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Black Buccaneer

1988 establishments in England2018 disestablishments in EnglandAmusement ride stubsAmusement rides introduced in 1988Amusement rides manufactured by HUSS Park Attractions
Amusement rides that closed in 2018Chessington World of Adventures past ridesClosed amusement attractionsFormer buildings and structures in the Royal Borough of Kingston upon ThamesUse British English from March 2021
BlackBuccaneer Cropped
BlackBuccaneer Cropped

Black Buccaneer was a swinging pirate ship that operated at Chessington World of Adventures Resort in southwest London, England from 1988 to 2018 in the Pirates' Cove section of the park. After operating for 30 years, the ride has been replaced by Blue Barnacle in 2021.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Black Buccaneer (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Black Buccaneer
Leatherhead Road, London Chessington (Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames)

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Wikipedia: Black BuccaneerContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.3475 ° E -0.3169 °
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Address

Chessington World of Adventures

Leatherhead Road
KT9 2NE London, Chessington (Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames)
England, United Kingdom
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Phone number
Merlin

call+448716634477

Website
chessington.com

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BlackBuccaneer Cropped
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Chessington World of Adventures

Chessington World of Adventures Resort is a 52-hectare (128.5 acres) theme park, zoo and hotel complex in Chessington, Greater London, England, around 12 miles (19 km) southwest of Central London. The complex originally opened as Chessington Zoo in 1931; the theme park aspect was developed by The Tussauds Group, debuting on 7 July 1987 as one of the first combined animal-amusement parks in Great Britain, similar in concept to Busch Gardens Tampa or Williamsburg in the US. The theme park, which features over 40 rides, is now owned by Merlin Entertainments, following its merger with The Tussauds Group in 2007. Under Merlin, Chessington has been increasingly developed into a resort and tourist destination, including two on-site hotels, swimming pools, a campground, spa and wellness amenities, and fitness facilities, including a high ropes course. The Chessington Zoo has over 1,000 animals, including western lowland gorillas, sea lions, and Sumatran tigers. It is split up into several areas; Trail of the Kings, Sea Lion Bay, Children's Zoo, Amazu, Penguin Bay, a Sea Life Centre and Wanyama Village and Reserve. Chessington World Of Adventures was ranked (in 2019) as the fourth most-visited park in the UK, with an attendance of roughly 1.69 million guests. In 2020, due to restrictions associated with the COVID-19 pandemic, the park experienced an unexpectedly short operating season and would temporary close its gates; furthermore, upon reopening, there would be a lowered overall capacity with strictly-controlled numbers of guests being granted entry into the park. Despite the park seeing a huge drop in attendance, Chessington still ranked as the third most-visited park in the UK for 2020, just behind Thorpe Park. Chessington World of Adventures is separated into different themed areas, loosely inspired by a range of world cultures. ‘Adventure Point’ is a colonial English “market square”, ‘Mexicana’ borrows from the Wild West and Latin America, ‘Shipwreck Coast’ is a nautical harbour town, ‘Wild Woods’ is a Central European-styled area with Bavarian architecture, ‘Forbidden Kingdom’ mirrors the ancient Middle East, ‘Land of the Tiger’ reflects the Far East, and ‘Wild Asia’ is based on an Indian jungle. Major attractions include: Vampire, Dragon's Fury, KOBRA, Tiger Rock, Scorpion Express, Zufari: Ride into Africa!, The Gruffalo River Ride Adventure, Mandrill Mayhem, and Croc Drop.