• Citing financial instability, Burroughs & Chapin announces that the Myrtle Beach Pavilion Amusement Park will close at the end of the 2006 season.
  • The Myrtle Beach Pavilion was a historic pay-per-ride, no parking fee, 11-acre amusement park that was located in Myrtle Beach...
  • The first Pavilion building — an annex of Myrtle Beach's first hotel, the Seaside Inn (now demolished) — burned in 1920 and was replaced in 1925 by another...
  • Flashback more than a century, and this same land gave birth to The Pavilion, a Myrtle Beach landmark that would live on for nearly 100 years.
  • While the physical Pavilion amusement park is no longer in operation, its spirit lives on through several Myrtle Beach attractions and commemorations.
  • An icon for generations of Sandlappers, the Myrtle Beach Pavilion Amusement Park – simply called the Pavilion – closed in 2006 following 58 years of...
  • Located at the corner of Ocean and 9th Avenues one block from the beach, Myrtle Beach Pavilion Park featured 36 rides including three roller coasters and two...
  • One of the notable features of the Myrtle Beach Pavilion is the hand-carved 1912 Herschell-Spillman carousel, which runs to the music of a ca.
  • A succession of four beach pavilions stood here or nearby from 1902 to 2006, all built by the Burroughs and Chapin Co. or the Myrtle Beach Farms Co. The first...