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Clifton Hill is the major tourist promenade in Niagara Falls, Ontario. The
street, close in proximity to Niagara Falls and the Niagara River, leads from
River Road on the Niagara Parkway to intersect with Victoria Avenue. The street
contains a number of gift shops, wax museums, haunted houses, restaurants,
hotels and themed attractions. For visitors, particularly families and
teenagers, it is a major amusement area and centre for night life.
The corner of Clifton Hill and Falls Avenue lit up at night
Same corner in a busy spring day
Several Attractions and thrill rides populate Clifton Hill.
Attractions
Prominent attractions on the street include Ripley's Believe It or Not! and 4D
Moving Theatre, the Guinness World Records Museum, the Niagara SkyWheel Ferris
wheel, and the nearby Louis Tussaud's Waxworks. Tussaud's has long been a staple
of the area, and a model of tight-rope walker Charles Blondin that formerly hung
above Clifton Hill is a common landmark.
Wax Museums
The Waxworks opened in 1949, the first of many wax museums in the area. Its
location on the Hill closed in September of 2000 when its lease ran out, and it
has since reopened just above the hill on Victoria Avenue. Also, another wax
museum, Movieland Wax Museum of Stars, that has many famous movie and TV stars
in it. It has relocated from a couple of years ago. It moved lower on Clifton
Hill to go into a bigger building.
Miniature Golf Courses
Cosmic Golf is an indoor, 18 hole, mini golf course that is entirely in the
dark, there are, however glow in the dark objects and obstacles that can give
families a really fun time. This golf course is located directly next to
Ripley's Believe It or Not!. There is a Hulk putt-putt golf located in Marvel
Superhero City.
Haunted Houses
There are 5 haunted houses on and around Clifton Hill: The House of
Frankenstein, Dracula's Haunted Castle, and The Haunted House, are on Clifton
Hill, Screamers House of Horrors and Nightmares Fear Factory are along Victoria
Avenue.
Restaurants
There are many great restaurants on or nearby the hill. Notably, these
restaurants include: Kelsey's (formerly named Rumours), Ruby Tuesdays, Dairy
Queen, Wendy's, Burger King, Tim Horton's, Montana's, Boston Pizza (the biggest
of all the Boston Pizza's in Canada), Rainforest Cafe, Mama Mia , Hard Rock Cafe
Niagara, Planet Hollywood, and a Wolfgang Puck.
Arcades
A huge arcade on Clifton Hill, called The Great Canadian Midway, has hundreds of
video games whose tickets you can redeem for prizes at the ticket counter. In
that arcade complex, there is an FX rollarcoaster simulator and a Ghostblasters
ride where the object is shooting lasers at ghosts. The Boston Pizza and The
Great Canadian Midway both are connected to The Sports Zone, a sports oriented
bar, with bowling and RealArcade (a virtual sports video game/interactive).
Across from the Great Canadian Midway is a place called Marvel Superhero City.
This is attached to the Rain Forest Cafe. Inside the attraction is a Spiderman
ride, which is similar to Ghostblasters except that it has 3D glasses, an X-Men
go-kart shooting game, a Superhero play area for kids, a Hulk putt-putt golf,
and video games.
Other Attractions
A fun house is located lower on the hill, next to a Ruby Tuesdays restaurant.
Fantasy Fudge Shop moved up the hill on the other side to their own building,
right next to the Midway. A great variety of gourmet fudges are offered here. On
Falls Avenue, the street bordering the Falls walkways, includes a Hershey's
store and a Coca Cola store. Everything on Clifton Hill is relatively close to
get to, but the trudge up and down the hill can be tiring.
Changes in Rides and Attractions
Through the years, the attractions on Clifton Hill have changed a lot. Brick
City, a lego associated attraction, is in the building of the former Adventure
Dome, an Imax presentation. The Great Canadian Midway used to be called
Dazzleland, and was much smaller and outdoors. The Niagara SkyWheel took the
place of the lobby and Golden Griddle restaurant of Quality Inn Clifton Hill.
The restaurant moved onto Victoria Avenue, but has new owners. Another location
is farther out on Lundy's Lane. A trip to Clifton Hill does not require too much
planning, because the attractions are all side to side. This area has become a
major tourist attraction, mainly in the summer months, because of all the new
additions to it.
Early history: Ogden Creighton
The land where Clifton Hill now occupies was acquired by the Phillip Bender
family in 1782 as part of a United Empire Loyalist land grant. In 1832 the
property was purchased by British Army officer Captain Ogden Creighton, a
half-pay officer who had served in the 70th and 81st Regiments and had served in
the Far East. Creighton laid out streets and building lots on the land, naming
the future settlement Clifton, presumably after Clifton on the gorge of the
River Avon in Bristol, England. The officer built his residence, Clifton
Cottage, on the edge of a high bank facing the American Falls (where the
present-day Quality Inn is located).
Creighton was involved in suppressing the uprising of the Rebellion of 1837.
Following a clash between William Lyon Mackenzie and an Upper Canada government
militia north of Toronto, the rebel leader took his forces to Navy Island on the
Niagara River to form a provisional government. In mid-January 1838 Mackenzie
and his followers evacuated the island. At the time Clifton Cottage became the
headquarters for a military detachment assigned to guard the border ferry. The
Creighton family left the Niagara area in the early 1840s, moving to Toronto and
later Brantford, Ontario. Captain Creighton died around 1850.
Early development
The street now called Clifton Hill was then Ferry Road, named due to its
proximity to the rowboat transportation system that ferried people across the
Niagara River between Canada and the USA prior to the completion of the Niagara
Falls Suspension Bridge. Ferry Road provided access to the Niagara Gorge where
the boats docked.
In 1833 the first Clifton Hotel was built at the base of the street by Harmanus
Crysler. Following in 1842, financier Samuel Zimmerman created a 52 acre estate
property along the south side of the road. Dubbed Clifton Place, Zimmerman
planned to create many gardens, large fountains and a mansion that was to be his
residence. The estate occupied the entire south side of what is now Clifton
Hill, bounded by the Niagara River, Murray Hill and Ferry Road (Victoria
Avenue). Among the buildings constructed were four large gatehouses (the last
was completed in 1856) and a $18,000 stable constructed of imported English
yellow brick. In addition a fountain was created in the center of the property.
Zimmerman was killed on March 12th, 1857 in the Desjardins Canal railway
accident. He only lived to see the foundation for his $175,000 "Clifton Place"
mansion built. Only the fountain remains to this day, located at the northern
end of Queen Victoria Park.
The Zimmerman estate was taken over by the Bank of Upper Canada, which went
bankrupt in 1866. The estate was put up for sale and purchased by US senator
John T. Bush of Buffalo, New York for 25 cents on the dollar. Bush acquired
Clifton House, the adjoining properties, and went on to complete the lavish
Clifton Place mansion. Bush and his family lived in the building for the next 50
years, with his daughter Josephine residing there until 1927. In 1928 the Bush
estate was sold to Harry Oakes of Welland Securities.
The first Clifton Hotel was destroyed by fire in 1898, and the ruins laid
untouched until 1905, when the second Clifton House and Lafayette Hotel was
built. Another fire broke out at the Clifton on December 31, 1932, and was again
a total loss.
Harry Oakes bought this property and deeded it to the Niagara Parks Commission,
which built Oakes Garden Theater, opening in September 1937.
The 1920s saw considerable growth in the area as a tourist destination. In 1925
Howard Fox opened the Foxhead Inn on Clifton Hill at Falls Avenue. On the north
side of the hill the Niagara Falls Tourist Camp was opened by Charles Burland.
Earl McIntosh opened two campgrounds, the Clifton Touring Camp on the south side
of the street and Clifton Camp to the north. Reinhart's Riverhurst Inn was built
between the Niagara Falls Tourist Camp and the Foxhead Inn.
In the 1950s the land on the south side of the street was offered to the US
Government as a site for a new American Consulate however the offer was never
acted upon and the land was later sold. Two hotels still in operation today
opened in the 1950s: The Park Motor Hotel and the Quality Inn Fallsway Hotel.
Beginning in the 1960s, Clifton Hill began to see various museums built,
including the Houdini Hall Of Fame, Ripley's Believe It Or Not, Hollywood Wax
Museum, House Of Frankenstein and Guinness World Records museum.
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