For years, this block at 16th and Welton has been dominated by the nearly empty Fontius Building. Prior to Fontius moving to the Steel Building (1923), as it is officially known, the store was located in the Symes Building (1906) at 834 16th Street. It sure is interesting to see a different Fontius sign after having the current 1960s version ingrained in our heads for so many years. But the Orpheum space has been off of the radar screen since being closed September 10, 1967. Subsequently demolished, along with the Tabor Grand in 1965, there were only three theaters left downtown by 1970: the Denver on 16th and Glenarm, the Denham at 18th and California, and the Paramount. Today, only one survives!
This picture, circa 1933, shows the Denver Theater, where the Denver Pavilions stands today. If you look closely, you can see a different Fontius shoe sign in the distance at Welton. Notice the Kittredge Building and Paramount Theater on the right and the D & F Tower in the distance.
Finding information on the Orpheum Theater has come from a number of places. (See Forrest, Kenton and William C. Jones. Denver: A Pictorial History, Boulder: Pruett Publishing Co., 1973.) In addition, online sources, if to be believed, indicate that the original Orpheum on Welton Street opened on October 5, 1903. It enjoyed life as a vaudeville show house, a silent movie theater and finally showed regular movies along with its numerous competitors downtown. Its multi-purpose stage hosted many acts, including those of Will Rogers, the Marx Brothers and Al Jolson.
This photo, circa 1910, shows the changing character of this once residential neighborhood. The old homes facing the Orpheum on Welton Street were not long for the world.
These two photos, circa 1920, show the unique architecture of the Orpheum. The top photo shows the future site of the Fontius Building, which was not constructed until 1923. The photo shows its predecessor, which I believe was known as the El Paso Building. The lower photo shows the Denver Dry Goods Company in the background. In addition, the Colonial/Republic Hotel is seen in the far left of the photo. This building is currently being razed.
The interior of the Orpheum was no less grand, as indicated by the photos above.
However, progress was marked by the reaffiliation of the theater around 1930 when it became part of RKO International. A remodel was in the works.
A new and improved Art Deco Orpheum greeted visitors in the top photo, circa 1930 (it is unknown what or who is being "hung" in the photo). The Orpheum was still packing people in for shows featuring Fred Astaire in the lower photo, circa 1950. However, competition from an increasingly suburbanizing public would soon spell doom to the downtown theaters, including the Orpheum. Television and drive-ins also hurt downtown movie business.
Out with the old, in with the new. This picture says it all. The First National Bank of Denver (621 17th Street) rises into the sky as one of Denver's earliest skyscrapers in this photo circa 1957. This building would become familiar to people around the world in the 1980s show Dynasty. It was one of the buildings shown in the opening credits to that show. Off to the side in this picture, the Orpheum awaits its fate, brought down by progress a decade later.
It's miraculous that the rest of Block 162 has remained intact up to this point. But now with the redevlopment of the block underway, only the McClintock and the Steel Building will remain. I think we should at least let the Fontius name remain. The Orpheum, Standish and Republic Hotel names will continue to fade away. However, the Steel/Fontius building will be made shiny again. Hopefully, the Fontius name will stick around and not soon be forgotten.
All historic photos are from the Denver Public Library's Western History Collection. Some of the hyperlinks above direct you to DenverInfill.com to view present day photos and maps of Downtown Denver.
6 comments:
I agree with you Shawn. I was kind of hoping the fontius name would remain, but I believe Makovsky really wants to distance himself frrom it. Oh well. Thanks for the great blog!
Interesting history. Sad that city leaders were so quick to bulldoze the past in place of so-called modern buildings. Thankfully some of it survives still. Leaders have come to realize that the character of old buildings help to give their cities and towns that specialness that brings tourists to explore.
Shawn,
My recollection was that the Fontius store was across Welton from its location in the Steel Building. When I was a kid my Mother used to take me there every fall prior to school starting for a new pair of shoes. It moved across Welton some time in the late fifties or sixties. The sign in your photo taken looking down Sixteenth Street shows it in the earlier location that I remember.
Bob Hayes
Am reading a diary of my grandmother's account of her month long trip to Yellowstone via train in 1910. She stopped in Denver for a few days on the way home (to Kansas), and attended a show at the Orpheum on Thursday, August 18, 1910. Alas, she didn't say what they saw! In her words " We went to the Orpheum after supper. It is very good, but Denver has lots of good moving picture and vaudeville theatres." Anyone know what she could have seen?
Lisa L.
I am pretty sure my Great Grandmother was in a Vaudeville Show there in july of 1910. is there anyway to find out more info about this?
My grandmother was an acrobat in vaudeville and I have a "panoramic" photograph of her and fellow vaudevillians standing in front of the Orpheum, dated December 31, 1914, with Gertrude Hoffman Company printed above the date. Mile High Photo Co. took the picture. I had the picture framed and it is hanging on our wall with many of my grandparents' vaudeville photos. Too bad all those classic buildings get torn down and replaced with modern architecture. I prefer the old!
Post a Comment