State Theater
326 Houston Street,
Manhattan,
KS
66502
326 Houston Street,
Manhattan,
KS
66502
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I’ve added a Sanborn view of this theater to show the arrangement, which seems to have been fairly consistent up through the last map in 1947.
And closed in 1957
Renamed State on May 19th, 1940.
Dickinson theatre opening Tue, Sep 9, 1930 – 3 · The Manhattan Mercury (Manhattan, Kansas) · Newspapers.com
Reopened as the Dickinson theatre on September 9th, 1930
J.J. Marshall has his grand opening of the Marshall Theatre on December 6, 1909 with the 3-act play of “Girls.” It had a seating capacity of 1,100. In May of 1921, Glen W. Dickinson bought the theatre. It was converted in 1961 to a J.C. Penney’s department store.
Boxoffice of August 19, 1939, calls this house the Dickinson Theatre. It must have been renamed the State sometime between 1939 and 1941.
A document about historical resources in Manhattan, prepared for the National Register of Historic Places, says that the Marshall Theatre was Manhattan’s first purpose-built movie house, and that it was originally designed by Carl Boller. This project was undertaken in 1909, a decade before the firm Boller Brothers was formed, though Robert Boller was working in his older brother’s office as a draftsman by this time.
The list of known Boller Brothers theaters says that Boller Brothers did additional work on this theater in 1929 and 1950, but doesn’t reveal the extent of these projects.
The Riley County Historical Society says “1910 – Marshall Theatre opens downtown.” This reference is to downtown Manhattan, Ks.
The Dickinson site says, “"1920, company founder Glen W. Dickinson, Sr quit the family business –a Ford dealership in Brookfield, Missouri specializing in tractors—to purchase a small two-screen theatre in a booming agricultural college town. The Dickinson Marshall Theatre in Manhattan, Kansas was christened in November 1920 as the first of many Dickinson Theatres.”
It appears Dickinson bought the Marshall Theatre.
Dickinson Theatres says their first movie theatre opened in 1920 in Manhattan, Kansas and was the Marshall Theatre. See info here http://www.dtmovies.com/about.htm
Agape Family Church occupies the building entrance on the West side of the building. Not sure if the building has multiple tenants, but sure looks like it could.
From Manhattan a postcard view of the Marshall Theater.
Looking at the Google street view, there is a Marshall Theater building right about where 326 Houston Street is. Just a couple of doors down from 322 Houston, which is a furniture store.