Avon Theatre

193 Clinton Street,
Binghamton, NY 19305

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shovelhead13746
shovelhead13746 on November 6, 2019 at 3:58 am

Clinton Street was re-numbered twice in the 1920’s, that is why the street numbers do not match up. There was only the ONE theatre building.

adamghost
adamghost on March 30, 2017 at 6:25 pm

Nice catch! And mysterious since the ad has the address as clearly different and in line with the 1929 Press clipping. Which strongly indicates there were two theaters, despite the 1934 notice having the old address.

rivest266
rivest266 on February 18, 2017 at 9:38 am

This opened as Avon on October 2nd, 1933. Grand opening ad in the photo section.

Article:

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adamghost
adamghost on February 1, 2016 at 3:52 am

It is hard to track down the immediate post-theater history of the building because 193 Clinton Street (the 227 and 231 Clinton addresses seem to be eroneous – the Jan. 1934 licensing notice for the theater still shows its address as 193 Clinton) is associated with various business, particularly the restaurant business, both during its tenure as a theater and after. There’s reference to a nightclub/restaurant operating here in 1936, and the sale of restaurant fixtures in 1941, but based on the description to the latter this does does not appear to have been in the theater portion of the building.

Local book publisher Vail-Ballou had its warehouses in this vicinity; in a major 1944 expansion they purchased several lots, including the lots (said to be a garage and service station) at 189-191 Clinton. Since these were directly across from Charles Street this appears to be the same numbering then as now, and thus probably the same as the time the theater operated. It seems probable the theater building was also swallowed up in the 1940s as part of the Vail Ballou expansion of its plant, which included much of the block up to and including 193 Clinton. That plant’s subsequent demise almost certainly gave rise to the immense parking lot that now occupies most of the north side of this block. Vail Ballou went out of business, after 112 years, in 2012.