Most people who sell a company for $51 million buy a bigger house, a yacht, early retirement.
Gordon Hartman bought 25 acres of land and spent years building swings that wheelchairs could access, rides that didn’t require you to walk, spaces that didn’t punish you for being different.
Because one day at a pool, he watched his daughter try to play.
And the world said no.
So he built a world that says yes.
Morgan’s Wonderland isn’t just a theme park.
It’s a father’s love made tangible. It’s a question asked and answered. It’s proof that inclusion isn’t impossible—it just requires someone to care enough to build it.
Gordon Hartman looked at his daughter walking away from that pool and made a choice.
He could accept the world as it was.
Or he could change it.
He changed it.
And now, thousands of families every year get to experience what Morgan experienced that day at the pool—except this time, the other kids don’t walk away.
This time, everyone plays together.