Someone's math is off. The article says it was a 1910 carousel, and right now it's 2014. So wouldn't it make the thing somewhere around 113 to 114 years old? It does mention that it was installed there in 1932, so it's been operating in the same location for 82 years.
I love old carousels. The newer ones are often made with fiberglass animals and feel kind of cheap. A real wooden carousel animal just has a special feel. I've taken my kid to four of them in the area, along with the Looff in Santa Cruz that still has a ring machine. The history of most of these rides is of finding new homes and the possibility that they'd be sold and the new owner might restore the animals and split them up for sale to collectors. The King Arthur Carousel at
Disneyland is all horses, and that was because Walt wanted it that way. It started off as a Dentzel, but where horses (not all the same manufacturer) were added from assorted pieces that were split up from the original carousels.
There's a Dentzel at the San Francisco Zoo.