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The
Caribbean Arcade
Extinct
WDW Attraction
Location:
Caribbean Plaza,
Magic Kingdom
Opened: c. Summer 1974
Closed: c. Spring 1980
Ticket Required: None
Contributing Disney
Personnel:
Sam McKim
Descendant of:
Disneyland's
Pirate Museum Arcade
Space Later Became:
Lafitte's Portrait Deck,
Lafitte's (shop)
Remnants:
Space still exists, although
no longer open to public
Related External Sites:
Yesterland -
Pirate Museum Arcade
Sorcerer's Workshop
Pirates Arcade Museum
Additional photos courtesy Dave Ensign, Marion Caswell & Sorceror's Workshop
All images copyright
The Walt Disney Company.
Text copyright 2009
Mike Lee
I would like to
acknowledge the
thoughtful assistance of
Dave Applewhite,
Robert Boyd,
Brian Lee
and
Werner K. Weiss
with my research on
the Caribbean Arcade
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Last Update to this page: June 8, 2009
The Caribbean Arcade is one of the Magic Kingdom's
least-discussed extinct attractions, second only perhaps
to the short-lived
Safari Club Arcade. That Adventureland game room ancestor
had a lot in common with its buccaneer
progeny, where any kid's pocket change could be readily
converted into a scurvy good time for a period of roughly six years.
One of the most reasonable explanations for the
arcade's scant coverage is that the average adult would
not have spent much time in this dimly-lit
alcove, which sat off the western end of Caribbean
Plaza's open-air market, Plaza del sol Caribe, directly across from the
highly traveled House of Treasure shop. So most accounts of the haunt stem from
childhood memories, which despite their warmth are often less keen than we would
prefer when looking for specifics.
When Pirates of the Caribbean opened in December
of 1973, much of the surrounding area in Caribbean
Plaza was not yet ready to debut. Most of the shops did
not open until April of 1974. Sometime between April
and the end of the year, the Caribbean Arcade laid
down its gangplanks. It was a direct descendant of
Disneyland's Pirates Arcade Museum, which had been
operating in that park's New Orleans Square since
roughly 1967 (it later became the Pieces of Eight shop).
The above left photo shows the entrance to this chamber
as it appeared in 1993, about thirteen years after the
arcade closed. My own recollection of the interior
space was that the room was substantially darker than
in its later years when it served as vendor and merchandise operations.
How much darker I cannot say, nor can I readily identify
what the focal point of the room was, if there was one
besides the games and other machines.
The games and machines
themselves are a little easier for me to remember. At least one wall was lined with
old-style mounted rifle games in handsome wood cabinets, identical to those
shown in the above center photo of Disneyland's Pirates Museum Arcade, an image
borrowed from Werner K. Weiss's fantastic
Yesterland site. These games offered you the
chance to take aim at pirates for a dime. Some of the
pirate targets were modeled after figures that appeared
in Pirates of the Caribbean. At least one other machine
featured pirates from Peter Pan. WED artist Sam McKim led the design
effort on these customized games. One of his designs is shown at above
right.
A freestanding rectangular cabinet housed another game, which I'm certain was
called "Make Captain Bones Dance." It allowed you to pull the strings of a
skeleton puppet - to the accompaniment of a sea shanty - by pushing buttons on a
rudimentary control panel. This machine was essentially the same as the "Hoofin' Henry" game that
was once found in Disneyland's
Teddi Bara arcade and a "Pinocchio" game from DL also.
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Also present in the room:
- A machine where you could
stamp a short message into a
replica of a silver or gold pirate
coin. The doubloons were punched
with a small hole so they could be
worn as necklaces. These same
types of coins were still sold in bags of three at the House of Treasure for years after the
arcade closed.
- A machine that vended a selection of postcards, each with a Pirates of the
Caribbean drawing by WED artist / animator Marc Davis and a brief poem. For
example, an illustration of two pirates boozing it up in a rowboat carried these lines:
"Behold these bilge-rats with a feelin' o' sadness; Rum-spongin' be naught but
self-willed madness." These postcards were also later available at the House of
Treasure.
- A fortune teller, similar to Grandma at Main Street's Penny Arcade, except that
this one was hosted by the infamous lady pirate Anne Bonny. For a dime you could
receive some wordly advice from Anne printed on a small card, the back side of
which contained some authentic pirate lore. I have a weak suspicion that Anne's
face or outfit may have been the same as that of Esmerelda, who replaced Grandma
at the Penny Arcade in the early 1990s.
The original version of the Pirate-themed fortune-telling machine (Fortune Red)
still resides in Disneyland's Pieces Of Eight shop.
The Caribbean Arcade's name changed to Caverna de los Piratas in 1979. The
following year it closed, underwent a
renovation and opened as Lafitte's Portrait
Deck. Under this name, the venue allowed
guests to don pirate outfits and pose
alongside one of two sculpted pirate figures
(adapted directly from Auction Scene figure in the nearby
ride) for a photograph. One was the Auctioneer standing at a ship's wheel,
the other was the pirate who holds the redhead's rope sitting atop a pile of
treasure. In the late 1980's the
operation was licensed to the PhotoToons
company, and the pirates were removed.
From that point on guests in pirate garb
mugged by themselves and Disney
characters were added to the photographs
when printed.
In December of 1994, PhotoToons vacated
and the space became a merchandise outlet
simply called "Lafitte's," selling pirate hats,
hooks, swords, muskets, etc. By March of
1997 that shop, too, had closed. The
building stills sits at the western end of Caribbean Plaza and to the best of my
knowledge is currently a stockroom
for the adjacent plaza's merchandise.

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