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| The Michael Friedsam Memorial Carousel in Central Park |
Part of the answer is simply that they remind me of my parents. My father loved horses, and whenever he took us to an amusement park, we always rode the carousel together as a family. When there wasn't a real horse to ride, the painted stallions of the carousel were the next best thing.
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| The carved saddle of one of the most beloved horses on the Central Park Carousel, adorned with a leaping lioness |
I was fortunate enough to know not only both of my grandmothers but also my two maternal great-grandmothers. Like many Italian families, we had affectionate nicknames for everyone. One great-grandmother was “Grandma Bacio” because every visit began with pinched cheeks, cries of baciami!—“kiss me!”—and an endless shower of kisses.
The other was “Grandma Merry-Go-Round.”
She earned the nickname because, when my brother and I were very young, she somehow managed to buy us a two-horse merry-go-round, complete with a red and gold canopy, that seemed enormous in our tiny apartment. It became one of my earliest and happiest childhood memories. We rode it until we were too big, and from then on she was forever “Grandma Merry-Go-Round.”
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| Steeds from the Michael Friedsam Memorial Carousel in Central Park and Deno's Carousel in Coney Island |
I do not know what became of it. I only know that I wish I still had it.
My memories alone would be reason enough to love carousels. Yet they are more than sentimental reminders of childhood. They are living works of art. Every carved horse possesses its own character, frozen forever at the height of its gallop. They preserve a craftsmanship that belongs to another age, when even objects of recreation were made to be beautiful.
Their history only deepens the fascination. Long before they became children’s attractions, carousels evolved from medieval equestrian exercises in which riders demonstrated their horsemanship and skill. Over the centuries, those martial displays became celebrations, and eventually the merry-go-rounds we know today. In a curious way, they have never entirely lost their equestrian soul.
~ By Giovanni di Napoli, July 16th, Feast Day of the Madonna del Carmine























































