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The Jamestown Alert made an exciting announcement to
the citizens of the city on this day in 1892. The plans for the citys
new opera house had arrived from the well-known Minneapolis architect,
Harry C. Carter. In 1892, most of the larger cities harbored at least
one opera house, including Minneapolis, Grand Forks, and Watertown, South
Dakota. Jamestowns residents looked forward to building their own
house to stage musical, theatrical, and artistic productions in the city.
The plans that arrived on that day also included the development of the
rest of the block on which the opera house would be situated. The Lloyd
Opera House, as it would be known, would be surrounded by office buildings,
meeting halls, and small shops; these additions to the city were predicted
to begin a building boom in the relatively young town. Well-known artists
from the Twin Cities were brought in to decorate the three-story theater,
which was equipped with a fifty-foot high ceiling, more than seven-hundred
turquoise-blue seats, red and cream marble floors, elegantly frescoed
walls, running toilets, and 450 electric lights. Electric lights were
still a sort of novelty in Jamestown at the time, and the giant chandelier
in the center of the theaters dome alone held sixty of them.
When the plans arrived in the city, the town was so excited to begin building
that the article in the Alert claimed that the work would be
rushed
to completion as fast as money and men can do it. The opera house
was completed less than seven months later, and opened for its first show
on February 6, 1893. Shakespeares drama Julius Caesar was acted
out by the Warde-James play company on that night, and the show was met
by a full house of applauding citizens. The opening was hailed as
the
most distinguished event of a public kind ever seen in Jamestown.
The Lloyd Opera House featured musicals, plays, vaudeville acts, and musicians
from around the country until 1941, when the house was remodeled into
the Grand Theater and exclusively showed motion pictures. In 1975, the
theater was torn down as part of Jamestowns Urban Renewal program,
ending the buildings 82-year run as one of the finest artistic monuments
of the city.
Sources:
Jamestown Alert, May 26, 1892: p.1.
Jamestown Alert, February 9, 1893: p. 1.
Forrest, Lois & James Smorada, Ed. Century of Stories, 1983. Fort
Seward Historical Society, Inc. (pp. 179-180)
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