Carousel horses have recently become popular for collectors across the
country. The concept of the carousel dates back to medieval days when expert
horsemen tried to pierce a ring with his sword. Horse driven carousels were
devised to help them practice for this event.
Although there is evidence of carousels in America as far back as 1825, the
modern day carousel started in the late 1800s, when a steam engine was added to
the carousel. Gustav Dentzel, the father of the American carousel industry.
Built his first carousel in 1867 in Philadelphia.
The growth of the carousel industry, however, did not occur until the advent
of modern mass transit, "the trolley system." The trolley made it inexpensive
and easy for people to get to amusement parks. As can be expected, the
popularity of carousels grew as amusement parks began to spring up all across
the country. In the 1880s, Charles I. D. Looff opened his shop in Brooklyn and
installed one of his first carousels at the famous Coney Island Amusement Park.