Grand Opera House (Seattle)

Seattle's Grand Opera House in 1905.
Today the building (seen here in 2007) is a parking garage.
The St. Charles / Rector Hotel Building (seen here in 2007) front and center; a portion of the former Grand Opera House at right.

The Grand Opera House in Seattle, Washington, US, designed by Seattle architect Edwin W. Houghton, a leading designer of Pacific Northwest theaters, was once the city's leading theater. Today, only its exterior survives as the shell of a parking garage.[1][2] Considered by the city's Department of Neighborhoods to be an example of Richardsonian Romanesque, the building stands just outside the northern boundary of the Pioneer Square neighborhood.[1]

The building at 213–217 Cherry Street, Seattle, Washington was originally owned by John Cort, of Cort Circuit fame. Opened in 1900, after Cort convinced the city to extend the northern border of its official entertainment district north from Yesler Way to Cherry Street, it was the city's leading theater of the time. It survived a November 24, 1906 fire, but after it was gutted by another fire in 1917, it was converted to a parking garage in 1923.[1][2]

The reign of the Grand as Seattle's leading theater was relatively short. Cort himself was one of the reasons for this, when he made Seattle's Moore Theatre, also designed by Houghton, his flagship house after its December 28, 1907 opening. The 1911 opening of the showpiece Metropolitan Theatre in the Metropolitan Tract further eroded the Grand's position. By the time a January 20, 1917 fire gutted the building, it had become a movie theater.[2][3]

After the 1917 fire, the building sat empty for several years before becoming a multi-level parking garage in 1923.[1]

Theater

Gustav Luders and George Ade's The Sho-Gun being performed at Seattle's Grand Opera House in December 1905.

The Grand Opera House was constructed from 1898 to 1900. Nearby at Third Avenue and Cherry Street, John Considine, a veteran of box house days and a pioneer of vaudeville had his highly successful Seattle Theater.[4] Cort had the basement level of the Grand built in 1898 and opened it as a variety and beer hall known as the Palm Gardens.[1][5] In the summer of 1900, the rest of the building was built "in record time,"[5] with its official opening on October 8, 1900.[5]

In the winter of 1901, Cort signed a contract with New York-based impresarios Klaw & Erlanger. The contract went into effect in July 1901, quickly establishing the Grand as Seattle's leading theater and forcing the nearby Seattle Theater into second place. Within a year, Cort had taken over the Seattle Theater as well, placing both theaters in the Klaw & Erlanger circuit.[5]

In December 1905, The Sho-Gun was performed at the theater.[6]

A fire on November 23, 1906, destroyed the interior and led Cort to briefly make the Seattle Theater his flagship; in December 1907, Cort's new Moore Theatre opened and eclipsed the Grand once and for all. That time, Eugene Levy took over the Grand and ran it as a movie theater with "incidental" vaudeville.[5]

The stage of the Grand was 30 feet (9.1 m) and 72 feet (21.9 m) wide. Two tiers of boxes stood six on each side of the proscenium. There was also a balcony. In all, the highly ornate auditorium had a capacity of 2,200 people. The St. Charles/Rector Hotel was constructed next door on Third Avenue in 1912–13; it was originally interconnected to the opera house at the balcony level.[1]

Although the Grand was the twenty-second playhouse in Seattle's history and it was a mere 17 years old when it burned, by that time it was the oldest Seattle playhouse still in use.[5]

The fire

The theater caught fire early on the morning of Saturday, January 20, 1917, due to defective wiring under the floor of the balcony. Janitor George Matsu turned in the alarm at 6:13 a.m., bringing the fire department. The flames endangered the Rector Hotel, and the guests were evacuated. At about 7 a.m., the domed theater roof caved in, killing fire department Battalion Chief Frederick G. Gilham and seriously injuring nine other firefighters, five of them seriously. By 8 a.m. their colleagues had managed to evacuate the injured men and extinguish the blaze. One hotel guest suffered from smoke inhalation; otherwise, there were no civilian casualties.[7]

Less than two weeks later, an article in The Seattle Daily Times hinted that then-recent Seattle mayor George F. Cotterill may have fired R.H. Ober as Superintendent of Buildings because of the latter's safety-related rejection of permits for the Grand.[8] (There was a long-running feud between the Times and Cotterill, in which the newspaper "consistently ridiculed Cotterill and his positions."[9]) Levy had boasted in an advertisement about having a role in getting Ober removed, and other city officials may have felt intimidated by that; on the other hand, Fire Chief Frank L. Stetson asserted that the Grand had appeared no more dangerous than "other buildings of its type" and that the changes to the building that Ober had wanted had, indeed, ultimately occurred.[8] The city council committee investigating the matter did not ultimately conclude that either Levy or Cotterill had done anything wrong.[10]

Parking garage

This circa 1929 schematic cross-section shows a d'Humy Motoramp.

In 1923, new owners Victor Elfendal and W.W. Scrubby decided that the Grand would be converted to use as a parking garage. Schack, Young and Myers, a major Seattle architectural firm, affected the conversion. The Seattle Department of Neighborhoods asserts that this relatively intact and early example of a commercial parking garage has historic significance, independent of the building's historic significance as Downtown Seattle's oldest surviving structure initially designed as a theater. As Seattle's commercial core began to grow and as the automobile began to shape the city, "large parking garages…were a lucrative and essential part of downtown commerce."[1]

Construction began March 24, 1923 on a parking garage described at the time as "the first of its kind in the Northwest" with "[p]atented ramps".[11] At that time it was described as $30,000 "five-story and basement" project with a capacity of 300 cars;[11] a day before it opened on August 20, it was described as a seven-story building (6 floors and a basement) with a capacity of 350 cars, and having cost twice the original estimate.[12] It was further described as having "heavy mill-type construction" with 6-inch (15 cm) concrete floors, using the patented d'Humy Motoramp.[12] The garage also included a full-service auto servicing shop.[12] The resulting Cherry Street Garage became the third garage in the portfolio of the Griggs Garage Company, making it the largest such company in Seattle at that time.[12]

The structure

The building is a 5-story brick masonry structure in Richardsonian Romanesque style, not counting a foundation and basement. It measures 77 feet (23.5 m) x 120 feet (36.6 m). The theater interior is entirely destroyed, and the façade is much altered, but some original exterior features remain under white paint. The original red brick cladding has been painted over, as have the ornamental quoins and the remaining portions of the original sandstone trim. According to the Department of Neighborhoods, surviving sandstone features include "the former entry vestibule arch, the arched openings with keystones at the second floor level windows, the upper floor level window sills and watertable. Painted original sandstone trim also accentuates the former name plaque above the entry vestibule arch and the cap of the central raised entry bay."[1]

The building retains all of its original window openings. The two large openings at the first floor level date from the parking garage conversion. At the east end of the second floor, a former door opening to the ticket booth became a window opening: creating the garage entry and exit meant removing the entry stairway, which (according, again, to the Department of Neighborhoods) "reportedly was accented by Vermont blue marble." Originally, the garage retained raised corner parapets and a prominent cornice; these have been lost. The industrial steel sash windows from 1923 remain.[1]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i 213 Cherry ST / Parcel ID 0939000090, Seattle Department of Neighborhoods. Accessed online 20 December 2007.
  2. ^ a b c Eric L. Flom, Fire burns Seattle's Grand Opera House on November 24, 1906, HistoryLink, September 7, 2000. Accessed online 20 December 2007.
  3. ^ STG Presents Moore 100 Open House Archived 2007-12-30 at the Wayback Machine, on the STG/Moore site. Citation for date of Moore's opening and secondary citation for Cort's use of the theater. Accessed online 20 December 2007.
  4. ^ Frank Cullen and Florence Hackman, Vaudeville, Old and New: An Encyclopedia of Variety Performers in America, Routledge (2006), ISBN 0-415-93853-8. p. 263. Citation for Considine's box house background.
  5. ^ a b c d e f "Grand Was Oldest of Seattle's Playhouses", The Seattle Daily Times, January 20, 1917, p.2.
  6. ^ "Chorus performers from "The Sho-gun"".
  7. ^ "Flames Leave Big Playhouse a Heap of Ruins", The Seattle Daily Times, January 20, 1917, p.1; continued on p.2 as "Battalion Chief of Fire Department Killed".
  8. ^ a b "Former Mayor Will Be Asked by Committee to Explain Removal of Ober as Superintendent of Buildings", The Seattle Daily Times, February 3, 1917, p.11.
  9. ^ Wilma, David (2000-10-02), Cotterill, George Fletcher (1865-1958), Seattle: HistoryLink, retrieved 2015-09-01
  10. ^ "Committee Concludes Theatre Fire Probe", The Seattle Daily Times, February 8, 1917, p.12.
  11. ^ a b "Plan Downtown Garage", The Seattle Daily Times, March 24, 1923, p. 12.
  12. ^ a b c d "Huge Garage Opens", The Seattle Daily Times, August 19, 1923, p. 36.

47°36′11″N 122°19′56″W / 47.6031°N 122.3323°W / 47.6031; -122.3323

Read other articles:

Bim AfolamiAfolami pada 2020 Anggota Parlemen untuk Hitchin dan HarpendenPetahanaMulai menjabat 8 June 2017 PendahuluPeter LilleyPenggantiPetahanaMayoritas6,895 (11.7%) Informasi pribadiLahirAbimbola Afolami11 Februari 1986 (umur 38)Crowthorne, Berkshire, InggrisKebangsaanBritania RayaPartai politikKonservatifSuami/istriHenrietta AfolamiAnak3Alma materUniversity College, OxfordSunting kotak info • L • B Abimbola Bim Afolami FRSA (lahir 11 Februari 1986) adalah seorang p...

 

يفتقر محتوى هذه المقالة إلى الاستشهاد بمصادر. فضلاً، ساهم في تطوير هذه المقالة من خلال إضافة مصادر موثوق بها. أي معلومات غير موثقة يمكن التشكيك بها وإزالتها. (مايو 2023) علي أنصاريان (بالفارسية: علی انصاریان)‏    معلومات شخصية الميلاد 5 يوليو 1977  طهران  الوفاة 3 فبراير...

 

Bagian dari seri tentangBuddhisme SejarahPenyebaran Sejarah Garis waktu Sidang Buddhis Jalur Sutra Benua Asia Tenggara Asia Timur Asia Tengah Timur Tengah Dunia Barat Australia Oseania Amerika Eropa Afrika Populasi signifikan Tiongkok Thailand Jepang Myanmar Sri Lanka Vietnam Kamboja Korea Taiwan India Malaysia Laos Indonesia Amerika Serikat Singapura AliranTradisi Buddhisme prasektarian Aliran Buddhis awal Mahāsāṃghika Sthaviravāda Aliran kontemporer Theravāda Mahāyāna Vajrayāna Kon...

العلاقات المارشالية السيراليونية جزر مارشال سيراليون   جزر مارشال   سيراليون تعديل مصدري - تعديل   العلاقات المارشالية السيراليونية هي العلاقات الثنائية التي تجمع بين جزر مارشال وسيراليون.[1][2][3][4][5] مقارنة بين البلدين هذه مقارنة عامة ومر�...

 

كينغدوم هارتس 2 (بالإنجليزية: Kingudamu Hātsu Tsū)‏  المطور سكوير إنكس الناشر سكوير إنكس الموزع ديزني إنترأكتيف ستوديوز المخرج تتسويا نومورا المبرمج هيروشي هاراتا كينتارو ياسوي الكاتب بوب المنتج يوشينوري كيتاسي شينجي هاشيموتو الفنان تاكايوكي أوداشي الموسيقى يوكو شيمومورا سل...

 

Questa voce sull'argomento stagioni delle società calcistiche italiane è solo un abbozzo. Contribuisci a migliorarla secondo le convenzioni di Wikipedia. Segui i suggerimenti del progetto di riferimento. Voce principale: Unione Sportiva Catanzaro. Unione Sportiva CatanzaroStagione 1950-1951Sport calcio Squadra Catanzaro Allenatore Luigi Miconi Presidente Aldo Ferrara Serie C5º posto nel girone D. 1949-1950 1951-1952 Si invita a seguire il modello di voce Questa voce raccoglie le...

Government agency of Kazakhstan This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Law enforcement in Kazakhstan – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (August 2018) (Learn how and when to remove this template message)Police of KazakhstanAgency overviewFormedJune 23, 1992 (1992-06-23)Juris...

 

Southampton F.C. 1937–38 football seasonSouthampton F.C.1937–38 seasonChairmanSloane StanleyManagerTom ParkerStadiumThe DellSecond Division15thFA CupThird roundTop goalscorerLeague: Harry Osman (22)All: Harry Osman (22)Highest home attendance25,561 v Aston Villa(4 September 1937)Lowest home attendance7,870 v Bradford(2 February 1938)Average home league attendance16,592Biggest win4–0 v Fulham(18 April 1938)Biggest defeat0–5 v Chesterfield(6 September 1937)0–5 v Sheffield United(18 D...

 

United States Navy task force deployed to the Bay of Bengal during the 1971 India–Pakistan War Task Force 74 was a naval task force that has existed twice. The first Task Force 74 was a mixed Allied force of Royal Navy, Royal Australian Navy, and United States Navy ships which operated against Japanese forces from 1943 to 1945 during the Pacific campaign. The second Task Force 74 was assembled from the U.S. Navy's Seventh Fleet that was deployed to the Bay of Bengal by the Nixon administrat...

Cet article est une ébauche concernant une localité italienne et le Frioul-Vénétie Julienne. Vous pouvez partager vos connaissances en l’améliorant (comment ?) selon les recommandations des projets correspondants. Pocenia Administration Pays Italie Région Frioul-Vénétie Julienne  Province Udine  Code postal 33050 Code ISTAT 030075 Code cadastral G743 Préfixe tel. 0432 Démographie Gentilé poceniesi Population 2 619 hab. (31-12-2010[1]) Densité 114 h...

 

مصفوف مرصد أتاكاما المليمتري الكبير   المنظمة المرصد الأوروبي الجنوبي[1]،  ومؤسسة العلوم الوطنية[1]  البلد تشيلي  الاحداثيات 23°01′09″S 67°45′11″W / 23.01928°S 67.75318°W / -23.01928; -67.75318   الارتفاع 5058.7 متر  الموقع على الشبكة الموقع الرسمي  تعديل مصدري ...

 

Supporters of Paris Saint-Germain F.C. PSG supporters before the 2006 Coupe de France final against arch-rivals Marseille. Paris Saint-Germain Football Club (PSG) is the most popular football club in France and one of the most widely supported teams in the world. Famous PSG fans include Nicolas Sarkozy, Tony Parker, Fabio Quartararo, Tom Brady, Patrick Dempsey, Victoria Azarenka, Teddy Riner and DJ Snake. Lacking a big passionate fanbase, the club began offering cheaper season tickets to youn...

Minolta and Sony SLR A-mount prime lens Photographic lens Minolta AF 20mm f/2.8MakerMinolta, SonyTechnical dataTypePrimeFocal length20mmAperture (max/min)f/2.8 - f/22Close focus distance250 mmMax. magnification1/7.7Diaphragm blades7 circularConstruction10 elements in 9 groupsFeaturesApplicationNormal wide-aperture primePhysicalMax. length53 mmDiameter72 mmWeight285 gAccessoriesLens hoodbayonet, flowerHistoryIntroduction2006 SonyRetail infoMSRP679 USD Originally produc...

 

Naomichi Suzuki鈴木 直道 Gubernur Hokkaido Ke-7PetahanaMulai menjabat 23 April 2019PendahuluHarumi TakahashiPenggantiPetahanaWalikota YūbariMasa jabatan24 April 2011 – 28 Februari 2019 Informasi pribadiLahir14 Maret 1981 (umur 43)Kasukabe, Saitama,  JepangPartai politikIndependenAlma materUniversitas HoseiSitus webOfficial websiteSunting kotak info • L • B Naomichi Suzuki (鈴木 直道code: ja is deprecated , Suzuki Naomichi, Lahir, 14 Maret 1981 ...

 

United States historic placeSackets Harbor BattlefieldU.S. National Register of Historic Places Show map of New YorkShow map of the United StatesLocationCoastline and area from Sackets Harbor SW to and including Horse Island, Sackets Harbor, New YorkCoordinates43°56′43″N 76°7′59″W / 43.94528°N 76.13306°W / 43.94528; -76.13306Area260 acres (110 ha)Built1812NRHP reference No.74001247[1]Added to NRHPDecember 31, 1974 Sackets Harbor Battl...

British leisure travel group TUI Travel plcCompany typePublicTraded asLSE: TT.IndustryTransportFounded2007Defunct2014 (Merged with TUI AG)HeadquartersCrawley, England, UKKey peopleFriedrich Joussen(Chairman)Sir Michael Hodgkinson(Deputy Chairman)Peter Long(Chief Executive)ProductsPassenger transport, travel agency, accommodationRevenue£15,051 million (2013)[1]Operating income£297 million (2013)[1]Net income£63 million (2013)[1]OwnerTUI AG (56.4%)[2]Numb...

 

1989 film Mack the KnifeTheatrical release posterDirected byMenahem GolanScreenplay byMenahem GolanBased onThe Threepenny Operaby Bertolt BrechtKurt WeillProduced byStanley ChaseStarringRaúl JuliáRichard HarrisJulia MigenesRoger DaltreyJulie WaltersClive RevillErin DonovanRachel RobertsonCinematographyElemér RagályiEdited byAlain JakubowiczHenry RichardsonMusic byKurt WeillDov Seltzer (adaptation)ProductioncompanyGolan-Globus ProductionsDistributed by21st Century Film CorporationRelease d...

 

Aliansi untuk Pemulihan Perdamaian dan Anti-Terorisme atau ARPCT (bahasa Inggris: Alliance for the Restoration of Peace and Counter-Terrorism; bahasa Somali: Isbaheysiga Ladagaalanka Argagaxisadda), adalah sebuah aliansi Somalia yang diciptakan oleh berbagai panglima perang dan pebisnis. Aliansi ini terdiri dari Botan Ise Alin, Mohammed Dheere,[1] Mohamed Qanyare, Musa Sudi Yalahow, Nuur Daqle, Abdi Hasan Awale Qeybdiid, Omar Muhamoud Finnish dan lainnya. Beberapa di antaranya...

Muleshoe Curve is a curve of track used by the former Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR) near Duncansville, Pennsylvania. Part of a secondary and frequently disused route, the curve is less well known than Horseshoe Curve, located 4.34 mi (7 km) north. The curve was built in 1850s by the state of Pennsylvania as part of the New Portage Railroad. In 1857, the PRR purchased the line and promptly closed it, as the railroad already had its own line in the region. The PRR brought the line back into servi...

 

Morris West first novel (1945) Moon in My Pocket First editionAuthorMorris West as Julian MorrisLanguageEnglishPublisherAustralasian Publishing Co.Publication date1945Publication placeAustraliaMedia typePrintPages293 Moon in My Pocket is a 1945 novel by Morris West under the name Julian Morris. It was West's first novel and was written while he was in the services.[1][2] The Sydney Morning Herald later wrote The main interest of this, slight if sincere book... is West's r...