Facebook
TwitterApache License, v2.0https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
License information was derived automatically
*~Nothing in this dataset is meant to deter others from theme parks or put Disney in a bad light, mostly for portfolio purposes. *
Thumbnail source: https://www.wdw-magazine.com/today-in-disney-history-the-skeleton-dance-debuted/
*At the time of creating this dataset it was close to Halloween. *
This dataset is complied of the deaths that took place at Disneyland and Disney World since the opening of both theme parks in California and in Florida.
Of the 92 deaths at Disney Parks, 66 are from Disneyland (FL) and 26 at Disney World. It would seem that Florida has the most deadly incidents than California, however it seems people in California's incident's have to do more with suicide than anything else with Mickey & Friends parking the go-to place for their suicide, so to speak. Florida seems to have more accidents and known/unknown health issues.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_incidents_at_Walt_Disney_World https://www.damfirm.com/disney-deaths/#:~:text=64%20people%20have%20died%20at,as%20of%20August%201%2C%202023.
Link to my google sheets, however request to view is enabled. Reasoning for looking at it, is all I need if you are wanting to view the history of table itself.
Death Caused: What attraction, machine, others = are muders or accidents that happen to be on Disney property. Death How: how the deceased passed Date of Incident: numerical dates On Attraction: if passed because of the ride (injury or health issues) Attraction Area: Both of these theme parks are quite large and some have multiple areas to the attraction Location/Time: this one is going to go through some editing if not deleted, since it seems more like an extra how death was caused explaination. Age of Deceased: numerical Gender of Deceased: male, female, other. other= not stated From Where: what state was the deceased from, *not stated = i am assuming that it is because the person is already from California or Florida Fault: Park negligence, Guest Negligence (suicide is also counted in this), Acts of God (freak accident, something that couldn't be avoided in one way or another, or just simply unlucky.), Health Issue (known/unknown)
Not seeing a result you expected?
Learn how you can add new datasets to our index.
Facebook
TwitterApache License, v2.0https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
License information was derived automatically
*~Nothing in this dataset is meant to deter others from theme parks or put Disney in a bad light, mostly for portfolio purposes. *
Thumbnail source: https://www.wdw-magazine.com/today-in-disney-history-the-skeleton-dance-debuted/
*At the time of creating this dataset it was close to Halloween. *
This dataset is complied of the deaths that took place at Disneyland and Disney World since the opening of both theme parks in California and in Florida.
Of the 92 deaths at Disney Parks, 66 are from Disneyland (FL) and 26 at Disney World. It would seem that Florida has the most deadly incidents than California, however it seems people in California's incident's have to do more with suicide than anything else with Mickey & Friends parking the go-to place for their suicide, so to speak. Florida seems to have more accidents and known/unknown health issues.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_incidents_at_Walt_Disney_World https://www.damfirm.com/disney-deaths/#:~:text=64%20people%20have%20died%20at,as%20of%20August%201%2C%202023.
Link to my google sheets, however request to view is enabled. Reasoning for looking at it, is all I need if you are wanting to view the history of table itself.
Death Caused: What attraction, machine, others = are muders or accidents that happen to be on Disney property. Death How: how the deceased passed Date of Incident: numerical dates On Attraction: if passed because of the ride (injury or health issues) Attraction Area: Both of these theme parks are quite large and some have multiple areas to the attraction Location/Time: this one is going to go through some editing if not deleted, since it seems more like an extra how death was caused explaination. Age of Deceased: numerical Gender of Deceased: male, female, other. other= not stated From Where: what state was the deceased from, *not stated = i am assuming that it is because the person is already from California or Florida Fault: Park negligence, Guest Negligence (suicide is also counted in this), Acts of God (freak accident, something that couldn't be avoided in one way or another, or just simply unlucky.), Health Issue (known/unknown)