Berlin Wall
This doesn’t seem like much of a vacation, but apparently, people used to travel to Berlin in the ’60s and ’70s to check out the Berlin Wall. In this case, it is not a bad thing that the spot doesn’t exist anymore for us to visit. The Berlin Wall separated the two sides of the city after WWII, on one side lived the democratic Germans and on the other, the communists.
The wall was finally torn down in 1989 and millions of people were reunited with their family and friends.
Paragon Park
Paragon Park was an amusement park situated on Nantasket Beach in Hull, Massachusetts. The park offered many attractions including a wooden rollercoaster, a carousel, bumper cars, a water ride, and a Ferris wheel. The park shut its doors in 1984 but the carousal and rollercoaster were moved and are still in operation.
The park area was turned into a housing development, but in 2018 it was announced that the “Paragon Boardwalk” strip of Nantasket Avenue would be renovated and reopened.
Athabasca Glacier
The Athabasca Glacier in Alberta, Canada, is the glacier with the largest number of visitors in North America. It used to be a major tourist draw due to its once easy accessibility, size, and beauty. Sadly, over the past 125 years, the glacier has been steadily melting, with its southern edge already shrunken by an entire mile.
Experts believe that the glacier is shrinking more rapidly than ever, losing between 6.6 to 6.9 feet per year. It has also been said, that the glacier is nowhere near as lovely as it used to be in its heyday.
Heritage USA
Heritage USA, in Fort Mill, South Carolina, played an unusual part in American history. It was a Christian theme park, water park and residential development. The park was founded by televangelists Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker famous for their TV program the PTL Club (which stands for, wait for it, “Praise The Lord”).
Attendance suffered when Jim Bakker got in trouble with the law and the park lost its tax exemption, leading to its eventual closing in 1989.
The Seattle Gum Wall
This doesn’t sound like anything you couldn’t find under a school desk, but for some reason, the Market Theater Gum Wall was a somewhat famous tourist attraction for those visiting Seattle. People added their gum to the wall for years to create this unique and iconic wall, but in November 2015 it was finally scraped clean.
The cleaning was not done for an aesthetic or hygienic reason, but due to the fact that the weight of all that gum was harmful to the integrity of the brick Pike Place wall. Visitors who come to check out the attraction will be faced with a plain blank wall. So prepare yourself in advance, this one isn’t coming back.