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The C.E. Morris House is a historic house in Columbus, Ohio, United States.The house was built in 1897 and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986. [1]
From the 1930s on, the Southern was a popular home for second-run double features. In the 1970s the theater briefly returned to first run fare as the Towne Cinema, showing black exploitation movies. Throughout the 1970s the Southern also hosted a weekly live Country Music Jamboree, sponsored by local radio station WMNI. [3]
The Palace Theatre is a 2,695-seat restored movie palace located at 34 W. Broad Street in Columbus, Ohio. It was designed and built in 1926 by the American architect Thomas W. Lamb as part of the American Insurance Union Citadel (now the LeVeque Tower). Today the theater functions as a multi-use performing arts venue.
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She operated the house as a cultural arts center for the Black community, under its former name of the Garden Manor. [2] In this role, the property housed two music schools, and the house was used for meetings, fashion shows, parties, weddings, and other events. [ 1 ]
The movie showed workers leaving the Reeves and Company factory and the Columbus Fire Department driving up Washington Street. [12] The official date recognized by Crump Theatre personnel at the time, however, was Thanksgiving Day, 26 November 1914, with the showing of "When Broadway Was A Trail," and "In The Lion's Den".
In the mid-1950s it became a rooming house, and drew attention for two murders that took place there. In the 1960s the house was condemned and faced demolition. In 1973, partners Bob Echele and Bob Gease purchased the house, gutting it and adding a fourth floor behind the turret. The couple installed a movie theater, ballroom, and private elevator.
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