Campbell Recorder 06/24/21

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CAMPBELL RECORDER

Your Community Recorder newspaper serving all of Campbell County

THURSDAY, JUNE 24, 2021 | BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS | PART OF THE USA TODAY NETWORK ###

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NKY’s Frontier Worlds theme park lost to Kings Island Jeff Suess Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

The king of the wild frontier nearly had his own theme park in Northern Kentucky. On Sept. 9, 1968, actor Fess Parker, famous for portraying Davy Crockett and Daniel Boone on television, announced plans to build Frontier Worlds, a $13.5 million theme park described as “Kentucky’s answer to Disneyland,” in Boone County. The Enquirer broke the news on the front page the morning of the press conference where Parker, Kentucky Gov. Louie B. Nunn and Boone County offi cials revealed details of a $100 million development that would start with the theme park, scheduled to open in June 1970. Parker’s Fespar Enterprises, Inc., held options on 1,500 acres near the intersection of I-71 and I-75 in Walton, Kentucky. The theme park would occupy 140 acres located on Beaver Road, based on a map printed in The Enquirer. The remaining acres would be for hotels, restaurants and residences. Frontier Worlds was dedicated to the heroes of American history. It would “re-create 20 frontier ‘worlds’ conquered by American heroes, real and fabled, from wilderness scouts to space explorers,” The Enquirer reported. Guests would enter the park through a large replica of the Mayfl ower, then could roam through diff erent historical eras from colonial times to the Old West to “contemporary space and science frontiers.” The initial 20 “super-attractions” included a Rocky Mountain thrill ride, a Klondike gold-rush town, a Huckleberry Finn raft adventure, a Salem witch whirl-through, an anti-gravity attraction, a rocket ride, a showboat and a time machine. Characters from American folklore such as Paul Bunyan and Pecos Bill would interact with guests. Boone County seemed an ideal location for Frontier Worlds. From 1964 to 1970, Parker appeared on TV each week in the show “Daniel Boone” as the legSee FRONTIER, Page 2A

Fess Parker, the actor who played both Daniel Boone and Davy Crockett on TV, was grand marshal of the Kentucky Derby Parade on May 1, 1969. COURIER-JOURNAL STAFF PHOTO

Towering 150-year-old ginkgo tree‘will not be removed’ for elementary school expansion Chris Mayhew and Quinlan Bentley Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

Edgewood residents are talking about whether a ginkgo tree outside R.C. Hinsdale Elementary School can be preserved again during an expansion as it was when the school was built. PROVIDED/BEN BARLAGE

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A cherished ginkgo tree will not be harmed as a result of a planned expansion of a Kenton County elementary school. The Kenton County School District appears to have listened to the public’s concerns and has decided not to remove the ginkgo tree – thought to be 150 years old, school district offi cials said in a tweet Saturday morning. “The KCSD has taken necessary steps to ensure the (Ginkgo) tree is protected & will not be removed as part of construction,” the tweet read. “The goal is to provide world-class facilities for our kids & we will continue to work to fi nd alternative solutions at Hinsdale going forward.” Edgewood City Councilman Ben Barlage said he was trying to spread the

News: 513-903-6027, Retail advertising: 513-768-8404, Classified advertising: 513-242-4000, Delivery: 859-781-4421, Subscriptions: 513-248-7113. See page A2 for additonal information

word to people about the tree when he saw it marked with an ‘X’ for demolition in a Kenton County Schools’ plan for an expansion at R.C. Hinsdale Elementary School. His Facebook post about the tree and school’s intertwined history generated 106 shares. Barlage said his phone has been fi lled with texts and calls from people who remember the tree fondly, he said. Ginkgo trees, native to Southeast Asia, can also be found across the Midwest. The school district, in a written statement released June 11, said it was talking about making other plans that would allow the tree to stay. “On behalf of the Kenton County School District, we recognize the importance of the beloved (Ginkgo) tree to the school and the larger community,” said Jess Dykes, director of public informaSee GINKGO, Page 2A

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