Burlington Beach's crowds and the lake itself shriveled when the dike began to leak.
In 1906, the development was revived under new ownership and a new name, Capital Beach revived under new ownership and a new name, Capital Beach (more commonly spelled Capitol Beach today). Less than a decade later, the "Coney Island of the West" was again on the decline and, against the advice of the Lincoln State Journal, the city of Lincoln decided against a proposal to purchase-for $100,000-875 acres encompassing Salt Lake as a city park.Anyone with a spark of imagination cannot help viewing with enthusiasm the prospect of Capital Beach as a part of the city's park system. Here is Lincoln in the midst of a level plain, without rugged scenery and without a river. It seems like a special providence that at its very gates there should be a lake a mile long and a mile wide which could be made into a free vacation resort for the entire city. This lake, surrounded by trees and walks and drives, as it would be, and with ample park space on all sides is undoubtedly the city's greatest potential natural asset.