About 956 results
Open links in new tab
  1. National Carousel Association Facebook Group

    2 days ago · Our Road Trip takes us to the Pacific Northwest and Albany Oregon and their Historic Carousel and Museum. The Carousel is a 1909 G.A. Dentzel Frame with new Carvings plus a …

  2. Gustav and William Dentzel Co. - CarouselHistory.com

    Mar 3, 2015 · Gustav Dentzel immigrated to the US from Germany as a teenager in 1860 and along with Looff, was one of the earliest major carousel builders.

  3. AntiqueCarousels.com | Buying, Selling and Consignment of Quality ...

    Groundbreaking carousel preservationist & restoration artist.

  4. Carousel World | Fine Art Collection

    A series of Carousel Fine Art compiled by the late Charlotte Dinger.

  5. Dentzel Carousel Company - Wikipedia

    The G.A. Dentzel Company was an American builder of carousels in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States, in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Its founder, Gustav Dentzel, had immigrated to the …

  6. vintagecarousels.com

    Faust County Park This carousel is a 1921 Dentzel 4-row carousel that is beautifully maintained. There are 46 jumpers, 16 standers, 4 deer and 2 chariots. The carousel is housed in a beautiful building. …

  7. Dentzel Carousel Company: Home

    Aug 17, 2025 · The Dentzel Carousel Company has been headquartered in Port Townsend, Washington, USA since 1983 and soon hopes to have a local project under way in Latin America.

  8. Major Carousel Builders and Carvers (Page 2 of 3)

    Dentzel carousels tend to be large park machines with a mixture of horses and other animals (menagerie). The animals are realistic and well carved. Although the company carved over a long …

  9. History - Rocky Springs Carousel Association

    From as early as 1895, famed carousel carver Gustav Dentzel of Germantown Boulevard in Philadelphia, brought potential customers to visit his show-case park carousel, sited in Lancaster’s …

  10. Daniel Carl Müller: The Artist as Carousel Carver

    Dentzel settled in the Germantown neighborhood of Philadelphia, where he opened a cabinetmaking shop and also began fabricating portable carousels for local fairs and parks.