Chickering Hall (est.1883) was a concert auditorium in Boston, Massachusetts, in the late 19th century. It occupied the second floor of Chickering and Sons showrooms on Tremont Street, near the corner of West Street. "Bradlee, Winslow and Wetherell were the architects, and Mr. E.P. Treadwell, the decorator. The hall lighted by the Edison electric light." By 1895: "Tremont St., towards Boylston, for some years has been called Piano Row, for a long row of piano agencies occupied a good portion of the block; but of late most of these have migrated to Boylston St. Chickering Hall, at 152 Tremont St., was for many years a favorite place for fashionable musicales, and the headquarters of the musical profession."
Performances/Events
1880s
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1890s
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Images
- Advertisement, 1889
- Seating chart, 1880s
- Advertisement, 1890
- Advertisement, 1891
- "Mrs. Herne as Margaret Fleming," 1891; depicts actress Katherine Corcoran
- Detail of map of Boston in 1896, showing Chickering Hall opposite Boston Common
See also
- Chickering and Sons
- Chickering Hall, Boston (1901), Huntington Avenue
References
- Illustrated Boston, the metropolis of New England. NY: American publishing and engraving co., 1889
- Bacon's Dictionary of Boston. 1886
- "The new Chickering: a pretty hall in which exercises were rendered yesterday. Boston Daily Globe, Nov. 8, 1883
- Ezra Prentice Treadwell (1848–1903), designer in Boston and NY. Obituary in: Building Trades Association Bulletin, v.4, no.5, May 1903
- King's how to see Boston: a trustworthy guide book; Macullar, Parker & Co. souvenir edition. USA: Moses King, 1895
- James Dow McCallum. "The Apostle of Culture Meets America." New England Quarterly, Vol. 2, No. 3 (Jul., 1929), pp. 357-381
- Boston Globe, Nov. 23, 1883
- Lee M. Edwards. "Hubert Herkomer in America." American Art Journal, Vol. 21, No. 3 (1989), pp. 48-73
- Boston Globe, Dec. 1, 1889
- Boston Globe, Oct. 19, 1890
- Boston Globe, Jan. 25, 1891
- Barnard Hewitt. "'Margaret Fleming' in Chickering Hall: The First Little Theatre in America?." Theatre Journal, Vol. 34, No. 2, Insurgency in American Theatre (May, 1982), pp. 165- 171
- Boston Globe, Jan. 7, 1892
- Boston Globe, Jan. 7, 1892
- Columbia University Library treasures Archived May 30, 2012, at the Wayback Machine: Sonata Tragica, G minor (Opus 45)
- Boston Globe, Feb. 3, 1893; Feb. 2, 1894
42°21′16.26″N 71°3′49.28″W / 42.3545167°N 71.0636889°W / 42.3545167; -71.0636889
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