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| - Once a Berry Farm and a small theme park with as stagecoach ride and railroad, Knott's Berry farm has transformed into the 160 acre park we know and love today. Location: Buena Park, California Size: 160 acres Number of Roller Coasters: 8 Highest Point: Supreme Scream- 300' Tallest Roller Coaster: Xcelerator- 205'
- Knott's Berry Farm was a 20th century amusement park, based in California on Earth. In 1986, a tourist at the Cetacean Institute carried a bag depicting several California attractions, including Knott's Berry Farm. The specific image chosen to represent the Farm was of a statue of a prospector and his donkey standing on a rock. (Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home)
- There are employees at Knott's Berry Park who dress as characters from Peanuts and pose for photographs with visitors. There is an area called Camp Snoopy with rides for children and adults and a Snoopy on Ice show is performed there. There are also shops that sell Peanuts merchandise.
- Knott's Berry Farm is a 160-acre (65 ha) theme park in Buena Park, California, owned by Cedar Fair Entertainment Company. It is also a line of jams, jellies, preserves, and other specialty food, produced by The J. M. Smucker Company based in Placentia, California. Knott's is the most visited park in the Cedar Fair chain with 3.654 million visitors in 2011.
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| - Once a Berry Farm and a small theme park with as stagecoach ride and railroad, Knott's Berry farm has transformed into the 160 acre park we know and love today. Location: Buena Park, California Size: 160 acres Number of Roller Coasters: 8 Highest Point: Supreme Scream- 300' Tallest Roller Coaster: Xcelerator- 205'
- Knott's Berry Farm is a 160-acre (65 ha) theme park in Buena Park, California, owned by Cedar Fair Entertainment Company. It is also a line of jams, jellies, preserves, and other specialty food, produced by The J. M. Smucker Company based in Placentia, California. Knott's is the most visited park in the Cedar Fair chain with 3.654 million visitors in 2011. The theme park sits on the site of a former berry farm established by Walter Knott and his family. Beginning around 1920, the Knott family sold berries, berry preserves, and pies from a roadside stand along State Route 39. In 1934, the Knotts began selling fried chicken dinners in a tea room on the property, later called "Mrs. Knott's Chicken Dinner Restaurant". The dinners soon became a major tourist draw, and the Knotts built several shops and other attractions to entertain visitors while waiting for a seat in the restaurant. In 1940, Walter Knott began constructing a replica Ghost Town on the property, the beginning of the present-day theme park. Knott added several other attractions over the years, and began charging admission to the attractions in 1968. In 1983, Knott's Berry Farm added Camp Snoopy, which began the park's present-day association with the Peanuts characters.
- Knott's Berry Farm was a 20th century amusement park, based in California on Earth. In 1986, a tourist at the Cetacean Institute carried a bag depicting several California attractions, including Knott's Berry Farm. The specific image chosen to represent the Farm was of a statue of a prospector and his donkey standing on a rock. (Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home)
- There are employees at Knott's Berry Park who dress as characters from Peanuts and pose for photographs with visitors. There is an area called Camp Snoopy with rides for children and adults and a Snoopy on Ice show is performed there. There are also shops that sell Peanuts merchandise.
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