1 – 4 of 4
Blogger Major Pepperidge said...

How are you blogging every day during your trip!! Crazy! I appreciate it though, you must have set up drafts for every single day. Now THAT'S dedication.

The early days of WDW still fascinate me, once in a while I do buy a Florida item if it triggers my synapses!

Friday, 18 July, 2008

Blogger Disneyana World said...

Wonderfully done.

I'm very much looking forward to your trip report.

Friday, 18 July, 2008

Blogger Katella Gate said...

I'm a few posts late with this question, but I suppose I could ask it here rather than burying it in an old posting.

The original Disneyland ticket scheme was A to E, with "A" being the stubby ticket. Then it was reversed with "E" being the short coupon.

Q1: What year did this happen?

Q2: Did the introduction of tickets at Knott's Berry Farm have anything to do with it?

Knott's tickets were also printed on Globe stock, and had "Large E" coupons. Did Disney switch to ensure at a glance they weren't honoring somebody else's coupon?

As for the price difference between Disneyland and DisneyWorld: I think it's mostly a captive audience thing. If you don't like the WDW prices, it's not like you can bail and spend the day at Knott's.

Friday, 18 July, 2008

Blogger Vintage Disneyland Tickets said...

Hi Major! Yup I did get the posts ready ahead of time, how could I miss posting paper goods on the week of Disneyland’s Birthday?

Disneyana, Thanks! I will be doing a multi-part post next week about my trip.

Katella; from what I can tell, the “reversal” of the ticket sizes occurred sometime in late 1966 early 1967 and seems to coincide with Walt’s passing, I have no idea why the size changed except that by that point they were printing more “E” tickets than the rest. Knott’s didn’t start their lettered tickets until 1969/70, and since their order was reversed (“A” was there best) and they had less attractions, they never produced an “E” ticket. Their A-D tickets were on globe paper though and tend to look similar, I wonder too if there were issues with people trying to use them at Disneyland.

And Katella, Oh boy do I hear you about the captive audience!

Friday, 18 July, 2008

You can use some HTML tags, such as <b>, <i>, <a>

You will be asked to sign in after submitting your comment.
Please prove you're not a robot