Comments from SethG

Showing 1,526 - 1,550 of 2,147 comments

SethG
SethG commented about Happy Hour Theatre on Jul 27, 2020 at 10:03 am

These sort of contributions are useless.

SethG
SethG commented about Echo Theatre on Jul 27, 2020 at 10:00 am

This will have to be marked as demolished. The spectacular bank building is nowhere to be seen. This must be the 600 block, east side, where the dumpy one-story thing is today. Address was likely 604 or thereabouts.

SethG
SethG commented about Gem Theatre on Jul 26, 2020 at 10:38 pm

One of those names at least must be an AKA for the opera house. I didn’t see a third theater anywhere on the maps, and downtown really isn’t that large.

SethG
SethG commented about Lock One Theatre on Jul 25, 2020 at 11:53 am

1914 Sanborn shows that the original building was a one-story structure, which appears to be slightly wider than the current building. It appears that the eastern wall may have slanted slightly outward toward the rear, as the building was then along the banks of the canal, which has been filled in in this area. The 1933 map shows a large rectangular awning/marquee. 2 internal hydrants supplied with 200' of 2" hose are noted as ‘attended’, but I guess they didn’t help.

SethG
SethG commented about Lock One Theatre on Jul 25, 2020 at 11:43 am

The very blurry picture only shows a little annex on the side. The main building is just to the left of this, and has a rather bland fake old facade. 94 seems absurdly small, but appears to be correct from pictures of the auditorium. Looks like it closed around 1955, and reopened sometime after 1996 after various other uses.

SethG
SethG commented about Gem Theatre on Jul 25, 2020 at 10:47 am

Sorry, slight typo, it’s the 1925 map that shows it as a store. Not that it’s really important, but the garage door seems to have been added by 1937, when this space had become what must have been a really tiny dealership.

SethG
SethG commented about Town Hall on Jul 24, 2020 at 4:27 pm

John Fryberger of the Toledo-based Spitzer and Co. was the architect for this structure.

SethG
SethG commented about Star Theatre on Jul 24, 2020 at 1:31 pm

Added a shot of downtown in which the Star can just barely be seen.

SethG
SethG commented about Victory Theatre on Jul 24, 2020 at 1:27 pm

Added a picture of the Kerr Block, in which can be seen (on the right side) the nasty facade of what was the Rosenbush Block, later the Miami.

SethG
SethG commented about Miami Theater on Jul 24, 2020 at 1:24 pm

Added a picture of the Kerr Block in which the repellent Miami appears at right.

SethG
SethG commented about Star Theatre on Jul 24, 2020 at 12:47 pm

Stupidly neglected to get a picture of this building, which has a certain scabby charm.

SethG
SethG commented about Strand Theatre on Jul 24, 2020 at 12:42 pm

Not that I think the address is correct, but on the off chance that it fell between the 1920-1940 gap in maps, I’ve added a 2015 picture of the Fisher Block. The ground floor has been run together with half of the neighboring building, and it is a Hallmark store.

SethG
SethG commented about Victory Theatre on Jul 24, 2020 at 12:39 pm

This building later became the Miami, using the 236 address which originally belonged to the western half.

SethG
SethG commented about Star Theatre on Jul 24, 2020 at 12:37 pm

Ohio has a poor copy of the 1940 update to the 1931 Sanborn, which shows this as a store with a lodge room above.

SethG
SethG commented about Crystal Theatre on Jul 24, 2020 at 12:35 pm

Ohio has a poor copy of the 1940 update to the 1931 Sanborn, which shows this as a store.

SethG
SethG commented about Strand Theatre on Jul 23, 2020 at 8:26 pm

The Ohio library has a rather poor copy of the 1931 map, updated for 1940. No theater is shown anywhere on N Columbia. 237 is still a store.

SethG
SethG commented about Grand Theatre on Jul 23, 2020 at 8:22 pm

I’m not sure why this is described as being small. The theater was huge, or at least the structure was. It was three stories tall, fairly wide, and ran the entire depth of the lot to the alley. The auditorium and stage were about 2/3 of that depth. An elaborately curved balcony, rather like a lyre in shape, appears up to the 1940 map (when it is noted that the rear wall is cracked). There was a long, wide central hallway leading between two storefronts to what appears to be a two-story lobby. The upper two floors of the front section were variously used as a hotel, offices, apartments, and a fraternal hall.

SethG
SethG commented about Miami Theater on Jul 23, 2020 at 8:15 pm

Found a bad copy of the 1940 update of the 1931 map, and it appears that at the very least, the theater was a substantial remodel of the old building. The central wall and stair are gone, although the height of the building and the footprint are identical. Still has the addresses 234-236.

SethG
SethG commented about Miami Theater on Jul 23, 2020 at 7:00 pm

The Rosenbush Block was constructed sometime between 1901 and 1911. The 1920 map shows 236, then the western portion, as a barber shop. The central stair is gone, and the entire building seems to be using the 236 address. The map marker is several blocks too far to the west.

SethG
SethG commented about Miami Theater on Jul 23, 2020 at 6:54 pm

The Miami was not in the Kerr Block, which is 202-208 N Columbia. It was in the J.A. Rosenbush Block, which was at 234-236 W Pearl. The building still exists, with a disgusting modern facade perhaps from around 1960. It appears to perhaps be depressing apartments. The structure has all the charm of a prefab building at a Soviet mining camp.

SethG
SethG commented about Strand Theatre on Jul 23, 2020 at 6:39 pm

If the address is right, which is always a dubious proposition, then this has not been demolished. 237 was historically the southern storefront of the Fisher Block. It appears as though a building of two storefronts was constructed sometime before 1885, and the northern half of that was then unified with a new building on the corner by 1890. Trying to line up what seem to be 3-4 buildings with two fronts is a bit confusing, but 237 on the 1920 map is a grocery store one down from the corner. This building is now all one unit with an address of 239. The park seems to be where 227 and 229 were. The NRHP listing for downtown is exceptionally poor for a recent effort, and has almost no information about all but a select few structures. Most of the little information there is is very vague.

SethG
SethG commented about Lyric Theater on Jul 23, 2020 at 5:01 pm

Actually, it seems that the address should be 115. The NRHP listing dates that structure to 1924, so the organ must have been installed during construction. The building is offices. In the blurry postcard above, it was hard to tell what building had the Lyric sign on it.

SethG
SethG commented about Towne Square Cinema on Jul 23, 2020 at 3:22 pm

You didn’t give me time to get to this one! ;)

SethG
SethG commented about Towne Square Cinema on Jul 23, 2020 at 3:22 pm

Probably open long before 2009, when there was a remodel. Was called the Towne Square before 2013. The building was constructed between 1886 and 1892 as an extension of the original W.E. Miller department store next door to the west. Both buildings were extended to the rear in 1899. Still a department store on the 1914 map, and likely for many years after that.

SethG
SethG commented about Lyric Theater on Jul 23, 2020 at 11:32 am

Address given is wrong. The building is 113 S Main. It’s a bridal shop today. Facade has been modernized and changed, but generally matches the postcard. The current building does not match that on the lot on the 1914 map, which is the ‘newest’ available online.