Lone Pine Hall
138 N. Jackson Street,
Lone Pine,
CA
93545
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Additional Info
Functions: Community Center, Office Space
Previous Names: Lone Pine Theater
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Lone Pine Hall Movies was listed on Sanborn Maps 1928 at Bush Street and Jackson Street, or today 138 N. Jackson Street.
On July 15, 1929, The Three Gumm Sisters performed at the Lone Pine Theater, which would make the future Judy Garland seven years old at the time.
Film Daily Year Book 1926 lists the theatre with 200 seats. In 1931 it was joined in town by the ‘New Lone Pine’ theater, later listed in 1932 as the Roxie Theatre.
The site is currently occupied by Statham Hall, serving as city hall, community and senior center.
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The March 1, 1924 issue of Motion Picture News listed Lone Pine Hall as one of the Southern California locations at which new Simplex projection equipment had recently been installed. Both Lone Pine Hall and the New Lone Pine Theatre were mentioned in the December 6, 1930 issue of the Big Pine Citizen. The October 3, 1932 issue of the Citizen said that the mystery thriller Dr. X would play at the Lone Pine Hall Theatre on October 4th, 5th, and 6th.
A July 23, 1932 Citizen article noted that Ray Pierson had leased the Lone Pine Hall in 1930. He was still operating the house in 1932. Mentions of Pierson (sometimes with the variant spelling Pearson) as operator of the Lone Pine Theatre appear in trade journals through the 1930s and 1940s, one in the May 29, 1948 issue of Motion Picture Herald, not long after the same publication noted that Western Amusement Company was building the new house that would open later that year as the Whitney Theatre. I haven’t been able to discover if the Lone Pine continued in operation after the Whitney opened.