
Showboat Theatre
217 W. 2nd Street,
Freeport,
TX
77541
217 W. 2nd Street,
Freeport,
TX
77541
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The Showboat Theatre opened its doors on June 6, 1942 with Abbott and Costello in “Rio Rita” along with a few unnamed short subjects (listed in the wrong position on its grand opening ad) alongside a musical performance by the Freeport High School band on stage and a dedication speech afterward.
The entire theater took an estimate three months to construct, and was named after the first Showboat Theatre in nearby Texas City, which the neighboring city itself possibly had two theaters being named the Showboat in the 1940s.
Yes, arch-ive.org is run by a good friend of mine. Those are her photos from a trip to Freeport.
Another theater building lost to neglect. Googling for news reports about the event (but finding none) I came across this page at a site called arch-ive.org (apparently not related to archive.org) which features three photos of the closed Showboat and a 1943 Sanborn map showing its site. Judging from the first photo, the birds of Freeport have lost a splendid communal perch.
Well, high wind and rain finally weakened the old girl to the point where the roof and east wall fell on the neighboring building below. As of Monday, March 21, 2016, the Showboat Theatre is being demolished.
Thanks! My daughter goes to Texas Tech University, and Worldcat tells me that they have a copy in reference. I’m going to have her check for me. But thanks so much for the tip about the Freeport Showboat.
A Google Books snippet view of the listing of architect Ernest Shult in the 1949-50 theatre catalog confirms that Shult designed the Showboat Theatres in Freeport (1942) and Texas City (1941.)
The partial list visible in the snippet also includes the following Shult designs: Palm, Sugarland, Texas (1949); Leon, Pleasanton, Texas (1948); Cole, Richmond, Texas (1947); Palacios, Palacios, Texas (1942); and Plaza, Wharton, Texas, (1941).
Also, a snippet of a March, 1939, issue of Daily Bulletin of the Manufacturers Record shows an item saying that Ernest Shult had drawn the plans for a $25,000 theater and store building at West Columbia, Texas, for Alex Sanbourne.