Tales from a Scenic Artist and Scholar. Part 1172 – El Reno, Oklahoma, 1923

Copyright © 2021 by Wendy Waszut-Barrett

In 1923, Thomas G. Moses delivered and installed scenery at Masonic Hall in El Dorado, Arkansas. He arrived in town on November 7 and left a few days later. Of his short visit, Moses wrote, “A few days’ work – put all my scenery up and had it paid for, which was a surprise as I expected I would have to wait for some time.” 

Moses then headed to Wichita, Kansas, stopping by El Reno, Oklahoma, on his way. Of his journey, he wrote, “Had to go across the country to El Reno on my way to Wichita. Arriving there I found the scenery all up and the ceremonial under way.  I left for Wichita the next day, wired the Madam that I was passing through Chicago on my way back to Binghamton, as I wanted her to meet me at the depot, which she did.”

Moses’ mention of “ceremonial” made me wonder if it was a Masonic scenery collection, so I started looking for a Masonic Temple in El Reno. Yep, there was one and it’s currently for sale – $60,000.  This is really a “fixer-upper” though, as the Mason’s left in the 1950s, and the space fell prey to a variety of retail stores, all of which left its mark.

The Masonic Temple in El Reno, Oklahoma

What I did find interesting, however, was that when it was constructed in 1909, the Masonic Temple was located next to an opera house – the Derry Theatre. The Derry Theatre hosted many Masonic activities, as well as many other activities.

The Masonic Temple in El Reno

Moses’ stop in El Reno was likely for the Derry Theatre. The Derry was used by many groups in 1923, including the Masons, Baptist Church and American Legion. Masons used the space for certain ceremonials and events, the Baptist church held Easter Services, and guest lecturers even spoke about the evils of the Klan. About the time Moses arrived, the American Legion was preparing for an Armistice Day ceremony at the venue. On November 11, the American Legion and the Baptiste Church would meet at the Derry Theatre in a special patriotic program to “participate in exercise appropriate to the day” (El Reno Democrat, 7 Nov 1923, page 1). Part of the evening’s entertainment included special patriotic musical by Baptist church choir.

The Derry Theatre is quite interesting all on its own. It started as a response to the fire that destroyed the old El Reno Theatre (the local opera house). On Jan. 12, 1921, the “El Reno Democrat” reported, “The new Derry Theatre offers a marked contrast to those days when El Reno people climbed the rickety stairs in the old opera house to see Andrews and other noted players, and it marks a new era in the theatrical business in El Reno…Years ago there was such a demand for a theater building in keeping with the city, that public spirited citizens united in the building of the old Reno Theatre. It was destroyed by fire two years ago and since that time Al Derry has had in mind the building of a playhouse that would be a credit to any city in the state, and his dreams were realized last night when the Derry Theatre was thrown open to the public for the first time” (page 1).

By April 1923, the Derry Theatre was not in great shape and entered mortgage foreclosure proceedings. Public notices from April 2-14 of that year announced the impending sale of all theater’s contents. The first public notice stated, “Notice is hereby given that in pursuance of an order of sale issued of the district court of Canadian county, State of Oklahoma, on the 2nd of April 1923, in an action wherein Roy Wolcott, as Bank Commissioner of the State of Oklahoma was plaintiff and Al Derry, Grace Derry and Chas. L. Engle were defendants. Along with all of the following foods to sell was “all standing, movable and shifting scenery other than curtains hung on rolls and other scenery so attached as to permanently remain in same place in the building. By Nov. 15, 1923, the “El Reno American” announced the suit to prevent the removal of moving picture show fixtures from the Derry Theatre” (page 1).

But the Derry reopened on Dec. 19, 1923, and the Derry’s were still involved in the management. On Dec. 13, 1923, “The El Reno American” reported, Derry to Open Saturday. Unless unforeseen circumstance arises, the Derry theatre will be restored to El Reno on Saturday night when Mr. and Mrs. Al Derry will open up with a combined picture show and vaudeville their new playhouse in the old armory building at the corner of Rock Island and Hayes. The new addition to the theatrical field, which will be the fourth to be put into commission in El Reno, has been fitted up with one of the largest stages in this part of the state, and Mr. Derry states that he has booked a number of high-class road shows for the coming winter. The building will have a seating capacity of 900 and will be heated with coal furnace” (page 1).

            On Dec. 19, 1923, the “El Reno Daily Democrat” announced, “New Derry Theatre Will Open Tonight” (page 1). The article continued, “The New Derry Theatre at the corner of Rock Island and Hays street will open tonight with a big feature program…The opening of the Derry offers a wide range of entertainment – spoken drama, film drama and vaudeville” (page 1).

To be continued…

Tales from a Scenic Artist and Scholar. Part 1142: Scenery for the Davenport Masonic Temple, 1922

Copyright © 2021 by Wendy Waszut-Barrett

I return to the life and times of Thomas G. Moses after a four-week break.

In 1922 Thomas G. Moses wrote, “… got a train for Davenport, Iowa. Some fine daylight ride.  Met Lester Landis and we set our model up for the Scottish Rite Bodies.  No chance to close for some time.” Work had started on the building during the spring of 1921 and was completed in the fall of 1923. The old Masonic temple that housed the Davenport Scottish Rite was located on the corner of Third and Main Streets, built in 1886.

Davenport Masonic Temple, home of the Davenport Scottish Rite until 1923.
A picture of the old Masonic Temple in the “Daily Times,” Nov. 19, 1923.

Moses was representing Sosman & Landis Studio, whereas Toomey & Volland delivered the first Scottish Rite scenery to Davenport. In fact, a Toomey & Volland advertisement in “New Age Magazine,” listed the Davenport as one of sixteen Scottish Rites theaters using Toomey & Volland scenery by 1912.

By the spring of 1922, the foundation for the new Masonic Temple was completed, just in time for the Scottish Rite Reunion. There were nearly one-hundred candidates in the Cornerstone-Stone Class, named in recognition of the progress on the new temple. Six months later, the four-day fall reunion with the Zerubbabel Class was also very large.  On Jan. 1, 1923, the membership strength of Zarephath consistory was 2,383. The building was dedicated during the fall reunion of 1923.

Moses wrote, “Made several trips to Davenport in hopes of getting the big contract of about $16,000.00, but we were too high.” It was a massive endeavor with scenery for two stages.

The main auditorium was located on the second floor. With a seating capacity of  2,700, it featured a pipe organ and motion picture booth. The main theater was not only intended for public entertainment but also Masonic ceremonial for the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite, Ancient Arabic Order of the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine and the Mystic Order of the Veiled Prophets of the Enchanted Realm (Grotto). There was also a smaller theater on the main floor, known as the Gothic Room. This secondary stage hosted ceremonials for the York Rite and Order of the Eastern Star.

Main auditorium in the Davenport Masonic Temple, 1923.
Doric Lodge room in the Davenport Masonic Temple, 1923.
Egyptian Lodge room in the Davenport Masonic Temple, 1923.

The new Masonic Temple was completed by the fall of 1923. When the building opened, the “Daily Times” announced, “Davenport’s new million-dollar Masonic temple is a monument to the faith and perseverance of a group of Davenport Masons who long ago conceived the idea of sheltering all of the local Masonic lodges and clubs in one large building. It has always been the hope of Davenport Masons that this city should eventually have one of the most beautiful temples in the state, representative of the prominent position occupied by Davenport in Iowa Masonry. More than 10 years ago progressive members of the various lodges began to study out plans whereby their ideal might be worked out, and October 1913, the first committees are said to have been named to consider the project and to report upon its possibilities. Strange enough, the earliest committees on the new temple project agreed upon the site at Seventh and Brady streets as one of the most ideal locations in the city for the new temple. Today the Masons are dedicating their new temple…The temple together with its site cost approximately $1,040,000 and this amount has been raised through subscription by the members of all the Masonic bodies of Davenport, in the form of stock in the New Masonic Temple association” (Nov. 19, 1923, page 9).

The Masonic Temple in Davenport, Iowa.

On Nov. 19, 1923, “The Daily Times” included a series of articles about the new building. Of the theater, the newspaper reported, “The new Masonic temple has the finest auditorium in the tri-cities and offers exceptional facilities for public concert work and other forms of entertainment. The auditorium is built in the amphitheater style and is illuminated by the largest indirect lighting fixture in the United States……As an auditorium devoted to music and the art of dancing, the Masonic temple will in a large measure take the place of Davenport’s lost ‘legitimate’ theater.”

From the “Daily Times,” Nov. 19, 1923.

William J. Klinck was manager for the main auditorium. Of the new theater, Klinck reported, “We have gone to a great deal of additional expense to equip the stage for practical show purposes. Of course, there are over a hundred sets of stuff for the Masonic work alone, but aside from this, we will be able to accommodate any stage attraction, no matter how large. We are not planning any theatrical attractions this season, but for next year I am trying to line up Al Jolson, the Passing Show, the Greenwich Village Follies, the Barrymores and many other high-class attractions. We will have nothing whatever to do with mediocre shows and will not even listen to any proposition that does not include the binging here of performers regarded as real stars.”

To be continued…

Tales from a Scenic Artist and Scholar. Part 705 – Masonic Temple Fire in Louisville, 1903

Part 705: Masonic Temple Fire in Louisville, 1903

In 1903, there was a fire that destroyed the Masonic Temple in Louisville, Kentucky; this was not the Scottish Rite Cathedral, but it had a theater. The Weber Bros. managed Louisville’s Masonic Theatre and the house had a seating capacity of 1,743 (Orchestra, 674, Balcony, 478 and gallery, 571). The width of the proscenium was 36 feet wide by 36 feet high. The depth from the footlights to the back wall as 43 feet and the height to the rigging loft was 72 feet. The depth under the stage was 10 feet and the height to the fly gallery was 25 feet. It was certainly a sizable space for productions, and not some little hole-in-the-wall space.

At the time, a theatre in a Masonic building was not unusual. Many nineteenth-century Masonic buildings relied on the rent collected from retail tenants who leased the first few floors of the building, with lodge rooms in the upper levels. For Masonic opera houses they used the performance space for the income, with lodge rooms tucked away in upper levels. Examples were found all over the country, including in Duluth, Minnesota. The building used by the Duluth Scottish Rite before its current home was also a Masonic Temple with public theatre. The Masons only started to encounter major after the constructed huge edifices that were only used and rented by the Fraternity. If the Masonic orders stopped renting or ceased to exist, it was almost impossible to find a new tenant and recoup the lost income. Furthermore, if the building was only occupied by only one Masonic group, it would only take a decline in membership to start the ball rolling in regard to financial problems pertaining to standard building maintenance costs or repairs.

Now, let’s look at the landscape of Masonic opera houses, theaters and halls that were listed in Julius Cahn’s Official Theatrical Guide for the 1903-1904 Season. Seventeen Masonic stages were listed as an option for touring companies. These were not the only ones, just those listed as an option by Julius Cahn.

Advertisement in Julius Cahn’s Official Theatrical Guide for the 1903-1904 Season.

They included:

Masonic Temple Theatre in Fort Wayne, Indiana

Masonic Temple Theatre in Wallace, Idaho

Masonic Hall in Sumner, Illinois

Masonic Opera House in Oskaloosa, Iowa

New Masonic Opera House in What Cheer, Iowa

Masonic Temple in Louisville, Kentucky

Masonic Opera House in Bel Air, Maryland

Masonic Theatre in Ellenville, New York

Masonic Opera House in Forestport, New York

Masonic Hall in Sag Harbor, New York

Masonic Opera House in New Bern, North Carolina

Masonic Opera House in Chillicothe, Ohio

Masonic Opera House in Ironton, Ohio

Masonic Hall in Jenkintown, Pennsylvania

New Masonic Theatre in Nashville, Tennessee

Masonic Opera House in Orange, Virginia

Masonic Temple Opera House in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island

The earliest mentions of Masonic stages that I have encountered to date were constructed during the 1820s. When you think about it, the idea was brilliant. Lodge rooms were similar as in other Masonic lodges, but it allowed a larger space for events. It is also not hard to make a leap from lodge room floor to elevated stage, especially if there is already a theater in the building complete with stock scenery. How hard would it be to recognize that an existing cave setting, palatial setting, or seascape would enhance a dramatic presentation during degree work?

Back to the Louisville Masonic Theatre fire. One account was published in the “Statesman Journal” 21 Nov. 1903, page 1. Here is the article:

“Masons Lose By Fire.

Old Temple at Louisville Totally Destroyed – Tenants Lose Heavily.

Louisville, Ky., Nov. 20. – Fire early today destroyed the old Masonic Temple, occupying half a block in the heart of the retail business district. The loss is about a quarter of a million dollars, among the largest losers being the Masonic Temple building, $125,000; Insurance, $65,000; Hopkins Theatre, $20,000; J. W. Fowler Drug, $36,000; Rodgers & Krull, jewelers, $40,000.

The fire is supposed to have started in the scenery o the stage of the theatre. The losses to the tenants will be heavier than ordinarily owning to the high insurance rate due to the construction of the building, and because it contained a theatre. There were seven acts on at the theatre this week, and the people presenting them lost their effects. The theatre is owned by Colonel John D. Hopkins, of St. Louis. The building, which was erected in 1864, is a total loss. At one time it was the principal theatre of Louisville.”

Upon a little more digging, I discovered that the building occupied half the block bounded by Fourth, Fifth, Green and Jefferson Streets. The theatre was located on the third floor. Among the losses listed above were Byck Brothers shoes, $15,000; Boston Shoe Co., $15,000; and Charles H. Smith’s Son, hatter, $15,000. From the touring production standpoint, several trained dogs and monkeys lost their lives in the fire. The estimation of totals losses ranged from $200,000 to $300,000.

The loss of the Masons remained relatively low, as they had recently dedicated a new temple at Fourth and Chestnut Streets and removed all their effects to their new home. Hmm. This article completely intrigues me on several fronts, and I am curious to look for a few answers in the Scottish Rite library next week. But there is one more thing…

The big scandal that surrounded the 1903 Masonic Temple Theatre fire was that at least five members of the Louisville fire department were engaged in looting the stores that were being burned. Among the items stolen were meerschaum pipes, shoes, theatre trunks, opera glasses, and jewelry. The box office was ransacked and the dressing rooms behind the stage were rifled through. In other areas, locked desks were broken into with axes, as firemen searched for cash and other valuable artifacts. The corrupt men belonged to two fire companies. The stolen objects were later discovered in their lockers and under their mattresses in the engine house. The search was made after witnesses who came forward made accusations and five were later charged with the actual crime. Nineteen others were charged with being complicit for refusing to give information and/or assisting the men hide the stolen items. An additional six men were dismissed, totaling eleven firemen that were let go. Unreal.

To be continued…

Tales from a Scenic Artist and Scholar. Part 317 – The Cincinnati Venue for the Chemical Paintings in 1843

 

Part 317: The Cincinnati Venue for the Chemical Paintings in 1843

Here is a description of the venue where Duncanson and Coate’s chemical paintings premiered in 1843. A Cincinnati Enquirer article describes in great detail the transformation for each visual spectacle: the Milan Cathedral, Jerusalem and the Crucifixion, the Interior of the Holy Sepulchre and Belshazzar’s Feast in 1843. This was the collaborative effort between African-Americans artist Robert S. Duncanson and the photographer Coates to create a unique form of visual spectacle. There are four descriptions will be posted tomorrow after examining the venue where the production was first presented in Cincinnati.

While researching the Cincinnati venue, however, I was surprised when I realized that the first performance actually took place in the same room where the Cincinnati Masons met. The advertised Concert Hall above the Cincinnati Post Office is also considered one of the first Masonic meeting spaces in the city.

White corner building (on right) was the first Masonic Hall (also used as a concert hall) above the post office in Cincinnati on Third Street. The second Masonic building (tan facade on right) building is depicted past the bank (building with the columns). This would be the same location as the third Masonic building too. Image from http://www.mormoninterpreter.com/where-in-cincinnati-was-the-third-edition-of-the-book-of-mormon-printed/

The two-story brick building was erected on the corner of Third Street and Bank Alley (now the corner of Third Street and Walnut).One of the men responsible for the construction of the building was Postmaster Elam Langdon. The Post Office was situated on the first floor of the building and the Masons used the second floor hall for their lodge room. The road called Bank Alley was also known to local citizens as either Post Office Alley or Masonic Alley. Interestingly, that same second-floor space was also advertised as a Concert Hall for musical performances during 1843. Newspaper advertisements for concerts, such as that by Max Bohrer, noted the 1843 venue as “the Concert Hall, over the Post Office” (Cincinnati Enquirer, 13 June 1843, page 3).

This is the same concert hall above the post office where the chemical paints were displayed in 1843. The Cincinnati Enquirer, 13 June 1843, page 3

“Masonic Review” describes the history of early Masonry in Cincinnati and the cooperation of the various Masonic bodies to construct a Masonic Hall in the city. The first committee was composed of David Brown, William Burker and Postmaster Elam Langdon, “men of executive ability” (Masonic Review and the Masonic Journal, 1892, Vol. 76, page 15). “Subscriptions and dues were paid in bricks, lumber, labor &c., and in March, 1824, the first Masonic hall built in this city was completed at a cost of $2,437.72. The hall was a frame building, and was erected on the Town Lot, now the northeast corner of Third and Walnut…It was not until 1843 that an active interest was taken to build a second building, and in 1845 plans were submitted for a new building and approved.” The Hall was enlarged during 1834 as membership dramatically increased. This was the transitional step between the first and second buildings in Cincinnati. The second building was located just down the block on Third Street from the original corner building.

The third building was located on the same spot as the second building, just down the street from the original Masonic Hall. Image from: http://www.mormoninterpreter.com/where-in-cincinnati-was-the-third-edition-of-the-book-of-mormon-printed/

The following article was in the Cincinnati Enquirer on 14 Aug 1843 and describes the premiere of the Chemical Paintings (page 3):

“Daguerre’s Grand Chemical Secret Discovered! To be exhibited at Concert Hall, over the Post Office, every evening, until further notice.”

“Robert Winter, Jr. respectfully informs his friends and the citizens of Cincinnati generally, that stimulated by the assertion of Mons. Maffy, the proprietor of Daguerre’s celebrated chemical paintings, that it was impossible for any one in this country to imitate them, he has succeeded in producing the undermentioned pictures, which he confidently places before the public for them to decide relative to the merits of his productions, and whether he has not completely nullified Mons. Maffy’s assertion, by imitating or surpassing those painted by Daguerre himself, and which have so justly gained the admiration of the patrons of the Fine Arts wherever they have been exhibited.”

Here is the “Maffy” who Winter is referring to:

The first set “chemical paintings” credited to Daguerre and managed by Mons. Maffy.Article from Commercial Advertiser and Journal (Buffalo, NY) 30 June 1842, page 2.

“Each painting covers a surface of nearly two hundred square feet of canvas, and represents two distinct pictures, which form the peculiar style of execution, the varied nature and combination of the illuminating powers employed, produces changes the most astonishing, and at the same time the most natural, in the power of the artist, machinist or optician, to effect.

Appropriate music, selected and arranged expressly for the occasion, will accompany each change; and the proprietor confidently anticipates the exhibition will form one of the most attractive, moral and pleasing entertainments, ever offered to a Cincinnati audience.”

From the National Gazette (Philadelphia) 25 Jan. 1841, page 3. Note that the venue was in New York’s Masonic Hall.

To be continued…