Thank you for your comment. I spoke with Tony Baxter at the Pacific Northwest Mouse Meet (awesome event, by the way) about these ticket books, and we sort of came to the conclusion that this was probably the transition booklet from the single attraction tickets sold at the booths ... to the E Ticket (sort of the "Disneyland Missing Link" ticket book). There are so few of them extant, that most likely they saw the futility of such a book as compared to the ease of having a single ticket (say an "A" ticket) for a handful of attractions. This is purely historical speculation, but our best educated guess. Paul
This is an excellent providence. It really makes a good point out of it.
ReplyDeleteThanks,
Universal Studios Hollywood
Thank you for your comment. I spoke with Tony Baxter at the Pacific Northwest Mouse Meet (awesome event, by the way) about these ticket books, and we sort of came to the conclusion that this was probably the transition booklet from the single attraction tickets sold at the booths ... to the E Ticket (sort of the "Disneyland Missing Link" ticket book). There are so few of them extant, that most likely they saw the futility of such a book as compared to the ease of having a single ticket (say an "A" ticket) for a handful of attractions. This is purely historical speculation, but our best educated guess. Paul
ReplyDelete