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Charles I. D. Looff

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Charles I. D. Looff (b. May 24, 1852, Schleswig-Holstein, Denmark; d. July 1, 1918, Long Beach, California) was an amusement park pioneer and a maker of hand-carved carousels. He immigrated to New York City in 1870 and originated the Coney Island style of carousel while working as a carver in a Brooklyn furniture factory. He added the middle initials I.D. to his name when, upon arrival at Ellis Island, he was told he needed a middle initial for his ID. Looff and his wife Anna had six children including amusement park operators Arthur Looff, Charles Looff, William Looff, and Emma Vogel. Looff relocated his family and business to Riverside, Rhode Island in 1895, then Long Beach, California in 1912. With his sons Arthur and William, Looff built the Santa Monica Pier and operated amusement parks and carousels at Santa Monica, Ocean Park, Redondo Beach, Venice Beach, Santa Cruz, and San Francisco. Looff and his wife Anna lived upstairs from his Long Beach carousel factory until his death in 1918. Looff's son Arthur went on to build the Giant Dipper Roller Coaster at Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk and other attractions.

List of Looff carousels:

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