Doric Theatre
908 Walnut Streeet,
Kansas City,
MO
64106
908 Walnut Streeet,
Kansas City,
MO
64106
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Ground was being cleared for the new theater that was to become the Doric, according to an item in The American Contractor of September 3, 1917. Architects Greenbaum & Hardy had designed the house for owner Mrs. Margaret D. C. Ridge.
An item about the Doric Theatre’s new organ appeared in the November 29, 1919, issue of Music Trades Review:
Following the explosion which severely damaged the Doric Theatre in 1922, the December 16 issue of The American Contractor said that architects Greenbaum, Hardy & Schumacher were drawing preliminary plans for a theater on the site, but I’ve found no evidence that the project was ever carried out.Here are fresh links to the photos of the Doric Theatre at the Kansas City Public Library. All are dated 1918:
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Here are a couple of photos from an architectural journal titled The Western Architect, Sept. 1919 issue. Lovely interior shot, which also shows the floor plan. Enjoy.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/kcfan/5670370082
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I am in possesion of a photocopy of a partial page from the “Kansas City Star” dated November 25, 1917. It reports on the construction of the Doric Theater which was to replace the Ridge Building located at 908 Walnut Street which had burned in 1909. The theater was to cost “over $50,000” and was being built by a company managed by George W. Curtis “one of the first Kansas City men to be interested in moving pictures.”
The theater got its name from the exterior design of the building created by the architects, Greenebaum & Hardy. The exterior finish of the building was terra cotta and the seating capacity was 976.
A Kimball organ Size 3/18 was installed in the Doric Theater in 1920. It appears that the organ survived the explosion because it was removed in 1922 and moved to the Liberty Theater in Council Bluffs, Iowa. 1922 could be around the time that the Doric Theater closed.
I read that this theater closed in the early 1920’s due to a gas explosion that destroyed most of the building.
Other photos: View link
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This photo of the Doric theater is dated at 1915:
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