• '''Bull's Eye''' – A
roundup wheel ride that goes in diagonal directions. Formerly known as The Rainbow. It was closed following the 2016 season and replaced with Slingshot. •
Camden Park Zoo – located North of the train station; it was removed in the early 1970s. •
Caterpillar – a classic amusement park ride operated at Camden Park in the 1950s. The cars followed an undulating circular track. A similar
Music Express-type ride, the
Hot Cat, was featured at the park from the 1990s to 2011. •
Enterprise – a fast, looping, inverted "Ferris wheel"-like ride, featuring a mural of the
Starship Enterprise from
Star Trek: The Next Generation. The ride was closed in 1993, after a hydraulic malfunction resulted in injuries to more than fifty riders. •
Fun Slide – a tall, multi-lane slide that stood between the
Little Dipper and the railroad tracks in the early 1980s. Riders climbed a long series of stairs, and slid down one of the lanes on a burlap mat. Camden Park's slide featured blue lanes, and its steps were painted brown. •
Hot Cat – a
Music Express-type
Caterpillar ride, the
Hot Cat featured a train on an undulating circular track, half of which was enclosed in a darkened shed-like structure. The exterior was brightly lit with flashing lights, while loud music played both inside and out. The
Hot Cat was a featured attraction at Camden Park from the 1990s to 2011, but was dismantled in 2012. It stood south of the
Big Dipper, and west of the
Paratrooper and
Magic Rainbow. •
Hurricane – a classic Hurricane ride manufactured by Dartron Industries. Camden Park's Hurricane ride was painted blue with yellow cars, each adorned with the name of a famous hurricane from the 1950s or 1960s, including
Audrey,
Betsy,
Beulah,
Camille,
Carol, and
Hazel. The ride was a fixture of the park during the 1980s, and was located in the park's northeast corner, behind the log flume, and next to the Tilt-a-Whirl. It was replaced by the Kite Flyer. •
Miniature Golf – in the 1970s and 1980s, a miniature golf course was located north of the skating rink. This area was later occupied by the
Thunderbolt Express. A new, 18-hole miniature golf course has opened in its place. •
Roller Coaster – Camden Park's first wooden roller coaster, originally described as the "new sensation." Riders were taken to the top of a tall hill, then sent down a gentle dip, and then into a counter-clockwise spiral, followed by an elliptical course featuring several smaller dips, and returning to the pavilion. Painted white, the roller coaster was complemented by a red-roofed tower adjacent to the top of the first hill. This ride was demolished in the summer of 1957, and construction began on the
Big Dipper, which opened the following summer. Camden Park's Spider was painted black, with white car interiors, and was usually illuminated after dark with yellow and white fluorescent tubes and clear incandescent bulbs; toward the end of its life, the yellow fluorescent bulbs were replaced by red. •
Tip-Top – a flat ride manufactured by
Hrubetz featuring ten tub-like cars, each with two bench seats and a large, horizontal wheel in the center. The ride would spin and be propelled upward by compressed air. Each car would spin independently, and riders could influence the speed and direction of their spin by pulling or pushing against the wheel. In the 1980s this ride was located south of the
Camden Park Mound, between the Scrambler and the Spider. The Flying Scooters ride has occupied this location since 2006. •
Yo-Yo – a classic amusement park ride, featuring a series of swings suspended on long chains from a rotating upper carousel. This ride was located south of the
Big Dipper, immediately west of the
Paratrooper and
Magic Rainbow rides during the late 1980s. Camden Park's was painted yellow, with black and white trim. The same type of ride had previously been operated at Camden Park in the late 1970s. ==Popular culture==