New Hudson Theatre
368 E. Hudson Street,
Columbus,
OH
43202
368 E. Hudson Street,
Columbus,
OH
43202
4 people favorited this theater
Showing 23 comments
It was still operating as a church when I lived in the neighborhood in the 1980’s. One friend told me he’d go there to watch double-features in the 60’s.
Nothing going on here. Still derelict. Don’t see how a music venue would make it there. Is no parking and a run down neighborhood.
Plans have been submitted to the City of Columbus for approval to turn this location into a live music venue. Only the front portion of the theatre remains, so much construction will have to take place. No timeline has been given for completion after permits are complete.
This closed in 1967 and reopened as “The New Hudson Theatre” showing adult movies on May 2nd, 1970. Another ad posted.
This opened on July 9th, 1927. Small article opened
Building has been leased and will be turned into a bar and music venue hopefully by September of this year.
NOTHING so far.
What is it being replaced with?
Auditorium part of the theater has been demolished.
Went by today and noticed a large portion of the roof has collapsed in the back of the theater over the stage/screen area. The walls are still standing for now. It’s fairly easy to get a look inside. Appears the scrappers have been at it finally able to get inside easily. Not too promising for the new owner I fear.
Back door and side exit by the alley were both open so I peeked inside. Old rows of seating are piled on top of each other at each end of the auditorium, light coming through the ceiling. Stage is still there, large air vents dangling from the ceiling. I’ll try and go back and take some pics the next time I see it open. Still no clue as to what it will be. Nobody answered when I called out.
County auditor information states the theater sold on May 22, 2017 for $72,500 to Bubbykins LLC. I looked it up as I noticed the plywood removed from the two east second floor windows and debris being lowered in buckets by workers to the alley below. I emailed Columbus Underground to see if they knew anything but have yet to hear back.
That building is not worth that much money. I don’t see what you could do with it, as there is no off-street parking in that area and it is not close to a commercial zone. It also isn’t very close to Ohio State. I’ll be very surprised if it sells.
For sale for $350,000! I don’t believe it. http://www.mlsfinder.com/oh_cbr/kw_940/index.cfm?action=listing_detail&property_id=214025114&searchkey=6990f949-ca87-335f-d6a9-208541cc92b3
i’ll post the info from that link 2 comments up in case the page goes down someday. great info.
“When it opened in 1927, The Hudson sat in the middle of a busy commercial strip between 4th and Summit. A barber shop and beauty salon flanked the entrance. A small office suite occupied the second floor. During WWII, it housed the local draft board and later a dentist’s office.
In 1970, the abandoned theater was reopened as the New Hudson and showed pornographic films. It suffered repeated vice raids and finally closed in 1972.
After The Hudson closed as a theater, it was a church for many years. Currently, the building is empty, derelict, and vandalized.parking was hurting. The theater closed in 1965.
In 1970, the abandoned theater was reopened as the New Hudson and showed pornographic films. It suffered repeated vice raids and finally closed in 1972.
After The Hudson closed as a theater, it was a church for many years. Currently, the building is empty, derelict, and vandalized.
I recently called the owner, Working for Jesus, trying to get a hold on the pastor. No luck. Wonder who might have gone inside the theater/ church before. Very curious how the church reused it.
The Hudson and other OSU-area movie theatres are described on this page: University District History: 100 Years of University District Theatres
The Last Man on Earth (1964). Vincent Price could deliver the most campy lines and make them perfectly believable. My older brother drove me to the Hudson Theater to see that movie and he parked at the curb directly in front of the entrance. I got out under the marquee, which extended almost to the street. By my memory it was a pleasant and simple theater. Not to far away were the Indianola, the Clinton, and farther north the Beechwold. Today only one of these operates as a movie theater. Before automobiles were common there were movie theaters. As automobiles became ubiquitous theaters were renamed as neighborhood theaters. I was told that the interurban line ran close to the Hudson. LLLower
In the summer of 1972, the “New Hudson Theatre” was running “selected films for the liberated adult male audience”.
The ad for this ran in the July 1, 1972 Columbus Dispatch.
Saw some horror matinees & In Search of the Castaways in the early 1960s there. Don’t remember it as anything special.
In February or March 2010, all of the comments disappeared from the Cleve Theatre (Columbus Ohio) page, and I was able to grab them from the Google Cache. Looks like the phantom deleter struck again!! Something very strange going on around here.
Ron, thanks for pulling them out of Cache-land. Very much appreciated.
In the Google Cache for this page, I find all of these old comments. I do not understand why CinemaTreasures decided to delete them:
Here is a photo of the Hudson, taken during the summer of 2006:
View link
posted by monika on Mar 29, 2008 at 2:50pm
When was this last used as a movie theatre? I do not remember any ads for a theatre with this name when I lived in Columbus (1968-75).
posted by Ron Newman on Mar 29, 2008 at 9:15pm
Ron,
I have no idea. I lived in Columbus for a few years and it was never in use and looked as if it hadn’t been in use for quite some time. There were wooden crosses and a church services sign on the building at that time, which can be seen in the photo I liked above. The only information I have been able to get for this theatre is it’s name, though that is from no lack of trying.
posted by monika on Mar 31, 2008 at 8:35am
I went to a film there in the late ‘60’s. A real barn of a room…long and narrow. Nothing to get excited about…actually a rather dull place.
posted by MarkL on Jul 2, 2008 at 11:47am
As of February 2009, this building is still there and just as derelect as in the photo in the link above. Hasn’t been torn down yet.
posted by ZookieFreddie on Feb 22, 2009 at 8:52pm
The Hudson hasnt been used as a theater since at least the mid 70s. Even when used as a church the building looked derelict and abandoned. Its situated on a narrow lot hemmed in between a used parking lot and a house with little, if any, parking. (might be a few spaces behind the bldg) I suspect that’s why no one has bought and redeveloped the property. A real eyesore. The only activity there is from a bus stop in front of the building.
posted by TJ on Mar 5, 2009 at 10:43am
I meant it was next to a used car lot, not a parking lot. LOL.
posted by TJ on Mar 5, 2009 at 10:45am
The Hudson did have a decent sized marquee when I first moved to Columbus in 1982. The theatre was never operated as a movie theatre from 1982 on. So, given MarkL’s comment, it most likely closed sometime between 1965 and 1982.
I’m not sure, but I believe the marquee fell off the building in the mid-80’s.
posted by dn on May 24, 2009 at 11:09am
The theater looks even worse since I posted on here. Now there is a beat up couch sitting in the outside lobby area near the sidewalk. The front of the theater is filthy. What an eyesore! I know the theater hasn’t been open since the mid to late 70’s at least.
posted by TJ on May 25, 2009 at 4:46pm
According to Phil Sheridan, in Those Wonderful Downtown Theaters, The Hudson opened in 1931.
It was a neighborhood theaters for most of its life but showed exploitation and porn in the late 60s-early 70s.
I don’t know when it closed.
posted by DAKCMH on Jul 21, 2009 at 6:30pm
the auditors website shows husdson amusement co. in 1957 (not saying thats when it opened), starray corp in 1970, 1976 WEST TOWN STREET BETHLEHEM. now owned by “working for jesus” since 2001.
posted by retroguy on Feb 23, 2010 at 3:11pm
I dug a little deeper into those county records. (Thanks, Retroguy.)
First, the address listed above can not be correct. In Columbus, even numbers are on the north side of the street, and odd on the south. The Hudson is on the south side. The county site lists the address as 367 Hudson Street.
The property was first developed in 1920. The first indication of a theatre was in 1944, when the Ohio National Bank took over the property. A notation from 1948 indicates a “theatre”.
No real definite data, there, but something to check in the newspaper archives.
posted by MarkL on Feb 23, 2010 at 4:47pm
this theater is always being spray painted. good news someone also paints over it with blue soon after. i drove past one day last summer and saw the guy painting over the graffiti with the front door to the theater open.
posted by retroguy on Feb 23, 2010 at 6:15pm
my grandpa said he had been in the theater and remembered eating spaghetti next door after roller skating.
posted by retroguy on Feb 23, 2010 at 6:18pm
What happened to all of the comments here?