Grand Theater
1224 Commercial Street,
Bellingham,
WA
98225
1224 Commercial Street,
Bellingham,
WA
98225
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Additional Info
Previous Names: Our Theater
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The Grand Theater was built around 1912. The Grand Theater was briefly known as the Our Theater from April 3, 1931 when it was taken over by Hughes Franklin Theatres.
By the early-1970’s the Grand Theater was closed and the building was demolished around 1974. The Grand Theater had two entrances and a second address given for the Grand Theater is 133 West Holly Street.
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Recent comments (view all 3 comments)
This reopened as the Our theatre on April 3rd, 1931. Grand opening ad posted.
How horrifying to see all of the workmanship that created this beautiful theatre destroyed.
The Grand Theatre is listed in the 1914-1915 American Motion Picture Directory, though with the address 127 W. Holly Street. Two web sites have considerable information about the Grand: This web page from WhatcomTalk, with histories of several lost Bellingham theaters, and this page from the Puget Sound Theatre Organ Society. Each page features several photos.
The Grand was built to replace a smaller house of the same name that had opened in 1905 and was demolished in 1912 to make way for a new commercial building. The new theater was behind the new building and fronted on Commercial Street, though an entrance was retained on Holly Street. The house actually had two entrances, at 127 W. Holly and at 1224 Commercial Street. The Holly Street entrance served as the main entrance for much of the Grand’s history, but it was closed in 1957 and converted for retail use, so for the last few years of the theater’s life it was entered only from Commercial Street. The Grand’s last show, in 1973, featured the movie “Last Tango in Paris.” The building was demolished in 1974.
The Pacific Coast Architecture Database says that the Grand Theatre was designed by local architect Frederick Stanley Piper (firm name F. Stanley Piper), who also designed the Edison (Liberty/Egyptian) Theatre in 1914. Piper practiced in Bellingham from 1908 to about 1927, having immigrated from the U.K., where he had worked as a draughtsman in Plymouth. He had received an architectural degree from Blundell College, Tiverton, Devonshire, England, around 1900.