Movie theaters: Difference between revisions

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* [http://andover.mvlc.org/opac/en-US/skin/default/xml/rdetail.xml?r=487303&t=century%20of%20change&tp=keyword&d=0&hc=1273&rt=keyword ''Andover a Century of Change:1896 - 1996''] by Eleanor Motley Richardson, (974.45 Ric) page 138.
* [http://andover.mvlc.org/opac/en-US/skin/default/xml/rdetail.xml?r=487303&t=century%20of%20change&tp=keyword&d=0&hc=1273&rt=keyword ''Andover a Century of Change:1896 - 1996''] by Eleanor Motley Richardson, (974.45 Ric) page 138.


--[[User:Glenda|Glenda]] 14:42, November 24, 2006 (EST)<!-- insert signature here, if desired -->
--[[User:Glenda|Glenda]] 14:42, November 24, 2006 (EST)<br>
--[[User:Kim|Kim]] 11:02, November 30, 2011 (EST)<!-- insert signature here, if desired -->


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Revision as of 11:02, 30 November 2011

Andover's first movie theater, the Wonderland, opened in 1909 at 7 Elm Street. The Colonial Theater on Essex Street opened in 1912. The building was owned by Sam Resnick and had previously housed a livery stable, a train station, and then a post office. It was later named the Andover Playhouse.

When the movie house closed in the '60s, the building was converted to office use, and it housed the part of town government that wouldn't fit into the town hall. Finally, the building, then called the "Theater Building," was torn down in 1984 for parking space at the Library.


...The Andover Playhouse.... click to enlarge


See

  • "Another theater becomes a memory", Andover Townsman, 1984.
  • "Remember When: The Andover Playhouse" , Andover Townsman, August 19, 2004

--Glenda 14:42, November 24, 2006 (EST)
--Kim 11:02, November 30, 2011 (EST)

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