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EJ Phillips' New York     John Nickinson's New York
Academy of Music
14th Street between 3rd Avenue and Irving Place, Built: 1854, Demolished: 1926 http://www.musicals101.com/bwaypast.htm#Academy  History and interior http://robertdavisinc.com/academy.htm
Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Academy_of_Music_(New_York_City)   Charles Walcott appeared at the Academy of Music in 1898.

Castle Garden, Battery Park, Built: 1808, Demolished: 1940
Originally Fort Clinton, this round brick edifice was built on a small island just off Battery Park. As landfill expanded Manhattan's coastline, the island was subsumed into park. In 1824, the fort was roofed over and converted into an indoor garden. Renovated to serve as a concert venue in 1839, and was used by early minstrel troupes. Castle Garden became an opera house in 1847, and hosted Jenny Lind's New York debut in 1850. Five years later it became New York's immigrant depot, and was turned into an aquarium in 1895. Now owned by the U.S. government, it serves as a reception center for visitors to the Statue of Liberty.  http://www.musicals101.com/bwayformer.htm#Castle 
Castle Clinton
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Castle_Clinton  Originally a fort, opened as Castle Garden in 1824. John and Charlotte Nickinson appeared at Castle Garden in 1848. . In 1850 Jenny Lind sang and Lola Montez performed her tarantula dance.

Chickering Hall interior http://robertdavisinc.com/chicker.htm  437 5th Avenue and 18th Street
History http://www.nycago.org/Organs/NYC/html/ChickeringHall.html  1874-1893 with lectures by Oscar Wilde, Thomas Huxley [and George Riddle] then became retail space. 1901 sold and razed.

New York 1886
"George Riddle sent me tickets for his course of readings, the 1st on Saturday night at Chickering Hall.  Hattie went and took Mrs. Kirby.  A Midsummer Nights Dream was the subject, with [Walter] Damrosch's orchestra playing the music."

Empire Theatre
1430 Broadway, at 40th St,1893, Charles Frohman 
1430 Broadway near 40th Street, Built: 1893, Demolished: 1953, Owned by Al Hayman http://www.musicals101.com/bwaypast2.htm#Empire  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empire_Theatre_(New_York_City) 
Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide lists Al and David Hayman as managers of the Empire Theatre.

Fifth Ave. Theatre Daly's  interior    http://robertdavisinc.com/dalys.htm  Fifth Avenue @ 26th http://robertdavisinc.com/fifth.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fifth_Avenue_Theatre
1221 Broadway at 30th Street, Other names: Banvard's Museum (1867), Wood's Museum (1868), Broadway (1876), Metropolitan
Built: 1867, Demolished: 1920  http://www.musicals101.com/bwaypast1b.htm#Daly 
Charles and Isabella Walcottwere at Daly's 1899-1901.

Fifth Avenue Theatre, 27 West 28th Street (NW Corner), Also named: St. James, Madison Square, H.C. Miner's 5th Avenue Theatre, Built: 1873, Demolished: 1939?, Seats: 1,529 Note: This theatre took its name from an opera house that burned down in 1873. An 1877 renovation included a ventilation system that blew air over blocks of ice, making this the world's first air conditioned theatre. Destroyed by fire in 1891, it was rebuilt at the same location and renamed the Madison Square. Musicals: The Pirates of Penzance 1879 - US Premiere  http://www.musicals101.com/bwaypast2.htm#Fifth 

There were at least four theatres named the Fifth Avenue Theatre http://robertdavisinc.com/fifth2.htm

Grand Opera House interior http://robertdavisinc.com/grandop.htm
8th Ave & W 23rd St NY NY  Built by Samuel Pike of Cincinnati, who gave EJP a dress worn at a reception for the Prince of Wales in 1861. William Davidge was the Stage Manager in 1869.
1894 Lady Windermere's Fan with Charles Frohman.  Isabella Walcottappeared here under Augustin Daly in "Under the Gaslight" in 1874.

Harlem Opera House
207 West 125th St. opened 1889, Oscar Hammerstein  http://www.harlemoperatheater.org/ 

Hammerstein's Harlem Opera House, week of Jan. 24, 1895

Miss Olga Nethersole in Camille

Hammerstein, Oscar Andrew, The Hammersteins: A musical theatre family, Black Dog & Leventhal Publications, 2010

Hoyt's Theater Sept. 11, 1895   Today it was rumoured, and I heard it was announced in some of yesterday's papers - that we open on the 19th in Buffalo, NY for three nights and Saturday matinee, and return to open on the 23rd at Hoyt's [Madison Square] Theatre for a run.  Mr. Chas Frohman is attending rehearsals, is very pleasant and seems to be well pleased with the work of the company.  

The Madison Square Theatre was the scene of important developments in stage technology, theatre design, and theatrical tour management. For about half its history it had other names including the Fifth Avenue Theatre, Daly’s Fifth Avenue Theatre, Hoyt’s Madison Square Theatre, and Hoyt’s Theatre. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madison_Square_Theatre

Hoyt's Theatre program week commencing Nov. 4, 1895

Gay Parisians

Laura Keene's Theatre http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laura_Keene  Keene (1826-1873) "the first powerful female [theater] manager in New York" but most famous for appearing, with her company at Ford's Theatre in Washington DC  in Our American Cousin the night Lincoln was assassinated. Charles Peters, Eliza Nickinson's husband, was the original Binney in Our American Cousin. In 1858. Charles Walcottbecame a leading man in 1862 and Isabella Nickinson Walcottwas a protégé of Laura Keene.  John Nickinson and Isabella appeared as Havresack and Melanie in May 1862.  Owen and Virginia Nickinson Marlowe were also in the company,.  There was a benefit for Owen Marlowe in 1871.

Lyceum Theatre  
west side of Fourth Avenue between 23rd and 24th Streets. 
Lyceum (Old), 312-316 Fourth Avenue (North of 24th Street), Built: 1885, Demolished: 1902 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyceum_Theatre_(Broadway)

History: The first NY theatre to be lighted entirely by electricity. http://www.musicals101.com/bwaypast3b.htm#Lyceum   Managed by Daniel Frohman according to Julius Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide.
Charles and Isabella Walcottappeared at the Lyceum Theatre 1887-1899.  Virginia Nickinson Marlowe and Isabella Nickinson Walcottappeared there in 1892.


Madison Square Theatre  interior http://robertdavisinc.com/madison.htm 
Wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madison_Square_Theatre  Augustin Daly Era (1869-1873) Steele MacKaye and Rev Dr. George and Marshall Mallory Eras (1879-1885) AM Palmer Era (1885-1891) Charles H Hoyt- Frank McKee- Walter N. Lawrence Era (1894-1908) 
Charles Walcott was a member of the Madison Square Theatre Company 1884-1885.  EJ Phillips was engaged by AM Palmer for the Madison Square Company 1885-1891.

Madison Square Theatre program 1885
Madison Square Theatre floor plan

Stanford White's Madison Square Garden Theatre 

1890 1892 program, AM Palmer 
NE corner of Madison Square Garden, Madison Avenue at 27th Street, Built: 1890, Demolished: 1925, Seats: 1,200, Architects: McKim, Mead and White, Owners/Managers: Albert M. Palmer (1890-1896), Charles Frohman (1896-1915)
History: Part of the Madison Square Garden complex, this theatre booked plays, operas and musicals, becoming a favorite with fashionable audiences of the 1890s. Architect Stanford White was murdered while attending a 1906 performance in the Madison's Garden Roof summer theatre.  http://www.musicals101.com/bwaypast3.htm#Garden 
Wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madison_Square_Garden#Previous_Gardens torn down in 1925.  Site of the 1892  Actors Fund Fair

Niblo's Garden Interior http://robertdavisinc.com/niblos.htm Charlotte Nickinson performed here, as did John Nickinson in 1844, 1846 and 1850
Wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niblo%27s_Garden Broadway near Prince Street Established 1823, Niblo's Theatre built 1834.  Destroyed by fire  1846 and rebuilt 1849. 1872 again destroyed by fire and rebuilt by department store magnet AT Stewart. Demolished 1895.
Niblo's Garden: New York Entertainment Center
http://theboweryboys.blogspot.com/2010/10/niblos-garden-19th-century.html history, images and podcast.
William Niblo is buried at Greenwood Cemetery
http://www.green-wood.com/event/a-night-at-niblos-garden/

Olympic Theatre
444 Broadway, between Howard and Grande, John Nickinson  at 1838-1850. Charlotte Nickinson made her debut here in 1846, aged 14.
Olympic (1st), 422 Broadway (between Howard & Grand Streets), Later Name: Mitchell's Olympic, Built: 1837, Closed abruptly in 1850. Burned down: 1854
History: Modeled after the London Olympic, eventual owner William Mitchell turned this into one of the most popular theatres in Manhattan. It was converted into retail space in 1852, and burned down two years later.  http://www.musicals101.com/bwaypast4.htm  Olympic Theatre Internet Broadway DataBase 
http://ibdb.com/venue.php?id=1316
Victorian Burlesque http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victorian_burlesque

Palmer's Theatre 
Broadway & 30th, later (1891) Hoyt's Theatre, Union Square Theatre, Wallacks' Theatre (third) Broadway and Thirtieth Street  (just south of Greeley Square)

Standard Theatre interior http://robertdavisinc.com/standard.htm
April 1894
Last night he [Walter Dolman] was called to a rehearsal at Standard Theatre.  6th Avenue between 32nd and 33rd Streets.

Tony Pastors Theatre 
Manhattan walking tour map
"A little playhouse in the Tammany Hall Building, on the north side of 14th Street, near Third Avenue.  The attractions are invariably of the variety order." (Kings NYC)   

Tony Pastor, the vaudevillian, was a living summation of nineteenth-century urban entertainment. An Italian born in 1834 (or thereabouts), the son of a grocer, Pastor was an uneducated urchin who sang at temperance meetings, played tambourine in a minstrel company at Barnum's Museum on lower Broadway in 1847, and knocked around through half a dozen circuses in the 1850s, working as a singer, clown, acrobat, tumbler, dancer, and horseback rider, often all in a single show. In the early years of the Civil War, Pastor began a career as a balladeer in "concert saloons," descendants of the English music hall where the acts were often flimsy excuses for the alcohol, and the "waitress girls" considered the serving of drinks the beginning rather than the end of their job. Pastor became a beloved figure, famed for a stock of 1,500 tunes, and for his good-humored ribaldry. He sang about soused Irishmen and farcical Negroes and avenging wives and long-suffering husbands. James Traub, The Devil's Playground : A Century of Pleasure and Profit in Times Square, 2004 http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/product-description/0375507884/103-8920797-5029402?_encoding=UTF8&n=283155 

Tony Pastor Collection, Humanities Research Collection, Univ. of Texas Austin  http://research.hrc.utexas.edu:8080/hrcxtf/view?docId=ead/00106.xml  [1837-1908]

A letter from Albert, aged 14 to his mother mentions going to Tony Pastor's Theater.

Union Square Theatre  interior http://robertdavisinc.com/unionsq.htm   http://www.josephhaworth.com/union_square_theatre.htm  
Broadway and Fourth Avenue, Built: 1870, Demolished: 1936, Owners: Sheridan Shook, Albert Palmer (1872-1883), Keith and Albee (1873-1914).  History: Built for variety, the Union Square switched to legit bookings in 1872. In 1883, Keith and Albee added it to their growing vaudeville circuit -- the Four Cohans made their Manhattan debut on the opening bill. A movie house from 1914 on.  http://www.musicals101.com/bwaypast6.htm#Union 

Washington DC, Jan 6, 1893  [Ramsey Morris] hints of being established permanently in a New York Theatre should be a hit in New York we shall remain for a longer period than three weeks.  I am afraid though that the Union Square is not the right theatre for us - too far downtown now. 

New York, Mar 24, 1893 In today's Herald you will see an article stating that B.F. Keith of Boston will take charge of the Union Square Theatre on April 8th.  That is the end of our present engagement, but Mr. Keith & Mr. [Ramsey] Morris are in negotiation to continue Joseph for an indefinite run.  Whether their efforts will be successful remains to be seen.  I hope they will be. 

Wallacks  interior  http://robertdavisinc.com/wallacks.htm
Manhattan walking tour map
 
Third Wallacks later Palmer's Theater
Wallack's (1st), Broadway and Broome Street (SW corner), Built: 1850, Demolished: 1869, History: Built by actor John Brougham, who called it the Lyceum. Actor-manager James W. Wallack took over the house in 1852 and renamed it for himself. After Wallack left to manage his new 13th Street theatre (see below), the theatre underwent several changes of name and ownership. http://www.musicals101.com/bwaypast6.htm#Wallack's1 

Wallack's (2nd), Broadway at 13th Street, Later named: Germania, Star, Built: 1861, Demolished: 1901  Note: This was the second theatre to bear the name of actor-manager James W. Wallack. After Wallack's death, his son Lester managed the theatre until 1881. Later known as the Germania and the Star, it housed all sorts of productions until it was demolished to make room for a skyscraper. http://www.musicals101.com/bwaypast6.htm#Wallack's 

Lost Wallacks 1861 Theater, Daytonian in Manhattan http://daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.com/2012/09/the-lost-1861-wallacks-theatre-broadway.html 

James W. Wallack, Sr. lived only three years after opening his theatre, and upon his death in 1864 John Lester Wallack took over as sole proprietor and manager--as well as leading actor.  In his 1919 book “A History of the Theatre in America” Arthur Hornblow remembered the dazzling seasons here.  “In this new Wallack’s, for more than twenty years the most famous playhouse in America, some of the greatest triumphs connected with the name of Wallack were achieved.  For the lavishness of its productions and the brilliancy of its casts, this theatre has never been equaled in this country.”

LESTER WALLACK'S THEATRE Lester Wallack moved into his up-town theatre at the northeast corner of Thirtieth Street in February, 1881, but the building was not ready for opening until January 4, 1882. The exterior of the building has never been completely finished. Here Wallack had an excellent stock company as before; but the house never became so famous or so popular as the old Thirteenth Street theatre, perhaps, because a new generation of theatre-goers had grown up and the actor-manager was getting old. He retired from active management, and the house opened as Palmer's Theatre on October 8, 1888, to become and remain Wallack's once more on December 7, 1896. Jenkins, Stephen, The Greatest Street in the World: The Story of Broadway, 1911  http://www.bklyn-genealogy-info.com/Manhattan/Broadway/Union.html  

Owen Marlowe [Virginia Nickinson's husband] and Mrs. Charles Walcott[Isabella Nickinson] were members of Wallack's Theatre Company

Woods Museum and Theatre, George Wood 514 Broadway, later site of Daly's theatre New York Songlines West 30th St and Broadway http://www.nysonglines.com/broadway.htm
George Wood obituary 1886 May 18 https://www.newspapers.com/clip/10034184/george_wood_theatrical18_may_1886_ny/   First managed the Old Bowery Theater inNnew York in 1850-51, then settled in Cincinnati and built Wood's Theatre there at Sixth and Vine. Married Eliza Logan in 1859 [who died in 1872] moving to St. Lous, where he also built a theatre named after himself. He returned to New York in  1864 and leased the New York Theatre, originally Brougham's Lyceum and the first Wallack's Theatre, running it until April 1, 1867. When Henry Wood retired from the management of Minstreal Hall, 514 Broadway, Wood opened it Jan 15 1866 with "The Balloon wedding".  In 1868 he entered into an agreement with PT Barnum. His second wife was Henrietta Grainger, a young Australian actress who was a member of his company.  His second wife was a chorus singer in Duff's Mikado company until Wood's "precarious condition [Bright's disease] demanded her constant attentions."  He was survived by his wife and three young children, and was buried at Greenwood Cemetery with his first wife and a child who had predeceased him, after a service at the Church of the Transfiguration.  EJ Phillips frequently mentions visiting Mrs.Wood and the boys in New York and Philadelphia where they went to school at Girard.

Barnum's Museum burned on March 2 1868 and he never owned or operated a museum of his own again, but he did work with George Wood's Museum which housed the remainder of his collection, for which Wood paid 3% of the gross receipts to Barnum.  Weird and Wonderful The Dime Museum in America 1997 https://books.google.com/books?id=env9TrQmu7oC&dq=%22george+wood%22+barnum&source=gbs_navlinks_s

Brooklyn
Brooklyn Theatr
e Oct 1886  The Brooklyn Theatre at Washington and Johnson Streets had burned in  1876 during a performance of The Two Orphans with Kate Claxton and Maude Harrison.  Another theater was built on the site in  1879 and razed 11 years later [c1890) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brooklyn_Theater_Fire  accessed Jan 22 2011.  Was this that theater?

Section IV Entertainment including theaters and the Crystal Palace, http://legacy.www.nypl.org/research/chss/spe/art/print/exhibits/movingup/labeliv.htm
Section VIII Including Broadway and hotels and businesses http://legacy.www.nypl.org/research/chss/spe/art/print/exhibits/movingup/labeviii.htm
New York Public Library, R. Waddell, Moving Uptown: Nineteenth Century Views of Manhattan, 1998

The heart of the [Museum of the City of New York] Theater holdings is the John Golden Archive, which consists of approximately 40,000 folders, organized by production, personality and theater building. This archive preserves a virtually complete chronology of the theater in New York City from the late eighteenth century to the present. The folders contain such materials as photographs, contracts, correspondence, playbills, manuscripts, advertising materials, reviews, obituaries, clippings, sheet music, autographs, souvenir programs, and prompt books with marginalia on blocking and performance. The photographic holdings of the Theater Collection provide a visual chronicle of New York theater from cartes-de-visite of the 1860s through production stills of the 1990s.  http://www.eoneill.com/mcny/collection.htm  1220-1227 Fifth Avenue from East 103rd to 104th Streets, across from Central Park

Atlanta Georgia Julius Cahn's 1897 Guide lists the Grand Opera House and Lyceum Theatres. 

Baltimore Cahn's 1897 Guide lists the Academy of Music, Ford's Grand Opera House, Holliday Street Theatre, Kernan's Monumental Theatre and Lyceum Theatre. 

Fords Grand Opera House https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ford%27s_Grand_Opera_House  1891 Saints and Sinners  West Fayette St between West Howard and Eutaw Opened 1871. Closed 1964.  Owner John T Ford also owned Ford's Theatre in Washington DC.

Lyceum Theatre 1894 Olga Nethersole  Built by John Albaugh in 1890. Albaugh also owned Albaugh's Grand Opera House and the National Theatre in Washington DC, and was married to Maggie Mitchell's sister. Fifth Years in Theatrical Management 1912 https://books.google.com/books?id=ODEzAQAAMAAJ&dq=baltimore+john+albaugh+lyceum+theatre&source=gbs_navlinks_s

Binghamton
Stone's Opera House built 1891 http://nyslandmarks.com/treasures/09jan.htm
Joseph at Stone's Opera House, Binghamton New York, Nov. 21, 1892   

Boston
Boston Museum
 On Tremont Street (at 18 and 28), between Court and School Street, the oldest theatre [existing in 1883] in Boston opened in 1841, and its stock company gave their first performance in 1843. "The subterfuge of housing a theatre in a museum was not uncommon, for it allowed many otherwise puritanical people to enjoy play-going".  The theatre closed in 1893.  (But EJ Phillips was playing at a theatre of the same name in 1895.  See letter of March 13th.) [Oxford &  King's Dictionary of Boston (1883).  Edwin Booth had made his first stage appearance there (1849) and in 1878 HMS Pinafore had its first American presentation.  Willie Seymour joined the Museum as stage manager in 1879, remaining for ten years [Hornblow, Theatre in America  By 1897 Charles Frohman was manager of the Boston Museum.
Boston Museum and Boston Theatre histories, Boston Athenaeum http://www.bostonathenaeum.org/node/224

Boston, Sept. 15, 1887 Went to Boston Museum to see Dominie's Daughter yesterday afternoon  Detroit Mar 13, 1895 My address next week is Boston  Museum
Now an office building, with ground floor Phillip's Market and Papyrus card and stationery store. When was this building built?

These three theaters were all in the same block
Boston Theatre
was at 539 Washington Street, between West and Essex Street, Boston.  Built in 1854, seated 3,000. Kings Boston   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boston_Theatre has images
Now the Boston Opera House  http://www.bostonathenaeum.org/node/224


Boston, May 27, 1888 We remain here two weeks longer playing Jim [the Penman]  It was decided last Thursday when A.M.P[almer] came to attend the Actors Fund benefit at the Boston Theatre

Bijou Theatre
The Union Square Theatre company seems to have appeared here.  The Boston Athenaeum collection of theatre playbills has been helpful in tracking EJ Phillips in the years before we have letters for. 
545 Washington St.  http://cinematreasures.org/theater/11085/   Now an office building, next door to the Boston Opera House.  Part of Emerson's Paramount Theater?

Bowdoin Square Theatre The company stayed at the Hotel Bowdoin (which was connected with this theatre) in 1895 while playing at the Boston Museum.

Globe Theatre 1893 Joseph  364 Washington St. at State Street

Park Theatre "A small, compact, and elegant playhouse"  (619-621 Washington Street near the corner of Boylston)
"The Union square and the Madison square companies of New York  have played long engagements."  Built in 1879, seated 1184.  Kings Boston  Park Theatre History,  619-621 Washington St. Lotta Crabtree built. 1879- 1990 demolished. Boston Athenaeum  http://www.bostonathenaeum.org/node/224
Boston, May 15, 1890 I have been to witness two performances at Park Theatre.  The first was Fanny Davenport in La Tosca and last Monday night -- Frederick Warde in Belphigor the Mountebank.  You see I am not much given to running around much at nights. 


Now a CVS and the Cathay Bank. The next block of Washington has the China Trade and the 1850 Liberty Tree Buildings [and lead to the last remnants of the Combat Zone.]

Tremont Theatre  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tremont_Theatre,_Boston_(1889) 1890, 1891 Madison Square Theatre 1889-1940s, building demolished 1983. The theater was owned by John Schoeffel, husband of Agnes Booth Schoeffel
176 Tremont St, now the Lowe's Boston Common Theater.
The original Tremont Theater (1827-1843 ) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tremont_Theatre,_Boston  was purchased by the Baptists and became the Tremont Temple  in 1843 and remains so today https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tremont_Temple EJ Phillips almost certainly walked past it.

Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide lists 12 Boston theaters.

Buffalo
Star Theatre Sept.- Oct. 1890
New York Times Dec 18 1888 Buffalo's New Theatre:  The well equipped house which Mr. Palmer's Company is to open Christmas week  The first floor contains nearly 700 luxurious folding seats and the balcony nearly 500 of the Wallack folding drop arm chairs. The opening play was Partners https://www.nytimes.com/1888/12/18/archives/buffalos-new-theatre-the-wellequipped-house-which-mr-palmers.html

Academy of Music burned Sept 2 1895  erected 1852 by Henry T Meech [died 1870]  leased 1875-76 to Abbey & Schoeffel. https://www.nytimes.com/1895/09/02/archives/a-great-sunday-fire-in-buffalo-the-historic-old-academy-of-music.html
Main & Seneca Streets, photos http://buffaloah.com/h/acad/index.html

Julius Cahn's 1897 Guide lists the Star and Lyceum Theatres. 

Charleston South Carolina Julius Cahn's 1897 Guide lists the Academy of Music. 

Charlotte North Carolina  Cahn's 1897 Guide lists the Opera House. 

Chicago
Chicago's first theatre dates from 1847 Cambridge

Hooleys Theater Richard Hooley (1822-1893) Hooley's Theatre first opened in 1872. 149 Randolph St., between Clark and LaSalle after the Chicago Fire  A book published about 1899, "The Story of a Theatre" by Lyman B. Glover, printed by R. R. Donnelley and Sons Company at The Lakeside Press, Chicago, Illinois, that tells about his theater.  NY Times obituary Sept 9, 1893 https://www.newspapers.com/clip/1091039/hooley_richard_m_died_ny_times_9_sep/  The first Hooleys Opera House opened on Clark St in 1867.

Richard Hooley photograph http://www.ancientfaces.com/research/photo/366248  http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=5145883  Richard Martin Hooley

The reconstruction of Chicago's Hooley's Theater in 1882 was the first commission to generate praise for Louis Henry Sullivan independent of Adler. Louis Henry Sullivan was, said one commentator, "the master spirit directing and shaping the creation" (1) of the new interior. By the time McVicker's Theater was remodeled in 1885, Louis Henry Sullivan 's work was "the best" of its kind in Chicago, according to one critic, "superior to anything heretofore seen in any public building in this country", in the eyes of another. Famous Architects  http://architect.architecture.sk/louis-henry-sullivan-architect/louis-henry-sullivan-architect.php 

McVicker's Theatre,  The First McVicker's Theatre was built in 1857 and destroyed in the great fire. Rebuilt in 1872 and remodelled in 1885, it burnt again Aug 26, 1890, during the run of the war play Shenandoah. Rebuilt, it opened again in March 1891 with the  [Joseph] Jefferson -Florence company of The Rivals. The theater closed in 1984 and was torn down in 1985, a sad and inglorious end for a theater which, in an earlier life, hosted Sarah Bernhardt's first Chicago stage appearance a century earlier. http://www.bergsengs.com/McVickers-Theatre.html

James H. McVicker (1822-1896). McVicker was a Scotsman and a comedian. On May 2, 1848, he appeared as the "First Low Comedian" in a theater owned by James B. Rice. Rice would later become Mayor of Chicago. McVicker worked in France and England and owned a stock company of actors in the U.S.  He is best known, however, by the theaters he owned. In 1857, he built a theater on Madison St. west of State. It cost $85,000 and was completely equipped including a drop curtain that depicted the railroad bridge connecting Rock Island with Davenport.  The curtain was considered by many a work of art. From opening night, until its destruction in the Great Fire of 1871, the stage was visited by the finest actors and the best musicians. His second theater was built in 1871 and was destroyed in the Great Fire nine weeks after opening night. After the fire, he spent $200,000 to build the Theater Ludlow. Sarah Bernhardt on her first American tour appeared at McVicker's Theater. In 1862, John Wilkes Booth achieved personal success in Richard III. His [McVickers'] daughter, Mary, was a popular performer starting at the age of ten. When she was 18, she married Edwin Booth the brother of the assassin. She died in 1881, childless, and 33 years of age. At the death of  Lincoln, the City chose a Committee of One Hundred to be at the funeral in Springfield. James McVicker was one of the men chosen to represent the City.   http://chicagoscots.net/Name%20List/Name%20List%20M.htm

McVicker's Theatre, Chicago http://www.cinematreasures.org/theater/1798/  25 W. Madison Street 60602  James H. McVicker (1822-96)
Wikipedia 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McVicker's_Theater
McVicker's New Theatre, Observanda, 1891 https://archive.org/details/mcvickersobserva00chic

JH Stoddart  writes in his Recollections of a Player that in 1888 the Company "began our usual summer tour, which opened at the Chicago Opera House, the first time the company had ever played in that theater. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicago_Opera_House  Built 1884-1885 West Washington Ave & North Clark St
Chicago Theaters of Chicago  http://chicagology.com/theatres/

Denver  Aug. 26, 1890 See by paper this Morning that McVickers Theatre, Chicago, burnt down last night.  We are to play at Hooleys.

New York, May 12, 1892 I shall stop over at the Sherman House in Chicago as we play at Hooley's Theatre House in the same block.  It seems a long journey to take for one week's work but so it is. 

Chicago, Oct. 19, 1893  We have very strong attractions against us but so far we have done very well.  The theatre we play in is called the Schiller.  It is a new theatre and very comfortable in regard to dressing rooms &c.

Schiller Theatre 1892-1960 [demolished] http://www.cinematour.com/theatres_us.php?province=IL&page=4  64 W. Randolph Street Chicago, IL 60601  A large portion of the facade featuring portraits of famous Germans was saved and was later incorporated into the entranceway of the Second City Theater on North Wells Street.   http://cinematreasures.org/theater/1016/  and other places in Chicago  http://chicago-architecture-jyoti.blogspot.com/2011/09/lincoln-park-apartment-1945-n-lincoln.html

New York, Nov. 18, 1895 Well I was not asked to go to London, but to Chicago for a Summer Season, after this Season is over, which will not be for some time yet.  The Summer Season will be for from ten to sixteen weeks at Hooley's Theatre, possibly beginning in June.  So I accepted and think that will be better than going to London and perhaps getting lost in the fog.   

Chicago Theatres  Hooleys, Richard Hooley; McVickers  JH McVicker  
Story of a Theatre, Lyman B. Glover, 1898  http://www.archive.org/details/storyoftheatre00glov   Hooleys and other Chicago Theaters

Cincinnati
Pike's Opera House opened in Cincinnati in Feb. 1859 http://books.google.com/books?id=eJxABLtxX60C&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=snippet&q=samuel%20pike&f=false

John Nickinson was stage manager at Pike's Opera House from the early 1863 until his death in 1864. 

Washington DC Jan 8, 1893 I play in Pike's Opera House, Cin'ti [Cincinnati] and think I shall stop at the Burnett House as it is the nearest to theatre.

Pike's Opera House, Cincinnati, Great Fire of 1866, Harper's Weekly April 14, 1866 http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~ohhamilt/news/1866april14.html  Fourth and Vine Streets  Pike's Opera House also burned in 1903

FRANK LESLIE'S ILLUSTRATED New York and dated: April 14, 1866. This 16 page newspaper contains prints and text concerning the latest news of the day. Some of the prints and news in this issue include: "Burning of Pike's Opera House, Cincinnati" shows the fire company--with fire engines--in action.  http://www.rarenewspapers.com/new.asp

Nov. 15, 1893 Detroit  In Cincinnati next week we play at the "Grand Opera House" so you can send [letters] there. 
Grand Opera House http://www.cincinnativiews.net/entertainment.htm  The Grand Opera House was first built in 1859 on Vine St. at Opera Place, it burned down in 1901 ... Across the street from the Grand was the Lyric Theater. Located at 508 Vine St. it opened in 1906.  photograph

Pike's Opera House history http://www.diggingcincinnati.com/2013/08/history-of-se-corner-of-fourth-and-vine.html

Pike's Opera House was still listed in the 1897 Cahn's Theatrical Guide, with the Grand Opera House and eight other theaters in Cincinnati. 

Cleveland Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide lists the Euclid Avenue Opera House, Cleveland Theatre and Lyceum Theatre.

Denver 
Los Angeles, Sept. 19, 1888  Direct your letters to Theatre.  A.M. Palmer, Co.  At Denver, "Tabor Opera House". 

Tabor Opera House, Denver, opened 1881 http://www.taboroperahouse.net/   http://www.babydoe.org/houses.htm  16th and Curtis 

The Westin Hotel is located next to the Tabor Center, a multi-use office, hotel and shopping complex. The Tabor Center is built on the site of the former Tabor Opera House named for Horace Tabor, Colorado's silver mining King. Not only famous for his wealth, Horace Tabor's life became the basis for the opera "The Ballad of Baby Doe," detailing the love triangle of him, his wife August and his true love, Baby Doe. http://usinfo.state.gov/topical/econ/group8/summit97/sites.htm

Baby Doe Tabor http://www.babydoetabor.com/ 

Denver  Aug. 26, 1890  There is a new large theatre here called "The Broadway Theatre". Opera is being played there, this being the second week.  Lohengrin was the Opera last night.
Aug. 29, 1890 Our business is good notwithstanding we have at the new Broadway Theatre and Comic Opera at another house against us. 

1756 Broadway St.

Detroit 1892 1893  1895  1896 Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide lists the Detroit Opera House, Whitney Grand, Lyceum Theatre, Capital Square and Campbell's Empire Theatre. 

Harrisburg Pennsylvania 1897  Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide lists the Grand Opera House

Hartford Connecticut 1894 Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide lists Parson Theatre and the Hartford Opera House.

Indianapolis
Metropolitan 1867-1868
Academy of Music 1868

Metropolitan Hall: Indianapolis' First Theater http://historicindianapolis.com/the-metropolitan-indianapolis-first-theater/

Kansas City
The NEW COATES
 Coates Opera House on Diagonal Corner 
Best Attractions Only
Kansas City, Mo  Septr 29th 1896 

Coates House and Coates Opera House, Kansas City Public Library http://www.kclibrary.org/?q=blog/week-Kansas-city-history/worst-fire-kansas-city-history

Knoxville Tennessee Cahn's 1897 Theatrical guide lists Staub's Opera house, Gay and Cumberland Streets
Peter Staub and theater in Knoxville 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Staub

London Ontario Cahn's 1897 Theatrical guide lists the Grand Opera House.

Los Angeles
Los Angeles, Sept. 19, 1888  The theatre here is very pretty, as far as the Auditorium goes, but the dressing rooms are very uncomfortable. 

Aug 12, 1890 The dressing rooms at theatre were very hot last night, but that was due to the gas and want of proper ventilation.  Our house was crowded and everything passed off nicely. 

Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide lists the Los Angeles Theater, Orpheum and the Burbank. 

Louisville Kentucky
Barney Macauley founded Macauley's Theatre in 1873, although his younger brother John T. Macauley became the theatre's proprietor in1879. http://digital.library.louisville.edu/cdm/singleitem/collection/macauley/id/211

Macauley's Theatte  1873-1925  In 1873 when it was built on West Walnut Street, (now Muhammad Ali Boulevard) between Third Street and Fourth Street, the New Orleans Republican proclaimed Macauley’s Theatre as “one of the finest and most beautiful theatres in the Western country. It is fitted up with all the modern improvements. The ceilings are frescoed in deep rich colors.” Macauley's Theatre Collection, University of Louisville http://digital.library.louisville.edu/cdm/description/collection/macauley/

Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macauley%27s_Theatre  Macauley's lobby was decorated with pictures of the famous actors and actresses who had performed there, many with personal inscriptions and dedications. When the theatre closed, these were donated to the University of Louisville, which still includes them in their archives. Accessed 2018 April 11


Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide lists Macauley's Theatre, Amphitheatre Auditorium, Avenue Theatre, Grand Opera House and Temple Theatre.

Madison Wisconsin Fuller Opera House

Middletown New York Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide lists the Casino Theatre.  The Argus printed theatre programs.

Milwaukee
1893 "I am comfortably located in the above hotel [Davidson] and it is adjoining the theatre. Everything is new, clean and elegant."

Davidson Theater  http://www.astortheater.org/history14.html

Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide lists the Davidson Theatre and four others -- Academy of Music, Alhambra, Bijou Opera House and Pabst Theatre. 

Montreal
Theatre Royal 1825-1844 John Nickinson Marché Bonsecours.
Oct 1894 New York "
We play in the "Academy of Music" in Montreal I believe"
Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide lists Academy of Music, Queen's Theatre, Theatre Royale and Theatre Francais. 

New Haven: Grand Opera House and Hyperion Theatre listed in Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide.

New London Lyceum Theatre

New Orleans
James H. Caldwell established a first-rate English-speaking theatre in New Orleans by 1819.  Cambridge

Ben DeBar (1812-1877) had been "stage manager for Noah Ludlow and Sol Smith at the St. Charles Theatre in New Orleans, when they retired in 1843 he assumed management of their  New Orleans  and St. Louis  theatres. 
St. Charles Theatre
, New Orleans, LA http://www.saengeramusements.com/theatres/nawlins/stcharle/stcharle.htm  100 St. Charles Ave.

EJ Phillips was for some years a member of the famous stock company Ben DeBar [1821-1877 HAS] at St. Louis. She went from St. Louis  to New Orleans to play old lady parts at the Varieties Theatre, the leading stock theatre at New Orleans, under the management of Lawrence Barrett.(1838-1891).  

Varieties Theatre Lawrence Barrett 1870s  Gravier St between Baronne and Carondelet Sts New Orleans opened 1849 burned 1853 rebuilt, managed by Dion Boucicault burned again 1870 rebuilt 1872 on Canal St 1849-1872 Lawrence Barrett 1871-1875
New Varieties Theatre 921 Canal St. 1897 Gay Parisians

Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide lists the Academy of Music (managed by CB Jefferson and Klaw and Erlanger), St. Charles Theatre (also managed by Jefferson, Klaw and Erlanger),  Grand Opera House and French Opera house 

Newark NJ Cahn's 1897 Theatrical guide lists the Newark and Jacob's Theatres, Waldman's Opera House.

Newport Rhode Island  Cahn's 1897 Theatrical guide lists the Opera house.

Omaha  Cahn's 1897 Theatrical guide lists The Creighton and Boyd's New Theatre

Philadelphia
Arch Street Theatre 
Opened in 1828 as a rival to the Chestnut and Walnut Street Theatres in Philadelphia.  The theatre's heyday began in 1861 when Mrs. John [Louisa Lane] Drew (1820-1897) established it as one of the greatest of American stock companies.  The house was under her control for the next 31 years.  John Drew founded the Arch St. Theatre, married Louisa Lane Drew and they were the parents on Georgia Drew Barrymore, and grandparents of Lionel, Ethel and John.  http://www.theatrealliance.org/barrymores/barryname.html 

Arch Street Theatre, 609-615 Arch Street http://www.philadelphiabuildings.org/pab/app/pj_display.cfm/16554 Irwin R. Glazer Theater Collection, Athenaeum of Philadelphia 
  Arch Street Theatre Philadelphia

Philadelphia, Aug. 29, 1887  Jim [the Penman] is to be played here in the "Arch" [Street Theatre] next Monday.  Mr. Holliday will be with the party. Joe Whiting as "Jim" & Ada Dyas as "Mrs. Ralston" and Mr. [H.M.] Pitt for his old part of "Percival"  This will give us rehearsals as the cast must be changed considerably.

Broad Street Theatre 
Philadelphia Wissinoming  Jan 15 1891 I arrived here last Friday night.  Went to Broad St theatre Saturday. Was called to rehearse on Tuesday. Played yesterday matinee in Capt. Swift., rehearse Jim the Penman tomorrow and play in it Sat Mat and in Capt. Swift Saturday night.

Hotel Davidson, Nov 8, 1893 Milwaukee New Years day open in Philadelphia for two or more weeks at Broad St theatre.

Philadelphia, Mar 15, 1898  I was called very unexpectedly to play a part at the Broad St. Theatre -- and everything had to be given up to that.  A week ago Sunday Mr. and Mrs. [Willie] Seymour called to see me -- he being here with Mr. Sol Smith Russell who was playing a two weeks engagement at the Broad St. Theatre.  We had a pleasant chat -- and he left about 6 PM and I did not suppose I should see him again.  -- but as I was washing the supper dishes on Monday he came in a cab -- to ask me to go with him to the theatre to play "Clementina" in A Bachelor's Romance in place of Mrs. F.A. Pitt whose husband Mr. H.M. Pitt had died at 3 PM that day in New York and she would have to go on to New York to attend the funeral -- so I took a couple of gowns and went. 

Chestnut St. Theatre The [New] Chestnut Street Theatre was built in 1862 on the north side of Chestnut Street between Twelfth and Thirteenth Streets, a full seven blocks to the west of the old theatre, and considered by many too far removed from the theatre district to succeed.  But "the rapid westward expansion of center-city Philadelphia  soon made the new Chestnut Street Theatre the city's most fashionably located theatrical facility."  [from?]
Chestnut Street Theatre

FF Mackay was manager of the Chestnut Street Theatre from 1875-78, along with William Gemmill (c. 1845- 1882 CDP) and J. Frederick Scott.  "However in 1878 severe internal difficulties began and the Company's previously favorable position (as Philadelphia's only first-class resident company) began to erode. Many of the company's best actors resigned. "

Philadelphia, Dec. 20, 1893 On New Years Day we open with a Matinee [Lady Windermere's Fan] at Chestnut Street Theatre [Philadelphia]  for two weeks

Concert Hall and Chestnut Street Theatre, Chestnut Street at Twelfth (north side), 1211-27 Chestnut Street, Watercolor by Benjamin R. Evans, 1879, Library Company of Philadelphia.https://libwww.freelibrary.org/digital/item/597

Chestnut Street Opera House, 1021-1029 Chestnut St. http://www.philadelphiabuildings.org/pab/app/pj_display.cfm/14712  This seems to be a different building.

Grand Theater Was there a Grand Theater in Philadelphia?  Joseph seemed to have been produced there by Ramsey Morris in 1892.

National Theatre
New York, Mar 5, 1894 So I expect my season will close on the 1st of May.  Where I do not yet know, as we have not yet heard our route: only that we close Holy Week and begin our new season at the National Theatre, Phila on Easter Monday. 

Park Theatre, Broad and Fairmont Ave, Broken Seal for one week

Walnut Street Theatre  Isabella Nickinson Walcottand her husband Charles Walcottwere in this theatre company before joining Daniel Frohman's New York company in 1887.
Julius Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide lists Klaw and Erlanger, along with Al Hayman as directors at the Walnut St. Theatre.

We have a number of doleful letters from Mrs. M Augusta Garretson, who managed the Walnut St Theatre from Aug 21 1859 until she sold it to Edwin Booth and his brother in law John Sleeper Clark in 1865.. The New York Clipper reported July 1869 that she was the lessee of the Chestnut St Theater.  (1880 census born 1812, widowed).

Louisa Drew reported "Mr Drew and myself acted at the Walnut St Theatre, under the management of Mrs. DP Bowers, either ate in 1857 or early in 1858; and Mr. Drew played a farewell engagment there, previous to his departure for California and Australia, in the latter part of  November1858, Mrs. Garretson then being lessee.  Annals of Philadelphia in the Olden tTime 1891 https://books.google.com/books?id=5ZFJAAAAYAAJ&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false

The Lititz Pennsylvania [Lancaster County] record reported the death in Philadelphia  of Mrs. M Augusta Garretson July 31 1903 "She was for six seasons the proprietor and manager of the Walnut Street Theatre.  Mrs Garretson, whose maiden name was Tucker was born in New York 80 years ago."" [1823]

Walnut Theatre History (1809-present) http://www.walnutstreettheatre.org/theatre/
Walnut Street Theatre

Philadelphia, May 5, 1895 John [Dolman] is now the Phila correspondent of the New York "Clipper" and has to go in search of news.  He visits the various theatres in town nearly every night now, and I tell him he is getting very giddy.  He was rather bashful at first, but is beginning to like it.  

Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide lists 14 theaters in Philadelphia -- and 23 newspapers.

Philadelphia Theatrical Papers 1877- 1943, Univ. of Delaware Library http://www.lib.udel.edu/ud/spec/findaids/phila.htm

Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, Pa  Novr 27th 1894 We are playing at the "Alvin" Theatre, almost adjoining this hotel [Hotel Schlosser]. 

Pittsburgh, Nov. 28, 1894  Here I am living next door to theatre, which is also a great rest to me, and I am beginning to feel quite like myself.

Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide notes that the Alvin seated 2,000 people. Other Pittsburgh theaters were the Bijou, Grand Opera House and the Hopkins.

Portland, Oregon
1890 Marquam Grand Opera House (later the Orpheum, torn down 1970s.)  https://www.allclassical.org/the-rise-and-fall-of-the-marquam-grand-a-tragedy/
The Marquam Grand Opera House, which specialized in concert music for the elite, opened in 1890 on the north side of Morrison between Sixth and Seventh. Its general manager, Samuel Friedlander, even brought operatic arias and piano recitals to entertain his B’nai B’rith lodge, whose members patronized the opera house.    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_Augustus_Marquam   http://www.cafeunknown.com/2011/06/opening-night-through-shortest-days-of.html  
http://www.cafeunknown.com/2006/10/wreck-of-marquam-grand-marquam.html  
image exterior and interior http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-0Z0oWelw_7w/TfElmeO-yTI/AAAAAAAACPs/4vZQoWzmOhg/s1600/Marquam%2BGrand%2BOpera%2BHouse%2Binterior%252C%2BPortland%2BOregon..jpg


Portland, Sept. 15, 1896  We had a splendid house last night.  First night in ten weeks that the theatre has been open.  The Public was hungry for a show I guess.  I hope this and tomorrow night's will be as well attended.   Wish we were booked here for a week, Hotel and Theatre both comfortable, and only across the street from each other.

Richmond Virginia Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide lists the Academy of Music and Richmond Theatre.

Rochester New York  Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide lists the Lyceum Theatre.

Sacramento Eagle Theater https://www.parks.ca.gov/?page_id=27174 California's first theater, prompted by the California Gold Rush, is long gone, but has been reconstructed. Originally opened in  11849 and now part of the California State Railroad Museum.  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eagle_Theatre_(Sacramento,_California)

Saint Joseph Missouri  Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide lists the Tootle Theatre and New Crawford Theatre.

Saint Louis
Noah Ludlow and Sol Smith established the first real theatre in St. Louis in 1835. Cambridge 

EJ Phillips was for some years a member of the famous stock company Ben DeBar [1821-1877 History of the American Stage
Grand Opera House, Ben DeBar
http://cinematreasures.org/theaters/4359

Nov. 17, 1893 Cleveland Then go to St Louis.  Play in the old Olympic where I used to belong to the Stock Co [with Benedict DeBar].  

Nov 23, 1893 Cincinnati On the 4th St Louis.  We play at the Olympic Theatre there and I shall stop at Southern hotel which is just opposite theatre. 

Olympic Theatre 107 South Broadway opened 1866. A new building replaced the original in 1882.  St. Louis Mo Theatre Timeline http://moviesyearbyyear.blogspot.com/p/stlouis-mo-theatres.html 

Oct. 1, 1896  Kansas City  We play at a new theatre [in St. Louis] named "The Century".

Lindell Hotel, St. Louis, Oct. 4, 1896   Four blocks from theatre, which is a new one next door to Pope's old theatre which has been taken down, and a new block of buildings is being erected on the site, for stores, I guess. 

Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide lists 9 theaters, including the Century (managed by Al Hayman), and Olympic. 

Salt Lake City
Shortly after the Mormon's arrival in Salt Lake they built a small playhouse and Brigham Young was determined to construct a first class theatre.  Construction began in July 1861 and the formal opening was in March 1862.  In 1870 the railroad connected Salt Lake City to both coasts and "during the next fifth years practically every notable actor of the American stage" appeared there and was the favorite of many "not only because of the enthusiasm of its audiences, but also because of the atmosphere and character of the house".  [History Am Theatre]

Salt Lake City, Sept. 14, 1886 Last night we opened to a crowded house and that means something here, for the auditorium of the Mormon Theatre is pretty well as large as the Grand Opera House, NY

The Salt Lake Theatre, finished in March 1862, was the largest structure yet built by the Saints and cost $100,000. William H. Folsom was the architect of the exterior, which was Doric in style. E.L.T. Harrison, an architect from London and recent convert, modeled much of the interior after the London Drury Lane Theatre. Building supplies came from the now-disbanding Camp Floyd and the wreckage of government wagons on the trail.  The theater was dedicated with a prayer by Daniel H. Wells, and an address by Brigham Young. Over 1,500 people crowded the theater for the opening, and many continued to come for later performances. Dubbed the "Cathedral in the Desert," the theater became a neutral ground for Mormons and non-Mormons, although it was controlled by the Mormons.

With the coming of the railroad, Utah was placed on the national theatrical circuit, and the Salt Lake Theatre became increasingly secularized as New York booking agencies virtually controlled its attractions. Church leaders became uneasy with the loss of local standards and control. The theatre kept up with the latest technological advancements, though they were costly. Some 385 oil lamps lit the theater until 1872 when they were replaced by gas. Then, with the coming of electricity, the Railway Company furnished the theater with six lamps on each side of the building. For a time, the Salt Lake Theatre's prominence was challenged by the Walker Opera House. Built in 1882, it was located on the south side of 200 South Street between Main and West Temple streets. To settle the dispute between the two theaters, the New York booking agencies agreed to divide bookings evenly. In 1891 the Walker Opera House burned down.  Theater in Utah, Utah History Encyclopedia  
https://www.uen.org/utah_history_encyclopedia/t/THEATER_IN_UTAH.shtml


Salt Lake Theatre http://www.byujourneys.org/blog/salt-lake-theater/  Built  1861-62. Razed 1928, Replica built on the University of Utah campus 1962

The Salt Lake Theatre is the only one listed for Salt Lake City in Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide. 

San Diego mentioned only in passing.  Fisher Opera House   I don't think EJ Phillips ever got to San Diego. 

San Francisco 
Thanks to the Gold Rush, theatre came to California. The first theatrical performance by professional actors was given in San Francisco in 1850." Cambridge

Baldwin Hotel and Theatre  At the corner of Market and Powell Streets according to hotel stationery.  Built by gambler/ entrepreneur Elias Jackson "Lucky" Baldwin in 1875 (Sumner Bugbee, architect)  Originally called Baldwin's Academy of Music, the theatre emphasized touring stars and attractions.  "In 1878 Baldwin built a magnificent hotel which encompassed the playhouse and occupied the rest of the block.  Virtually all the great touring performers of the day appeared in their best-known vehicles at the house ... Both hotel and theatre were destroyed by fire in 1898." [Oxford]

In the evening, by way of severe contrast [to the Mission Dolores they visited earlier that day], we went to Baldwin's Theatre, attached to the hotel of the same name and just finished. It is really the prettiest to be seen in any part of the world -- a perfect little gem, fitted up like a bonbonniere in crimson satin and gold. The six proscenium boxes on either side, and the row of French boxes at the back are marvelously pretty. Nothing could be more rich and exquisite in refinement of taste. The symmetry of the house is unmarred by rows of pillars, the galleries being suspended from the roof.  California: a pleasure trip from Gotham to the Golden Gate, Chapter 20, April, May, June, 1877. Mrs. Frank Leslie  http://nbc-lumber.com/Leslie/Ch20.htm

 

The Baldwin Hotel and Theatre burned in 1898.  Albert Nickinson, in San Francisco for the Spanish American War took photographs of the ruins.
Baldwin Hotel fire
1
898 Nov 24  Sacramento https://cdnc.ucr.edu/?a=d&d=SDU18981124.2.2&e=-------en--20--1--txt-txIN--------1  Ny Times

California Theatre  For many years the leading theatre in San Francisco, it opened in 1869 on Bush Street, designed by SC Bugbee and Son, costing $150,000, and built for Lawrence Barrett and another actor by the head of San Francisco's Bank of California.  Emphasized a resident ensemble, while its principal rival the Baldwin Theatre specialized in touring stars.  The theatre burned in 1888.  A replacement was built on the same site and destroyed in the 1906 earthquake.

NO. 86 CALIFORNIA THEATRE
Location: 430 Bush St between Kearny and Grant, San Francisco  California State Historical Landmarks San Francisco County    On this site on January 18, 1869, the California Theatre, built by William C. Ralston, opened with the following stock company: John McCullough, Lawrence Barrett, Harry Edwards, Willie Edouin, E. B. Holmes, William Mastayer, John T. Raymond, W. F. Burroughs, W. H. Sadley Smith, John Wilson, Edward J. Buckley, Mrs. Judah Emelie Melville, Elizabeth Saunders, Annette Ince, Marie E. Gordon, Sophie Edwin, Minnie Walton, and Julia Buckley. Among artists who played here were Charles W. Couldock, Edwin Adams, John Broughan, Edwin Booth, Barton Hill, Walter Montgomery, Mrs. D. P. Bowers, Adelaide Neilson, and Lotta Crabtree. This theater remained a brilliant center of drama until August 11, 1888.   https://www.californiahistoricallandmarks.com/landmarks/chl-86

Located at what is now 440 Bush Street http://www.sfmuseum.org/hist3/playbill.html
444 Bush Street http://www.noehill.com/sf/landmarks/cal0086.asp 

Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide lists Al Hayman as the manager of both Baldwin's and the California Theatre.  Other theaters listed include the Columbia, Morosco's and Tivoli Grand Opera Houses.  Peter Robertson is listed as the theater critic at the Chronicle, one of six daily papers, and five weeklies.

Seattle  Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide lists the Seattle Theatre.

Stockton California  Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide lists the theater in Stockton as Yo Semite Theatre.

Syracuse New Wieting Opera House, Bastable Theatre, Grand Opera House

Tacoma Washington 
Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide lists the theater as the Tacoma Theater.

Toronto
The first purpose built theatre in Toronto opened in December 1848.  The brick building seated 750 and was lighted by gas, but awkwardly designed, eventually stopping first rate actors from coming to Toronto.  The theatre burned down in January 1874. 

Royal Lyceum Theatre
1848-1874, burned
King Street (between Bay and York Streets)

Royal Lyceum Theatre   John Nickinson and EJ Phillips at the Royal Lyceum Theatre 1850's
Theatre historian Mary Shortt wrote "In later years, [John] Nickinson's period of management at the Royal Lyceum came to seem like a golden age... but in fact ... under Nickinson [it] was never more than a third-rate provincial theatre.  His importance lay in the fact that for the first time he put Toronto's theatre on a genuinely professional basis, demonstrated that it could support a permanent stock company, and established the city as the leading theatrical centre in Canada West. [Shortt]

Nickinson's Royal Lyceum "offered a repertoire ranging from Goldsmith's She Stoops to Conquer to popular melodramas such as Uncle Tom's Cabin" Nickinson was known for his gala Christmas productions of Cinderella and Aladdin.  [Oxford Companion to Canadian Theatres]

Nickinson also managed Hamilton's Metropolitan Theatre, going there with the Toronto company each year.  (This must have been how he met EJ Phillips).  Hard economic times, starting in 1858, led to his giving up the Royal Lyceum in 1859. He ended up as stage manager at Pike's Opera house in Cincinnati and died there in 1864. [what is this from?]

Charlotte Nickinson Morrison at the Royal Lyceum Theatre 1871-1878

Bibliography Shortt, Mary "The Royal Lyceum: part I 1848-1859", John Nickinson chapter, Master's Thesis on Toronto theatre 1809-1874 c. 1979.

Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide lists the Princess Theatre, Grand Opera House, Toronto Opera House and Massey Music Hall.

Troy New York  Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide lists Rand's Opera House

Vancouver
1896
Possibly Vancouver Opera House  1891 -1969 761 Granville Street   This is the only theater listed in Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide. 

Washington DC 
National Theatre 
Timeline http://thenationaldc.org/timeline/
Still an active theater, and only a block from the Willard Hotel, both theater and hotel are on Pennsylvania Ave., a short walk from the White House.
Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Theatre_(Washington,_D.C.)

Academy of Music  9th & D Sts NW, Joseph 1892

Albaugh's Grand Opera House, 15th & E Sts. NW,  Camille 1894
Opened Nov 1884 according tot he NY Times Nov 9, 1884   "Albaugh's Grand Opera House, which has just been erected by the Washington Light Infantry Corp in connection with a new armory on Fifteenth Street near Pennsylvania Avenue, was thrown open to-night for a private view to a number of prominent citizens, though workmen are still with finishing touches for its formal opening." http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n2003075010.html
 

John W. Albaugh  (1837-1909) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_W._Albaugh
 "His last appearance on the stage, was as Macbeth with Modjeska, at Grand Opera House, Washington City, D.C., about 1894. He played in the following cities, Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York, Washington City, Troy, N.Y., Albany, Richmond, Virg., Pittsburg, Montgomery, Ala., Columbus, Ga., Detroit, Indianapolis, Boston, Louisville, Cincinnati, St. Louis, Nashville, New Orleans, Montreal and many others. He managed Holliday Street Theatre, and built and owns the Lyceum Theatre in Baltimore, and was Lessee and Manager at Washington City of the National Theatre for five years, of Albaugh's Grand Opera House for ten years, and in conjunction with a Washington gentleman, built, owned and managed the LaFayette Square Theatre for three years.
" Genealogy of the Albaugh Families", by Noah H. Albaugh, 1899  http://www.albaugh.info/johnw.htm

Ford's Theater may be better known (as the site of Lincoln's Assassination) but does not show up in these letters. AR Cazauran (1820-1889) AM Palmer's play reader and a celebrated play doctor wrote a once famous eyewitness account of the assassination of Abraham Lincoln.  Colleague William Jason Ferguson (1841-1930) was famous as the actor who saw Lincoln  shot, his stage career began at Ford's Theatre as a call boy.  The construction of the Theatre supports the claim that Ferguson  was the sole witness.  His description has been accepted as the most reliable account of the shooting (Sat Evening Post and NY Times (Apr 18, 1915) and his book I Saw Booth Shoot Lincoln (1930) 

Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide lists the New National Theatre, Academy of Music and John Albaugh's Lafayette Square Opera House, as well as the Bijou Family Theatre, Grand Opera House and Columbia theatre.

Wilkes Barre Pennsylvania  Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide lists the Grand Opera House

EJ Phillips' letters and other sources mention at least 110 cities -- Cahn's 1897 Theatrical Guide was very helpful in identifying theatres for these.

city

state

1897 pop.

EJP first year

EJP more years

theaters

Albany

NY

100,000

1891

1894

Haumann's Bleecker Hall

Alliance

OH

10,000

1893

Opera House

Asheville

NC

15,000

1897

Grand opera House

Atlanta

GA

100,000

1897

Grand Opera House, Lyceum Theatre

Auburn

NY

30,000

1892

Burtis Opera House    

Augusta

GA

45,000

1897

Grand Opera House

Baltimore

MD

500,000

1891

1892  1893 1894

Academy of Music, Fords Grand Opera House, Holliday St, Kernans Monumental, Lyceum

Binghamton

NY

45,000

1892

Stones opera house

Birmingham

AL

68,000

1897

O'Brien's Opera House

Bloomington

IL

28,000

1893

Grand opera house

Boston

MA

494,500

1886

1887 88 89 90 91 93 95

Boston Museum, Boston Theatre, Bijou, Globe, Park

Boulder

CO

6,500

1890

Temple Hall 

Brooklyn

NY

1,200,000

1886

1889 1893 1894

Park Theatre Brooklyn Theatre,?

Buffalo

NY

375,000

1890

1891 1892 1893 1894 1895

Academy of Music, Star, Lyceum

Burlington

IA

30,000

1896

Grand Opera House

Canton

OH

35,000

1893

Grand Opera House

Cedar Rapids

IA

25,000

1896

Green's Opera House

Charleston

SC

70,000

1897

Academy of Music

Charleston

WV

15,000

1893

Burlew Opera house

Charlotte

NC

20,000

1897

Opera House

Chattanooga

TN

50,000

1897

New Opera House

Chicago

IL

1,700,000

1875

1878 86 87 88 89 90 92 93 94 95  96

Hooleys, McVickers

Cincinnati

OH

300,000

1862

1893 1897

1862-1865 w/JN

Pikes Opera House, 

Cleveland

OH

366,000

1889

1893 1895

Cleveland Theatre, Euclid Ave Opera House, Lyceum Theatre 

Colorado Springs

CO

15,000

1886

Opera House

Columbus

OH

130,000

1892

1895 1896

Grand Opera House, Great Southern, High St Theatre 

Davenport

IA

40,000

1896

1896

Burtis Opera House, New Grand Opera House

Decatur

IL

27,000

1893

1896

Germania Opera House

Denver

CO

150,000

1883

1886 1888 1890

Taber's Opera house, Broadway Theatre

Des Moines

IA

75,000

1896

Foster's Opera House

Detroit

MI

305,000

1892

1893 1895 1896

Detroit Opera House, Whitney Grand Lyceum Theatre, Capital Sq, Campbell's Empire theatre

Dubuque

IA

40,000

1896

Grand Opera House

Easton

PA

40,000

1897

Able Opera House

Evansville

IN

65,000

1893

The Grand, People's theatre

Freeport

IL

17,000

1896

Tower's Opera House

Grand Rapids

MI

85,000

1893

Powers Opera House

Hamilton

Ontario

50,000

1848

1861 90 92 

1830s--1852

Metropolitan Theatre

Harrisburg

PA

50,000

1897

Grand Opera House

Hartford

CT

75,000

1892

1894

Hartford Opera House, Parsons

Herkimer

NY

5,000

1892

Grand Opera House

Indianapolis

IN

125,000

1867

1895

Empire Theatre, English Opera House, Grand Opera House, Park Theatre  

Ithaca

NY

15,000

1892

The Lyceum 

Janesville

WI

16,000

1893

Myers' Grand

Johnstown

PA

37,000

1892

Cambria Theatre, Johnstown Opera House

Kansas City

MO

200,000

1886

1888 1890 1896

Coates Opera house, New Coates Opera House

Knoxville

TN

45,000

1897

Staub's Opera House

Lafayette

IN

30,000

1893

Grand opera House

Lancaster

PA

40,000

1892

1897

Fulton Opera House

Lawrence

MA

53,000

1895

Opera House

Lockport

NY

20,000

1861

Arcade Hall

London

Ontario

35,000

1892

Grand Opera House

Los Angeles

CA

97,000

1888

1890 1896

Los Angeles Theatre, Orpheum, Burbank

Louisville

KY

210,000

1893

1898

Macauley's Theatre, Amphitheatre Auditorium, Avenue Theatre, Grand Opera House, Temple Theatre

Macon

GA

35,000

1897

Academy of Music 

Madison

WI

20,000

1896

Fuller Opera House

Middletown

NY

15,000

1886

Casino Theatre

Milwaukee

WI

275,000

1893

1895 1896

Davidson Theatre, 4 others listed

Mobile

AL

40,000

1875

Grand Opera House

Montreal

Quebec

300,000

1894

1895

Theatre Royal [JN] Academy of Music, Queen's Theatre, Theatre Francais

New Haven

CT

100,000

1894

Grand Opera House, Hyperion Theater

New London

CT

16,000

1894

Lyceum Theatre

New Orleans

LA

275,000

1871

1897

L Barrett 1871-1873

St Charles Theatre, Varieties Theatre

New York

NY

1,900,000

1877

1886-1897

Sturtevant

37 theaters

Academy of Music, Castle garden, Chickering Hall Empire Theatre, Fifth Ave/Daly's Grand Opera House, Harlem Opera House/Hammerstein's, Lyceum, Madison Sq, Madison Sq Garden, Niblo's' Olympic, Palmers, , Standard, Tony Pastors, Union Sq, Wallacks

Newark

NJ

350,000

1894

1896 1897

Newark Theatre, Jacob's Theatre, Waldman's Opera House

Newport

RI

22,000

1894

Opera house

Niagara Falls

NY

30,000

1892

1894

Niagara Falls Ont4,5K

Park Theatre

Norfolk

VA

75,000

1893

Van Wyck's Academy of Music

Ogden

UT

18,000

1886

no performances

Omaha

NE

150,000

1886

1888 1890 1896

Creighton, Boyd's New Theatre

Oswego

NY

22,000

1892

Richardson Theatre

Ottawa

Ontario

53,000

1861

Her Majesty's Theatre

Peekskill

NY

12,000

1892

DePew Opera House

Pensacola

FL

15,000

1897

Opera House

Peoria

IL

68,000

1893

Grand opera House

Philadelphia

PA

1,500,000

1875

1887-1898

1875-1877 

Arch St, Broad St. Chestnut St, Grand Theater, National Theatre, Park Theatre, Walcots Walnut St  Canhn's lists 14 theaters in Philadelphia

Pittsburgh

PA

350,000

1891

1893 1894 1896

Alvin Theater, 3 others in Cahns

Pittsfield

MA

28,000

1891

Academy of Music

Portland

OR

100,000

1890

1896

Marquam Grand Opera House

Portland 

ME

45,000

1895

Portland Theatre, City Hall 

Providence

RI

155,000

1893

1894 1895 1897 

Keith's Opera House, Providence Opera House

Pueblo

CO

36,000

1886

Grand Opera House 

Richmond

VA

100,000

1893

Academy of Music, Richmond Theatre

Rochester

NY

160,000

1893

1894

Lyceum Theatre

Rockford

IL

35,000

1893

1896

Opera House

Sacramento

CA

35,000

1886

1890 1896

Clunie Opera House 

Saint Joseph

MO

60,000

1886

1888 1890

Crawford Theatre, Tootle Theatre

Saint Louis

MO

700,000

1865

1893 1894 1895 1896 

1865-1870 NO

Olympic, Century & 10

Salt Lake City

UT

65,000

1886

1890 1896

Salt Lake Theatre

San Diego

CA

20,000

1896

Fisher Opera House

San Francisco

CA

300,000

1883

1886-1888 1890 1896

Baldwin Theatre, California Theatre

Savannah

GA

65,000

1873

1897

Savannah Theatre

Scranton

PA

90,000

1892

1897

Academy of Music

Seattle

WA

65,000

1890

1896

Seattle Theatre

South Bend

IN

28,000

1893

Oliver Opera House

Springfield

IL

35,000

1893

Chatterton Opera House

St Thomas

Ontario

15,000

1892

Duncombe's New Opera House

Stockton

CA

30,000

1890

YoSemite Theatre

Syracuse

NY

125,000

1892

Bastable Theatre, Grand Opera House

Tacoma

WA

60,000

1890

Tacoma Theatre

Terre Haute

IN

45,000

1893

Opera House burned since last issue 

Toronto

Ontario

200,000

1852

1892 1894 

Toronto 1852-1862 w/JN

Royal Lyceum, Grand Opera House, Princess Theatre, Toronto Opera House, Toronto Theatre

Trenton

NJ

90,000

1897

Trenton's Opera House

Troy

NY

62,000

1892

1893

Rand's Opera House

Utica

NY

50,000

1886

1892

Utica Opera House

Vancouver

BC

20,000

1896

Vancouver Opera House

Washington

DC

300,000

1885

1887 1891 1893 1894

National Theatre, Academy of Music, Albaugh's Grand Opera House

Wheeling

WV

40,000

1892

1893

Opera House

Wilkes Barre

PA

100,000

1892

Grand Opera House

Wilmington

DE

70,000

1892

1897

Grand Opera House

Zanesville

OH

30,000

1893

Schultz Opera House

Bibliography
Birkmire William H, The planning and Construction of American Theatre John Wiley & Sons 1896 http://books.google.com/books?id=-RItAAAAYAAJ&source=gbs_navlinks_s
Boston Athenaeum, Theater Database http://www.bostonathenaeum.org/node/224 Programs and playbills, circa 1860-1900 
Cahn, Julius, Julius Cahn's Official Theatrical Guide, Volume 2 1897 http://books.google.com/books?id=JiUtAAAAYAAJ&dq=editions:LCCNsn92017447  Theatres, hotels, railroads and newspapers for theatrical cities
Cinema Treasures http://www.cinematreasures.org/  Mainly movie theaters, includes some theaters which began as stage theaters. Searchable
Gagey, Edmond M., The San Francisco Stage: A History, New York : Columbia University Press, 1950.
Henderson, Mary C., The City and the Theatre: New York Playhouses from Bowling Green to Times Square,  Clifton NJ: James T. White & Co, 1973.
IDDB Internet Broadway DataBase, advanced search http://www.ibdb.com/advancedsearch.asp  Searchable by play, person or New York theater. 
Jenkins, Stephen, The Greatest Street in the World: The Story of Broadway, Old and New, From the Bowling Green to Albany, New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1911
Kendrick, John, Musicals 101 Theatre in New York 1865-1900 http://www.musicals101.com/bwaythhist3.htm 
Kendrick, John, New York Theatres: Past and Present http://www.musicals101.com/bwayhouses.htm  
Morrison, William, Broadway Theatres: History & Architecture, Dover Publications, Inc. 1999.
Museum of the City of New York, Theater Collection 
http://www.eoneill.com/mcny/collection.htm  
O'Neill, PB Anthony, A History of Theatrical Activity in Toronto, Canada, from its beginning to  1858, Louisiana State University dissertation, 1973    A wonderful resource with lots of new information on John Nickinson, EJ Phillips and others.
htttps://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_disstheses/2488/
Shortt, Mary "The Royal Lyceum: part I 1848-1859", John Nickinson chapter, Master's Thesis on Toronto theatre 1809-1874 c. 1979.
van Hoogstraten, Nicholas, Lost Broadway Theaters, Princeton Architectural Press, revised edition, 1997.

Young, William C, Documents of American Theater History Volume 1 Famous American Playhouses  1716-1899, American Library Association, 1973

Critic Alexander Woollcott on Sarah Bernhardt, Katharine Cornell and historic theaters, Miss Kitty Takes to the Road 1934 https://archive.org/stream/in.ernet.dli.2015.208566/2015.208566.Long-Long_djvu.txt 

League of Historic American Theaters  http://network.lhat.org/home
Pictorial diagrams of New York Theatres 1883 http://robertdavisinc.com/cover.htm
Theatre Historical Society of America http://www.historictheatres.org/

Last updated August 25,  2020

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