Beethoven Hall (1874–78) was an auditorium in
Boston,
Massachusetts, that hosted musical performances and other entertainments in the 1870s.
[1] It sat on
Washington Street, near
Boylston Street, in today's
Boston Theater District/Chinatown neighborhood.
[2] The architect was
William Washburn,
[3] who had also designed the first
National Theatre and the second
Tremont Temple.
In 1879 the renovated hall re-opened as the
Park Theatre.
[4] The building survived until 1990, when it was razed.
[5]
Performances
References
-
^ Dwight's journal of music,
Oct. 17, 1874
-
^ Boston business directory. 1879
-
^ City of Boston: Report of the Inspector of Buildings for the Year 1874 (Boston: Rockwell and Churchill, 1875)
-
^ Moses King (1881), Kings Handbook of Boston, M. King,
OCLC
778544,
OL
23442502M
-
^ Sweeney, Emily. Once a relic of the past, earthy art form sees a revival. Boston Globe, 09 April 2009
-
^ Boston Daily Globe, Nov. 18, 1874
-
^ Boston Daily Globe, Sept. 30, 1874
-
^ Boston Daily Globe, 5 February, 1876
-
^ Boston Daily Globe, 5 February, 1876
-
^ Boston Daily Globe, Sept. 20, 1875
-
^ Edward Le Roy Rice (1911), Monarchs of minstrelsy, from "Daddy" Rice to date, New York city, N.Y: Kenny publishing company,
OL
6527294M
-
^ Boston Daily Globe, 5 April, 1877
-
^ Milbourne Christopher. Magic: A Picture History. USA: Courier Dover Publications, 1991
-
^ Boston Evening Transcript, January 13, 1877
-
^ Boston Daily Globe, January 24, 1877
-
^ Boston Daily Globe, Nov. 17, 1877
-
^ Boston Daily Globe, April 19, 1878
-
^ Boston Daily Globe, March 9, 1878
42°21′9.86″N 71°3′45.35″W / 42.3527389°N 71.0625972°W / 42.3527389; -71.0625972
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