Uptown Theatre

1399 Central Avenue,
Dubuque, IA 52001

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Additional Info

Previous Names: Royal Theatre, Liberty Theatre

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The Royal Theatre was opened in 1909. A Liberty Theatre advertisement first appeared in the Telegraph Herald September 3, 1917, advertising “Law Of The North” staring Shirley Mason. The address was W. 14th Street and Clay Street, later renamed Central Avenue.

The Liberty Theatre was renamed the Uptown Theatre, reopening on January 21, 1934, by R.M. Yant. As advertised, the opening movie was the Marx Brothers in “Horse Feathers”.

On July 6, 1936, the Plaza Tavern and Party Room opened in the former Uptown Theatre.

Film Daily Year Book 1936 lists the 250-seat theatre as closed.

Contributed by Ron Pierce

Recent comments (view all 3 comments)

Joe Vogel
Joe Vogel on February 26, 2023 at 1:11 am

The 1914-1915 American Motion Picture Directory lists a house called the Royal Theatre at 14th and Clay Street. Could be the same place.

SethG
SethG on September 27, 2023 at 9:39 pm

Directories list the Royal at 1397, which would be the same building. Maps all show it as 1395. The Royal was opened in 1909, sometime after the Sanborn map was issued in February. It is listed through 1913. The Liberty was likely a wartime renaming. It is listed 1918-1929, after which it became the Uptown. The building was an old two-story brick commercial building, almost certainly pre-1884 (the relevant page is missing from this map), but definitely constructed before 1891, and expanded to the rear by 1909. The 1909 map shows it as a vacant store. The building still existed in 1950, but this section of the block is now a parking lot.

Joe Vogel
Joe Vogel on September 30, 2023 at 5:44 am

We have a discrepancy in opening dates. The October 30, 1908 issue of Moving Picture World said: “A new moving picture theater opened its doors for business at the corner of Fourteenth and Clay streets. Jake Rosenthal is manager of the new enterprise.”

Generally if there’s discrepancy between a Sanborn map and a trade journal item I’m inclined to trust the map, but would MPW publish a notice of an event three or more months before it happened? Is the February 1909 date on the map itself, or just on the web page serving it? I can imagine the LOC misdating a map, as I’ve seen mistakes on that site before. It seems more likely than either Sanborn or MPW making this particular error.

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