Six Flags St. Louis
Location | 4900 Six Flags Rd.Eureka, Missouri 63025, United States |
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Coordinates | 38°30′46″N 90°40′30″W / 38.512806°N 90.675050°WCoordinates: 38°30′46″N 90°40′30″W / 38.512806°N 90.675050°W |
Owner | Six Flags Entertainment Corporation |
Opened | June 5, 1971 |
Previous names | Six Flags over Mid-America (1971 to 1996) |
Operating season | March to January |
Area | 323 acres (1.31 km2) |
Rides | |
Total | 40 |
Roller coasters | 9 |
Website | Six Flags St Louis |
Six Flags St. Louis, originally known as Six Flags Over Mid-America, is a theme park located in Eureka, Missouri, a suburb within southwestern Greater St. Louis. The park is located within the far northeastern portion of the Ozark Plateau, 34 miles southwest of downtown St. Louis, Missouri. The park opened on June 5, 1971. It was the third of only three company start-up parks created by the Six Flags chain. The other two parks built from the ground up were Six Flags over Texas and Six Flags over Georgia. Unlike the other two parks, which are currently managed but are no longer owned by Six Flags, Six Flags St. Louis is still completely owned and operated by the Six Flags corporation. The park branded itself as 'The Coaster Capital of Missouri' in 2013. Admission to Six Flags St. Louis also includes free admission to Hurricane Harbor.
History
The park opened in 1971 as the third theme park of the Six Flags chain and is the only one of the three remaining parks completely built, owned and operated by Six Flags.
The park opened with six themed sections—Spain, France, England, the United States, Illinois, and Missouri, representing the "Six Flags" for the park.[1]
Six Flags St. Louis was located on 503 acres (204 ha) of land according to the Six Flags 2014 Annual Report.[2] Six Flags sold 180 acres of undeveloped land east of the park to home developer McBride & Sons.[3] According to the Six Flags 2015 Annual Report, the park now owns 323 acres of land(283 acres of land are used by the park with an additional 40 acres of potentially developable land).[4]
On February 19, 2016, Holiday in the Park was announced to debut at Six Flags St. Louis in Eureka, Missouri and Six Flags America in Baltimore, Maryland for the 2016 Season. The Christmas festival will feature over one-million dazzling lights, with multiple themed areas throughout the park and holiday entertainment, all in a family friendly atmosphere. Holiday in the Park begins on November 25, 2016 and runs select days until January 1, 2017.[5]
Six Flags St. Louis has announced its lineup of Mazes, Scare Zones, and Live Entertainment for Fright Fest 2016. Everything from Fright Fest 2015 will be returning with the exception of Insanity Alley, which will be replaced with Night Terrors, the all-new haunted attraction for 2016. Fright Fest 2016 begins September 30th, 2016 and runs every Friday, Saturday, and Sunday until October 30th.[6]
On September 1st, 2016, Six Flags announced Spinsanity, a Zamperla Mega Disko, would be the park's new addition for 2017.[7] The ride is scheduled to open in the spring of 2017. It will be located across from Tsunami Soaker and next to Sound Stage in the Chouteau's Market area of the park.[8]
Themed areas
Current themed areas |
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Illinois (1989–present) |
Studio Backlot (1995–present) |
Britannia (1994–present) |
DC Comics Plaza (1997–present) |
Chouteau's Market (1995–present) |
1904 World's Fair (1993 - present) |
Gateway To The West (1993–present) |
Bugs Bunny National Park (2006–present) |
Rides
Roller coasters
Ride Name | Picture | Year Opened | Manufacturer/Ride Type | Current Location | Other Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
River King Mine Train | 1971 | Arrow Mine Train | Gateway To The West | Location was originally part of the Illinois section. One of two separate Arrow Mine Train roller coasters, one of which was sent to Dollywood. Other Names - The River King Mine Train (1971), River King Run-Away Mine Train (1972–1983), Rail Blazer (1984). Operated with Stand-up trains as "Rail Blazer" | |
Screamin' Eagle | 1976 | Philadelphia Toboggan Coasters wooden roller coaster, designed by legendary Designer John C. Allen | Illinois | Opened as the tallest, longest, and fastest roller coaster in the world | |
Ninja | 1989 | Arrow/Vekoma Custom MK-1200 | Studio Backlot | Relocated from Vancouver's Expo 1986 fair where it was known as Scream Machine. | |
Batman: The Ride | 1995 | B&M Inverted roller coaster | Studio Backlot | Opened in 1995 as one of the nine installations of the same design in the Six Flags chain, however one of the few with a mirrored drop and layout. | |
Mr. Freeze: Reverse Blast[9] | 1998 | Premier Rides LIM launched roller coaster | DC Comics Plaza | Originally ran forwards, but in 2012, changes were made to the launch system to allow for the trains to launch out of the station backwards for a more thrilling experience.
Other Names - Mr.Freeze (1998-2011). | |
The Boss | 2000 | Custom Coasters International wooden terrain roller coaster | Britannia | Tallest and fastest coaster built by Custom Coasters International, also one of the longest wooden roller coasters in the world, boasting an astonishing 5,051 feet of track. | |
Pandemonium[10] | 2007 | Gerstlauer Spinning Coaster | Britannia | Ride replaced Sherwood Forest Theater (former Dolphin Arena). Other Names - Tony Hawk's Big Spin (2007–2010). | |
American Thunder[11] | 2008 | GCI wooden twister coaster | 1904 World's Fair | Ride located where part of the Moon Antique Cars was located and where the "Fairgrounds"/Looney Tunes Town/Goodtime Hollow kiddie area was located. Other Names - Evel Knievel (2008–2010).
Cubs Thunder (Fright Fest 2015) | |
Boomerang[12] | 2013 | Vekoma Boomerang | Illinois | Originally operated as Flashback at Six Flags Over Texas from 1989-2012 until it was completely refurbished and repainted then relocated to Six Flags St Louis for the 2013 Season. Ride replaced Water Street Cab Company the park's bumper cars. |
Current adult rides
Ride Name | Picture | Year Opened | Manufacturer/Ride Type | Current Location | Other Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Log Flume | 1971 | Arrow Log Flume | DC Comics Plaza
Other Names - The Hoo Hoo Log Flume (1971–1977), The Plunge (1978 - 1979), Log Flume (1980 - 2000)(2006-Present), The Ice Mountain Splash (2001–2005). | ||
Moon Antique Cars | 1971 | Arrow Antique Cadillac | 1904 World's Fair | Ride originally had 2 sides/tracks, one side/track removed during 80s, track shortened in 1999, lengthened in 2006.
Ride was heavily modified for the 2008 season for American Thunder (formerly Evel Knievel). | |
Six Flags Railroad | 1971 | Crown Metal Products | 1904 World's Fair and Bugs Bunny National Park | This is a Template:RailGa3ft narrow gauge railroad featuring two stations, St. Louis and Bugs Bunny National Park (Old Chicago).
Engine is named Tommy G. Robertson after the head maintenance official when the park first opened. Tommy G. Robertson is a real-working 25 ton steam locomotive that burns non-polluting propane. During Fright Fest, the train was originally converted to the "Terror Train" with a main villain "Pigman" who hijacks the train and scares guests. After 2010, there have been many rethemings for Fright Fest, including "Zombie Rails" in 2012, the "Holidead Express" in 2013, and most recently "Radioactive Rails" in 2014. For the Fright Fest 2015 season, the train will not have a show at all for the first time in the history of the event. Six Flags originally had two engines, the #5 was green and is now at Busch Gardens Tampa Bay and the #6 which is red and still operating at the park today. Tommy G. Robertson had a few modifications later after the initial design such as moving the whistle to the top of the steam dome. | |
Grand Ole Carousel | 1972 | 1915 PTC Carousel | Britannia | Other Names - Carousel (1972–1983), Grand Ole Carousel (1984–1994), Enchanted Carousel (1995–1997). | |
Shazam! | 1972 | Eli Bridge Scrambler | DC Comics Plaza | Originally located in USA section (near where Ninja's station is located), moved to current location in 1988
Was closed for a complete rebuild. Reopened at the beginning of the 2009 season. Other Names - Space Scramble (1972 - 1980), The Scrambler (1981 - 1986), U.S. Express (1987), El Toro Bravo (1988–1996) | |
Highland Fling | 1977 | Schwarzkopf Enterprise | Britannia | Refurbished Cars received from Six Flags Fiesta Texas's Wagon Wheel ride in 2015 | |
The Joker Inc. | 1980 | Intamin Bounty - swinging ship | Studio Backlot | Other Names - The Buccaneer (1980 - 1986), Yankee Clipper (1987 - 1994), Gotham Harbor (1995). | |
Thunder River | 1983 | Intamin river rapids ride | Gateway To The West | Replaced Mississippi Adventure, entrance replaced Tiltmore Hotel. | |
Colossus | 1986 | Carousel Holland B.V. 180 ft (55 m). tall Ferris wheel | 1904 World's Fair | Replaced Petting zoo. There are two sets of lights installed, one for the regular season, and one that is a big animated pumpkin for the annual Fright Fest event.
Ride was relocated from the 1984 Louisiana World Exposition in New Orleans, Louisiana. | |
Tidal Wave | 1991 | Hopkins Shoot-the-Chutes water ride | Illinois | ||
Xcalibur | 2003 | Ronald Bussink Professional Rides Evolution | Britannia | Replaced Great Escape arcade (original Illinois Sky-Way station building).
Ride moved from Six Flags Great Adventure. | |
Superman: Tower Of Power | 2006 | Intamin 230 ft (70 m). tall giant drop | Illinois | Ride Relocated from Six Flags Astroworld. | |
SkyScreamer | 2011 | Funtime StarFlyer | Illinois | Tallest ride in park at 236 feet (72 m) in the air swing ride. | |
Tsunami Soaker | 2014 | Mack Rides Twist 'n' Splash | Chouteau's Market | Replaced the "Hannibarrels" in 2014 which had been out of operation since the 1997 season. | |
Justice League: Battle for Metropolis | 2015 | Sally Corporation Interactive Dark Ride | DC Comics Plaza | Replaced Scooby-Doo! Ghostblasters: The Mystery of the Scary Swamp. | |
Fireball | 2016 | Larson International Super Loop | Illinois | Replaced Rush Street Flyer. | |
Spinsanity | 2017 | Zamperla Mega Disk'O | Chouteau's Market | A whirling Disk'O ride. |
Current kiddie rides
Ride Name | Year Opened | Manufacturer/Ride Type | Current Location | Other Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Bugs Bunny Ranger Pilots | 1975 | Chance Rides Red Baron - kiddie biplane ride | Bugs Bunny National Park | Moved from former location in Goodtime Hollow/Looney Tunes Town in 2006.
Other Names - Red Baron (1975–1984), Daffy Duck Airways (1985–2005). |
Daffy Duck Stars On Parade | 1990 | Zamperla Swing Ride | Bugs Bunny National Park | Ride was SBNO in 2007, removed late in 2007 for Evel Knievel construction and then moved from old "Fairgrounds"/Looney Tunes Town location to former Daffy Duck Duccaneer location in 2008.
Other Names - Tasmanian Devil Twister (1990–2005), Twister Swings (2006). |
Foghorn Leghorn National Park Railway | 1997 | Zamperla Rio Grande – kiddie train ride | Bugs Bunny National Park | Moved from former location in Looney Tunes Town in 2006.
Other Names - Looney Tooter (1997–2005). |
Elmer Fudd Weather Balloons | 2006 | Zamperla Samba Balloons | Bugs Bunny National Park | |
Marvin The Martian Camp Invasion | 2006 | Zamperla Crazy Sub | Bugs Bunny National Park | Ride moved from Six Flags Astroworld. |
Taz Twisters | 2006 | Zamperla Mini Tea Cups | Bugs Bunny National Park | |
Tweety Twee House | 2006 | Zamperla Jumpin’ Star – kiddie drop tower | Bugs Bunny National Park | |
Yosemite Sam Tugboat Tailspin | 2006 | Zamperla Rockin’ Tug | Bugs Bunny National Park | |
Bugs Bunny Fort Fun | 2006 | SCS Interactive “Treehouse” | Bugs Bunny National Park |
Current extra charge attractions
Attraction Name | Year Opened | Manufacturer/Ride Type | Current Location | Other Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Dragon’s Wing | 1996 | Skycoaster | Britannia | |
Speed O’ Drome Go-Karts | 1999 | J & J Amusements go-karts | Britannia |
Six Flags Hurricane Harbor
Hurricane Harbor is a water park that is located within Six Flags St. Louis, but is not part of the main park. There is an entrance right through the front gates on the right that takes park guests down a path directly to the water park itself.
Six Flags Hurricane Harbor | |
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Owner | Six Flags |
Included with park admission, or with a Season Pass
Slide/Attraction Name | Year Opened | Manufacturer/Ride Type | Other Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Big Kahuna | 1999 | Proslide Technology Inc. Mammoth | family raft ride |
3 speed slides | 1999 | Proslide Technology Inc. Speed Zone | Geronimo Falls (green straight speed slide), Kontiki Falls & Wahini Falls (red / blue twisting speed slides) |
4 tube slides | 1999 | Proslide Technology Inc. Pipeline | Piranha (red) & Man-O-War (yellow) - partially enclosed, Hammerhead (green) & Stingray (teal) - completely enclosed |
Hook’s Lagoon | 1999 | SCS Interactive Discovery Treehouse | family activity area, with Proslide Technology Inc. Twisters’ Zone slides |
Hurricane Bay | 1999 | Aquatic Development Group Inc. WaveTek wave pool | Wave pool with a "volcano" at one end and a beach at the other. |
Gulley Washer Creek | 1999 | Aquatic Development Group Inc. lazy river | Lazy river |
Tornado | 2005 | Proslide Technology Inc. Tornado “60” | funnel shaped tube slide that uses four person “cloverleaf” tubes |
Wahoo Racer | 2009 | Proslide Technology Inc. 6-Lane ProRacer | Mat-racing slide complex |
Bonzai Pipeline | 2012 | Proslide Technology Inc. SuperLOOP | Looping water slide |
Former attractions
Name | Opened | Closed | Manufacturer/Ride Type | Other Notes/Reason For Removal |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mule-Go-Round | 1971 | 1972 | ||
Injun Joe's Cave | 1971 | 1978 | Arrow Water dark ride | Theme/name changed to Time Tunnel in 1979. |
Super Sports Car Ride | 1971 | 1979 | Arrow Sports Cars | Replaced by The Buccaneer (The Joker Inc.) and Jet Scream. |
The Sky-Way | 1971 | 1981 | Von Roll | Illinois and USA stations; Accident on July 26, 1978, killed 3 and seriously injured 1 when a car fell from the ride. |
Mississippi Adventure | 1971 | 1982 | Arrow Boat Ride | Similar to Jungle Cruise; replaced by Thunder River. |
Tiltmore Hotel | 1971 | 1982 | Crooked fun house | Building became entrance to Thunder River.
Other Names - Angle Tangle (1971 - 1972), The Funn Family Place (1973 - 1974). |
Sky Chuter | 1978 | 1982 | Intamin 250 ft (76 m) tall Paratower | Replaced by Aero Flyer; moved to Six Flags Great Adventure. |
Haunted House | 1979 | 1982 | Haunted House Company walk through haunted house | Was added late in 1979 (on Labor Day weekend); may have had a temporary location in fall of 1979, before moved to current Tidal Wave location in 1980.
Attraction was 4 trailers linked together with a haunted house facade in front of them; attraction was moved from Six Flags Great Adventure where it operated as the original Haunted House (not the expanded Haunted Castle) in the fall of 1978. |
Action Factory with River King Disco & Rock 'N Reel | 1979/1980 | 1981/1983 | Intamin Motion Simulator & Disco dance area | Action Factory area (part of River King Mine Train station building and transfer station building) included a space themed motion simulator in 1979 and the disco dance area; Rock ' N Reel (motion simulator with virtual rides about the park) was added in 1980 to replace the space-themed movie that was shown in 1979.
Motion simulator was likely identical to the Sensational Sense Machine at Six Flags Over Texas. The motion simulator and the disco area were removed/closed in 1981, but the building remained open until 1983. |
Happy Hotrods | 1975 | 1984 | Kiddie spinning car ride | Located in Goodtime Hollow; replaced by new Looney Tunes Town area/rides. |
Fort Funtier | 1975 | 1984 | Kid's playground area | Located in Goodtime Hollow; replaced by new Looney Tunes Town area/rides. |
Ball Crawl | 1982 | 1984 | kiddie Ball Crawl | may have been part of the Fort Funtier area
Located in Gootime Hollow; replaced by new Looney Tunes Town area/rides. |
Pet-A-Pet | 1971 | 1985 | Petting zoo | Replaced by Colossus. |
River King Mine Train | 1971 | 1988 | Arrow Mine Train | Was located in Illinois section.
One of two separate Arrow Mine Train roller coasters. Other Names - The River King Mine Train (1971), River King Run-Away Mine Train (1972 - 1983). Rail Blazer (1984) which included stand-up modifications and was subsequently shut down upon the death of a 46-year-old woman in July 1984 |
Jet Scream | 1981 | 1988 | Schwarzkopf Looping Star | Was located in USA section, where Batman: The Ride is located today.
Replaced Super Sports Car Ride. Indirectly replaced by Ninja, ride moved to Six Flags Astroworld where it operated as Viper until the park closed in 2005, then the ride was scrapped. |
Tunnel Del Tiempo | 1979 | 1988 | Water dark ride | Theme/name changed to Legends Of The Dark Castle in 1989.
Other Names - Time Tunnel (1979 - 1986) |
The Condor | 1988 | 1988 | HUSS Condor | Removed as part of the ride rotation program. |
Elmer Fudd Constwuction Company | 1985 | 1989 | kiddie sandbox | Located in Looney Tunes Town; replaced by Speedy Gonzales Speedway. |
Yosemite Sam Summit | 1985 | 1989 | kiddie ball crawl with summit | Located in Looney Tunes Town. |
Legends Of The Dark Castle | 1989 | 1991 | Water dark ride | Theme/name changed to Castaway Kids in 1992. |
Tremors Dance Pavilion | 1989 | 1992 | Dance Pavilion, open select nights | Became Carrot Club (character meet-in-greet lunch area) in 1993; replaced by Batman: The Ride. |
Mo-Mo The Monster | 1973 | 1994 | Eyerly Aircraft Company Monster | Replaced by Riverview Racer (Aero Flyer) in 1996. |
Foghorn Leghorn Funasium | 1985 | 1996 | kiddie ball crawl with slide | Located in Looney Tunes Town; replaced by Looney Tooter (now Foghorn Leghorn National Park Railway). |
Speedy Gonzales Speedway | 1990 | 1996 | kiddie battery powered jeeps | Located in Looney Tunes Town; replaced by Looney Tooter (now Foghorn Leghorn National Park Railway). |
Porky Pig B-B-B Ball Park | 1985 | 1999 | kiddie ball crawl | Located in Looney Tunes Town; replaced by Crazy Maze. |
Road Runner Rally | 1985 | 1999 | Mason Corporation roller racers/scooters | Located in Looney Tunes Town; moved to new location in 1990; replaced by Crazy Maze
Other Names - Tasmanian Devil Taxi Company (1985 - 1989). |
Castaway Kids Comic Book Adventure | 1992 | 1999 | water dark ride | Ride was SBNO in 2000 and 2001; replaced by Scooby-Doo Ghostblasters.
Other Names - Castaway Kids Jungle Adventure (1992 - 1996). |
Tom's Twister | 1972 | 2005 | Chance Rides Rotor | Replaced by Bugs Bunny National Park. |
Tweety's Flying Cages | 1984 | 2005 | San Antonio Roller Works kiddie Ferris Wheel | Located in Looney Tunes Town; replaced by movement of Rockin' Roller.
Other Names - Ferris Wheel (1984), Flying Cages (1985 - 1992). |
Bugs Bunny Burrow | 1985 | 2005 | kiddie tunnel crawl | Located in Looney Tunes Town; replaced by extension of Moon Cars track. |
Cat Climb | 1985 | 2005 | kiddie net climb with slide | Located in Looney Tunes Town; replaced by extension of Moon Cars track. |
Eagle’s Bluff | 1998 | 2005 | Extra charge rock climbing wall | |
Marvin's Maze | 2000 | 2005 | Kiddie maze | Located in Looney Tunes Town; replaced by extension of Moon Cars track.
Other Names - Crazy Maze (2000 - 2001). |
4-D Theater | 2001 | 2005 | Extra charge Ham on Rye VR. | Other Names - Virtual Theater (2001 - 2004). |
Rockin' Roller | 1975 | 2007 | Bradley and Kaye Little Dipper | Was located in 1904 World's Fair ("Fairgrounds") - formerly Looney Tunes Town and Goodtime Hollow.
Location moved from south side of kiddie area to north side (next to Log Flume drop) in 2006. Other Names - Rock Candy Express (1975 - 1984), Acme Gravity Powered Roller Ride (1985 - 2005). |
Great Race Speedway | 2002 | 2007 | Hampton kiddie spinning car ride | Ride was SBNO in 2007; replaced by American Thunder (Evel Knievel).
Other Names - Speedy Gonzales Speedway (2002 - 2005). |
Daffy Duck Duccaneer | 2006 | 2007 | Sartori kiddie swinging ship | Ride was moved from Six Flags Fiesta Texas; replaced by movement of Daffy Duck Stars On Parade (kiddie swing ride). |
Slingshot | 2002 | 2008 | extra charge Funtime Sling Shot. | Ride opened mid-season; Ride moved to Six Flags New England. |
Kiddie-Go-Round | 1975 | 2010 | Herschell kiddie Carousel | Ride was moved to new location in "Fairgrounds"/Looney Tunes Town area in 2006, ride was SBNO in 2007, removed late in 2007 for American Thunder (Evel Knievel) construction and then moved to new location near the exit of Log Flume in 2008.
Other Names - Last Roundup (1975 - 1984), Merry Melodies Go-Round (1985 - 2005). |
Riverview Racer | 1983 | 2010 | Chance Rides Yo-Yo | Originally located in England section (replaced Sky Chuter), moved to the Illinois section of the park in 1996; replaced by SkyScreamer.
Other Names - Aero Flyer (1983 - 1994), Dragon’s Wing (1995). |
Water Street Cab Company | 1973 | 2012 | Soli bumper cars | Removed at the end of the 2012 season to make room for Boomerang.
Other Names - Dodge City (1973–1990). |
Powder Keg | 1971 | 1996/2013 | Intamin Drunken Barrels | Ride was SBNO from 1997-2013, removed at end of the 2013 season to make room for Tsunami Soaker.
Other Names - Hannibarrels (1971-1995) |
Scooby-Doo! Ghostblasters: The Mystery of the Scary Swamp | 2002 | 2014 | Sally Corporation interactive family dark ride | Heavily modified former dark ride (replaced Castaway Kids). Scooby-Doo Ghostblasters: Mystery of the Scary Swamp closed permanently on September 14, 2014. It was replaced by Justice League: Battle for Metropolis which opened on June 5, 2015. |
Rush Street Flyer | 1987 | 2015 | Chance Rides Falling Star | Removed at the end of the 2015 season to make room for Fireball. Relocated to La Ronde as Gravitor. One of the few rides that did not allow single riders. |
Turbo Bungy | 2001 | 2015 | Eurobungy bungee/trampoline | Moved to former Eagle's Bluff (rock wall) location for the 2014 season. Removed after the 2015 season. One of the few upcharge attractions at the park. |
Gallery
- Glow in the Park Parade at Six Flags St. Louis (Removed in 2011)
- Mr. Freeze next to Colossus
- Batman: The Ride
- Six Flags Railroad
- American Thunder (Formerly Evel Knievel prior to the 2011 Season)
- Scooby-Doo Ghostblasters: Mystery of the Scary Swamp (Replaced by Justice League: Battle for Metropolis)
References
- ↑ "Six Flags St. Louis". Retrieved 2014-04-10.
- ↑ http://phx.corporate-ir.net/External.File?item=UGFyZW50SUQ9NTc0MzQ4fENoaWxkSUQ9Mjc3MjgwfFR5cGU9MQ==&t=1
- ↑ http://www.stltoday.com/news/local/govt-and-politics/eureka-oks-plan-for-new-subdivision/article_9be45cf2-0159-5e90-b151-5e39773cc244.html
- ↑ http://phx.corporate-ir.net/External.File?item=UGFyZW50SUQ9NjE0NTEwfENoaWxkSUQ9MzI4NzI3fFR5cGU9MQ==&t=1
- ↑ https://www.sixflags.com/stlouis/special-events/hip/overview
- ↑ https://frightfest.sixflags.com/stlouis/
- ↑ https://www.sixflags.com/national/newfor2017
- ↑ http://www.stltoday.com/entertainment/arts-and-theatre/hotlist/six-flags-announces-new-ride-for-spring-spinsanity/article_6f69eecc-d23d-52ea-9493-c69c227b5d36.html
- ↑ "The next generation of cool thrills is here...MR. FREEZE: Reverse Blast!". Six Flags St. Louis. Retrieved 1 March 2013.
- ↑ "Pandemonium". Six Flags St. Louis. Retrieved 1 March 2013.
- ↑ MacDonald, Brady (25 November 2010). "Six Flags amusement parks prepare for thematic makeovers". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 1 March 2013.
- ↑ "Six Flags St. Louis announces new addition to the park's roller coaster lineup for 2013". SixFlags.com. Retrieved August 30, 2013.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Six Flags St. Louis. |
- Six Flags St. Louis
- Six Flags St. Louis at the Roller Coaster DataBase
- Six Flags St. Louis Photo Gallery