The wheel was then sold and rebuilt in St. Louis, Missouri, for the 1904 World's Fair. Finally, in May of 1906, a demolition company used 200 pounds of dynamite to destroy the wheel.
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The Weiner Riesenrad is the oldest still-operating ferris wheel in the world. It was originally constructed in 1897 to honor Emperor Franz Josef I's 50th Jubilee, and remains one of Vienna's most beloved attractions.
It was a warm late spring day in Clason Point on June 11, 1922, when 75 mile per hour storm winds toppled a 100-foot ferris wheel, ripping the structure from its supports and tossing it onto the beach ten feet below its base.
Fun Facts about the Ferris wheel and its inventor:The Ferris wheel was originally called the “observation wheel.” It was meant to provide a bird's eye view of the entire city. The wheel was not actually completed for a month and a half after the fair officially started. The Ferris wheel cost approximately $750,000.