Walnut Theatre
303 Antique City Drive,
Walnut,
IA
51577
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Additional Info
Functions: Fraternal Hall
Previous Names: Happy Hour Theatre, New Dreamland Theatre, Pep Theatre, Strand Theatre
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This small theatre appears on the 1914 Sanborn, in a small one story brick building that replaced a small wooden pool room from the 1909 map. It had opened in 1913 as the 300-seat Happy Hour Theatre.
This was one of two theatres, but likely closed after a short time, as only one theatre is listed in the 1914-15 American Motion Picture Directory, and none are listed in the 1926 Yearbook of Motion Pictures. By 1932 it had been renamed Walnut Theatre, by 1935 the New Dreamland Theatre, in 1936 the Pep Theatre and in 1937 the Strand Theatre. It suffered a major fire on July 22, 1940.
It was rebuilt with 250-seats and reopened on January 10, 1941 as the Walnut Theatre once again. It was closed on May 1, 1954.
The building has been given an ugly plywood front, and serves as the Amvets post.
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Recent comments (view all 3 comments)
The historical address would have been on Central.
A history of this house and the rival theater in the old Opera house building is told on this Rootsweb page, though I think it might have at least one inaccuracy (see my longer comment on the page for the other theater, which was longest known as the Lyric.) The house at 303 Central was opened in 1913 as the Happy Hour Theatre, and continued operating off and on under that name until 1929 or 1930. By 1932 it was known as the Walnut Theatre, then became the New Dreamland Theatre in 1935. In 1936 it became the Pep Theatre, and in 1937 The Strand Theatre. During this long period it was listed in the FDY with 300 seats.
The Strand suffered a major fire on July 22, 1940 and was rebuilt, but with only 250 seats, and reopened on January 10, 1941 as the Walnut Theatre, its final name. After struggling a bit in the late 1940s and early 1950s, it closed permanently on May 1, 1954. The building was soon purchased and remodeled by Amvets, who have occupied it since.
Thanks for the history! It’s so odd that this dinky thing survived longer than the much larger opera house.