The first 'Screamer' in Russian mountains is not a runaway train, it is a sled on an artificial snow-covered hill made of logged trees and trunks. Well-designed buildings frequently occupy a few blocks, and a 50-mile-long ride got a nickname "Flying Mountain". Children and adults will take troublesome trekking with 70 feet (5 stories) stairs and climb the sleigh with straw sheets. This trip lasted a few seconds.
The world's oldest roller coaster is a snow-capped mountain specially built in the palace garden around St. Petersburg, the Russian capital of the 18th century. This charm is known as Katalnaya Gorka or "Slide Mountain" in Russia. The height of the slide is lowered by 50 degrees from 70 feet (21 meters) to 80 feet (24 meters) and reinforced with wooden support. Wheeled carts are sometimes used instead of sleds. These slides are very popular in the upper class of Russia, but Russian Catherine II has made such a mountain in the garden of the Oranenbaum Palace near St. Petersburg. . "Russian Mountains" is the term for roller coasters in various languages, such as Spanish (lamontañarusa), Italian (montagne russe), French (les montagnes russes).
In the Russian Alaska era, the common name of this mountain was Bolshaya Gora ("Great Mountain" in Russian, Большая Гора). Peak's first English name is Densmore's Mountain or Densmore's Peak, a gold explorer Frank Densmore who admired the dignity of the mountain enthusiastically in 1889, but that name will only survive locally and unofficially. This mountain, named William Dickey from New Hampshire State, was named "McKinley Hill" for the first time, and in June 1896 he made a gold exploration at the beach on the Sushita River. He returned to the neighboring US account to appear on Sunday in New York on Alaska (1896) on 24th January 1897. Dickey said, "After nominating William McKinley, Ohio State as the presidential candidate, we named our highest mount Mt. McKinley, a fact that I received on this way of leaving this wonderful wilderness. News