Comments from SethG

Showing 776 - 800 of 1,432 comments

SethG
SethG commented about Majestic Theatre on Nov 4, 2020 at 10:00 am

I don’t know why, but I still cannot add a picture of either theater, although I did add one of something else successfully today.

SethG
SethG commented about Liberty Theatre on Oct 31, 2020 at 8:30 pm

That’s a lot of information, most of which agrees. I understood it to mean that the opera house (which is the large building at Chester and Tonica) was called the Lyric by no later than 1913. The 1887 map has the opera house labelled as La Forge’s Hall, and all subsequent maps just call it an opera house. It is a very basic box of a building, but could date to 1875. It was certainly not unusual for opera houses to be renamed, just as with theaters.

As far as population goes, I would think that 1,800 might support two small theaters, at least in the early years of the craze. So I might guess: That the opera house was occasionally showing movies under perhaps the ‘Frank’ name, and then right around 1911 we have the Lyric operating in this smaller building.

The owner of the Lyric takes over the opera house lease, and moves to the larger venue, and takes the name with him at some point. The small theater is still in business in 1914, but the Lyric is now the opera house.

Perhaps the small theater closes, and then is reopened in 1917 with a new name.

SethG
SethG commented about Majestic Theatre on Oct 31, 2020 at 11:17 am

The ‘Auditorium’ is certainly the township building. Once the website is fixed, I’ll add a picture of this and the Auditorium.

SethG
SethG commented about Liberty Theatre on Oct 31, 2020 at 7:21 am

I’m sure the map is more trustworthy. I’ll have to add the Lyric. Unless the maps specifically have them as showing movies, I don’t add opera houses.

SethG
SethG commented about Majestic Theatre on Oct 30, 2020 at 10:45 am

Yes, it was called Tippecanoe City, but the post office made them change it because there is a tiny unincorporated town 200 miles away called Tippecanoe. The Sanborn map spells it Chaffe’s a few times (but also Chaffee’s), and the 1905-6 Cahn guide spelled it Chaffee’s.

SethG
SethG commented about Liberty Theatre on Oct 29, 2020 at 6:17 pm

This theater appears on the Sept. 1914 Sanborn, so the opening date is incorrect. ‘Liberty’ does make sense for a jingoistic wartime renaming, so 1917 could be relevant. The building was constructed sometime before 1887, and on the 1909 map, it’s a harness shop.

SethG
SethG commented about Colonial Theatre on Oct 29, 2020 at 12:03 pm

By the way, the article calls it Hunt’s theater with a small ’t', meaning just that he owned it. It also says that it was on E Main, which is obviously wrong if it was next to the Mayflower’s later location. It’s hard to tell if the front of the Mayflower building really is the heavily remodeled remains of the two very old structures it replaced. I would have assumed those were demolished.

SethG
SethG commented about Jewel Theatre on Oct 28, 2020 at 10:12 pm

The bank constructed a new building across the street in 1908 (which is also still there), so the theater could have opened any time after that.

SethG
SethG commented about Colonial Theatre on Oct 28, 2020 at 10:08 pm

The Gem and New must have fallen in the gap between the 1911 map and the 1923 one.

SethG
SethG commented about Jewel Theatre on Oct 27, 2020 at 7:36 am

Building is currently a gourmet grocery.

SethG
SethG commented about Jewel Theatre on Oct 27, 2020 at 7:34 am

The address is wrong, and this has not been demolished. The theater was at 7 E Main. The building is a two-story Second Empire style building with a limestone front. It was likely constructed in the 1870s, and appears on the 1887 Sanborn as a bank. It’s the 1st National Bank on the 1905 map, but is ‘Moving Pictures’ on the 1911 map. It is still in operation on what is supposedly the 1947 map. The front page of the map is the 1931 map, with additions in 1937 and 1942, but Ohio’s collection labels it as June 1947.

SethG
SethG commented about Mayflower Arts Center on Oct 27, 2020 at 6:57 am

On the 1931 Sanborn, the auditorium has a note: ‘Steam Beams’. I assume this is a goof, and the surveyor intended to write ‘Steel’, but if it means something, I’d love to know.

SethG
SethG commented about Star Theatre on Oct 22, 2020 at 1:47 pm

Theater is demolished. The address was 205. It was in a large 4-story brick building (sometimes shown as three stories due to a mansard roof), constructed sometime before 1887 as the Bassett House, a large hotel that contained numerous businesses in the lower floors. The 1905 map shows 205 shared by the entrance to the hotel, a small, oddly-shaped pool room, and a bar and laundry in the rear, which was one story.

The theater lasted until 1911 at least, when they have the entire space. By 1920, the theater space is vacant. The building was torn down in the ‘70s, and is now a dreary gravel parking lot.

SethG
SethG commented about Undated photo courtesy Annette via Pinterest. on Oct 22, 2020 at 1:01 pm

Someone needs to go back and tell them that ‘Then’ and ‘Than’ are not the same!

SethG
SethG commented about Dream Theater on Oct 22, 2020 at 12:59 pm

The correct address for A theater was 316. It was in the northern half of the large brick building one removed from the square. The building dates to before 1887 (likely the early 1870s by the look of it). The 1905 map shows that section as dry goods, the 1911 map shows the theater, and the 1920 map shows it as a 5 & 10 cent store.

I am dubious of the ID. The window frames on the second story don’t match, the building has several small storefronts as opposed to two large ones, and the facade is either stone or plaster made to look like it. I think we have one theater’s address, and another’s name and photo.

SethG
SethG commented about Bijou Theatre on Oct 22, 2020 at 12:41 pm

The address for the Bijou was 120. The building was constructed sometime between 1898 and 1905, replacing various homes and businesses. The 1905 map shows the western half as two vacant storefronts.

The theater involved a substantial remodeling of that half of the building. As originally constructed, it was two stories until about halfway back from the street, when it was reduced to one story. After the remodel, the theater had a short and narrow entry between two much reduced storefronts, which in 1911 were a china shop and a news stand. The shape of the rear wall of the two-story section was modified, and the one story rear section had a large fly tower at the rear, and in front of this, an odd rectangular three story section over the middle of the auditorium.

The theater space is noted on the 1949 map, but appears to be vacant. At some later point, the building was badly butchered, and the top story removed. It appears that the rear of the theater was unaltered. Considering the ‘quality’ of the remodel, I doubt any of the theater entry was preserved.

SethG
SethG commented about Strand Theater on Oct 22, 2020 at 12:19 pm

The November 1920 Sanborn shows the Strand, with no mention of it being closed. The address seems to have been 108 E High, although the entrance may have been on the SW corner of the building, facing N Main. The theater replaced a wooden livery stable that appears on the 1911 map. The stage was curved inward in the center, and an outward curved balcony is noted.

SethG
SethG commented about Wapa Theatre on Sep 15, 2020 at 11:16 am

It would be nice if someone could write up the history for this theater. Some of these really old listings have no information at all. I saw a movie here in 2015, and the marquee is pretty fantastic at night. The auditorium is actually very broad and shallow. I think the balcony was closed at that point.

The 1946 Sanborn (an update of the 1924 map) still shows this as Brown’s Theatre, and the marquee is shown as an old-fashioned rectangular awning. Not sure when the neon went up, or when the name changes happened.

SethG
SethG commented about Palace Theatre on Sep 15, 2020 at 7:49 am

For research purposes, in 1907 the address was 717, there being no east/west division on any streets.

SethG
SethG commented about Theatre on Sep 13, 2020 at 5:58 am

Theater would have been on the right.

SethG
SethG commented about Grand Theatre on Sep 12, 2020 at 6:06 pm

For research purposes, in 1907 the address was 836-838, there being no north-south division on any of the streets.

SethG
SethG commented about Sidney Theatre on Sep 12, 2020 at 5:49 pm

Not sure of the significance, but the little stone up near the roof in the center of the facade names the building as the Deweese Block. He may have been the original owner, or perhaps just had the building constructed and leased the theater space.

SethG
SethG commented about Capitol Theatre on Sep 12, 2020 at 12:09 pm

As David pointed out a while ago, the film being shown in the photo is from 1927. The 1924 map shows the space as a store. Address should be on N Main, although it has mapped correctly.

SethG
SethG commented about Capitol Theatre on Sep 12, 2020 at 9:59 am

Needs to be marked as demolished. The building can be seen on the horribly blurry 2009 streetview, but this magnificent structure was gone by 2015. It was built sometime before 1887 as the Taylor Block, and was home to the masonic lodge on the third floor, above storefronts and offices.

SethG
SethG commented about Sidney Theatre on Sep 12, 2020 at 9:48 am

The 1946 update of the 1924 Sanborn still shows the name as Majestic, but this was likely just a failure to update the name.