Jim McGinty, the long-term owner of the old, run-down Alcazar Theatre building at 609 First Street, claims that it is the most photographed historic structure in Snohomish. “So why change it,†he asks?
The Alcazar Theatre was built by a Mr. Jackson, owner of the Jackson Wharf at the base of Maple Avenue and the Jackson Row Houses at Maple and Pearl, behind the Carnegie Library Building. Opening night was noted in the November 11, 1892 issue of the Snohomish County Tribune: “Passing through the broad arched entrance, the auditorium, 33 x 45 feet in size, with a seating capacity of 350 persons, is reached. In construction and decoration no expense has been spared, and the desired result, a theater first-class in all its appointments has been attained.â€
The Snohomish Historical Society archives has one theater program in its collection from the Alcazar of a production presented by the Snohomish Public Library, on April 8, 1904, titled, “The Mystic Midgets.†The program boasts: “100 Of Our Talented Young People.†And in 1906, a young Al Jolson, new on the vaudeville circuit, moved his act to the Alcazar when his booking in Everett fell through.
Charles H. Crippen is listed as the proprietor of the theater in 1909, and three years later the address, 609 First Street, is a listing for furnished rooms, which were on the second floor. We are getting close to the estimated date of our historic image, picturing the building as the Eastside Garage.
By the 1970s the building had found a new calling as a junk store, but with the establishment of Snohomish’s Historic District in 1973, it was upgraded to “antiques†and it held down the east end of Snohomish’s new moniker “the antique capital of the Northwest.â€
Through the years, McGinty has taken expensive steps to preserve the building, first by adding a concrete foundation, and then a few years ago, he replaced the roof. Recently, Mike Odell and Gayle Szalay opened an antique business on Fridays through Sundays. As you enter their shop, look up to note the red horseshoe shape structure in the ceiling – it marks the location of the theater balcony!
And just across the street, you can stop in at Tina’s Manor of Wine for one of her frequent wine tasting. So fortified, you will be ready to pose for the camera with the old Alcazar Building in the background.
Feel free to imagine what it would be like if were a theater again.
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ABOUT THE PHOTOGRAPHS:
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Published March 16, 2011 in the Snohomish County Tribune.