm to the northeast section of the barnyard is the white clapboard two-story farmhouse that is the former home of the Morrison family, now occupied by Grandma Morrison’s Homestead Restaurant. Just past the white picket fence that surrounds the front yard of the home is a farm lane leading to the Morrison Farm Field Tour (an attraction considered to be one of the most important experiences in all of Americana by the park’s Founder, Jack Cahill). The northeast end of the barnyard has the Critter Corral, a petting zoo for all ages, and the blue barn mentioned earlier and seen from Morrison Road, a barn that contains two attractions- The Flying Pigs (a suspended indoor-outdoor coaster) and Funnel Cloud, a rotor-style ride inside a tornado.
Proceeding down the other side of the barnyard, visitors come across a square wooden shed painted quite differently from the rest of the buildings in Morrison Farm- it’s green. Bright green with yellow trim. John Deere green, appropriate because this building contains Haybaler, a spinner ride sponsored by John Deere. Beside Haybaler is a huge wooden barn painted bright red. Here lives Barn Cat, and beside it, entered from a white chicken coop, is Field Mouse. On the visitor’s right, standing in the center of the barnyard, is a large, open-sided shelter with food stands and picnic tables- the Barnyard Picnic Grounds.
Continuing down the left side of Morrison Farm to the northeast section of the barnyard is the white clapboard two-story farmhouse that is the former home of the Morrison family, now occupied by Grandma Morrison’s Homestead Restaurant. Just past the white picket fence that surrounds the front yard of the home is a farm lane leading to the Morrison Farm Field Tour (an attraction considered to be one of the most important experiences in all of Americana by the park’s Founder, Jack Cahill). The northeast end of the barnyard has the Critter Corral, a petting zoo for all ages, and the blue barn mentioned earlier and seen from Morrison Road, a barn that contains two attractions- The Flying Pigs (a suspended indoor-outdoor coaster) and Funnel Cloud, a rotor-style ride inside a tornado.
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