Harris Theater

223 S. 4th Street,
Jeannette, PA 15644

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Additional Info

Previously operated by: Harris Amusement Co., Manos Amusement Inc.

Functions: Community Center

Previous Names: Eagle Theater, Harris-Jeanette Theater

Nearby Theaters

The Eagle Theater was opened on December 10, 1910. It was renamed Harris-Jeanette Theater on October 4, 1933. It showed its last movie around 1960. It is now a social club called the Eagles.

Contributed by David Stear

Recent comments (view all 9 comments)

DavidStear
DavidStear on May 31, 2002 at 12:55 pm

This theater’s name before it was converted to a social club was Harris Theater. It was presumably of the Harris chain.

Patsy
Patsy on July 31, 2007 at 12:57 pm

DavidStear: Do you know of a former Harris Theatre that was in Butler PA?

Joe Vogel
Joe Vogel on July 22, 2009 at 10:15 pm

The Harris Theatre of Jeannette was in operation prior to 1939, at the time the Harris Amusement Company took a lease on Michael Manos’s new Manos Theatre in the same town. The new house operated as the Harris-Manos Theatre until 1949, at which time operation was taken over by the Manos circuit. The Harris circuit continued to operate the Harris Theatre as well during this decade.

In 1950, Manos bought the Harris Theatre, ending the Harris circuit’s presence in Jeannette. The March 25 issue of Boxoffice that year said that Michael Manos had closed the Harris Theatre. I’ve not found any later mentions of the Harris in Boxoffice.

Joe Vogel
Joe Vogel on September 22, 2012 at 4:11 pm

Jeannette, by Terry Perich and John Howard, says that this house reopened as the Harris Theatre on October 4, 1933. It had originally opened as the Eagle Theatre on December 10, 1910.

The Eagle Theatre was originally operated by Oliver Kihchel in partnership with August Schmidt, the town’s police chief. In 1917, Kihchel and his wife, Bessie, took over sole operation of the house. In the mid-1920s, they took control of the Princess Theatre, then operated both houses until forced by financial problems to give up the Eagle to the Harris chain in 1933.

JohnHunt
JohnHunt on February 18, 2013 at 10:03 am

According to the Greensburg City Directory for 1917 my distand relative by marriage, GRACE A VOGEL is listed as being the Pianist at the EAGLES THEATER, Greensburg, PA. She was the daughter of ALBERT VOGEL and AMANDA BIBER, and born 16th September 1892 in PA. She had previously been married to RUGH G BAUM, but divorced and later married BURTON M NEWELL. She died in 1940 in Greensboro, North Carolina. Was she possibly a relative of yours JOE VOGEL ?

Joe Vogel
Joe Vogel on February 18, 2013 at 2:26 pm

John, as far as I know I had no relatives in Pennsylvania during that period (nor any now, for that matter.) Vogel is actually a fairly common surname though. My great-grandfather, Jacob Vogel, emigrated from Switzerland to California in 1883 with two of his daughters, joining his eldest son, who was already here. His wife and five younger children, including my grandfather, followed in 1884. Most of his descendants still live in California.

JohnHunt
JohnHunt on February 19, 2013 at 6:24 am

Thanks for that Joe. Yes, after I started looking into Grace Vogel and her family in Pennsylvania I was amazed at just how many there were. It seems that she most probably wasn’t a relative of yours, but I think it sure is a wierd coincidence that she should have been the pianist at the old Eagle Theater, along with your own interest in the place. I can’t say that I’m a huge Cinema/Theater buff, but it is great to know a bit more about where she worked back then. Thanks for your kind help and interest. John

F_J_Harris
F_J_Harris on June 14, 2013 at 3:42 am

For the first two years of my life my family lived in this theater. I have no actual memory but I’ve seen pictures and heard stories. My Dad, John P. Harris, was the manager and an apartment on the second floor came with the job. (Dad was named after his paternal uncle who founded the Nickelodeon in Pittsburgh in 1905.) We moved back to Pittsburgh in 1950 (which conforms with Mr. Vogel’s timeline in his comment dated July 22, 2009.) Following that my Dad managed several Harris theaters, including the Denis in Mount Lebanon and the Perry on the North Side of Pittsburgh. Those two theaters I do remember. Frank J. Harris

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