Airdome

S. Main Street,
Hays, KS 67601

Unfavorite No one has favorited this theater yet

Additional Info

Previous Names: Southside Airdome

Nearby Theaters

Folks in Hays may have seen their first moving pictures at the Hays Opera House in 1905. And the venue hosted sporadic moving picture exhibition traveling shows. But the first full-time movie venue in Hays was located at Seventh Street and Main Street and was G.M Elwick’s Airdome that launched July 20, 1909 as a movie house with illustrated songs, a piano and movies. George H. Cox relaunched the Airdome for a second season in 1910 adding some live vaudeville to the mix.

In October of 1910, the films were moved to the G.A.R. (Grand Army of the Republic) Hall becoming the first hard top venue for movies. The success of the indoor films three days a week led to the venue being run as the Electric Theatre beginning in 1911. Meanwhile, a new Airdome was constructed on South Chestnut Street sometimes referred to as the Southside Airdome (and nicknamed The Dome). Hays' second, Southside Airdome was said to be an improvement over the first one.

The Southside Airdome operated for five seasons from 1911 to 1915 and seated far more patrons with room for 500. Cox also invited churches to use the space on Sunday mornings or evenings that weren’t programmed. The 1914 season was programmed by the Hays Picture Show Company using Universal films. HPSC added 200 seats to the pavilion which seated 700. The Airdome was discontinued in 1915 as in 1916 movies were moved year-round to the Hays New Opera House. The Southside Airdome was presumably razed not long after the 1915 season.

Contributed by dallasmovietheaters

Recent comments (view all 1 comments)

SethG
SethG on May 18, 2024 at 10:50 pm

The address would today be somewhere on S Main (Chestnut was renamed sometime after 1918). I don’t find any evidence of an airdome on the July 1911 map, but it only went as far south as Wilson (now 6th), and only shows the north side of that intersection. That is really far out of downtown though, so I suspect this was somewhere between 7th and 9th streets. Nothing on the 1918 map, but if it was dismantled in 1916, there wouldn’t be. Comparing the 1911 and 1918 maps makes it hard to see where it would have fit. Possibly the west side of Main just south of 8th, or the NE corner of Main and 7th.

The earlier airdome would have been at the corner of what was then Chestnut and Normal. The only logical place would have been the NE corner, everything else is occupied by the same buildings on the 1905 and 1911 maps.

You must login before making a comment.

New Comment

Subscribe Want to be emailed when a new comment is posted about this theater?
Just login to your account and subscribe to this theater.