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New Opera House (Charles Town, West Virginia)

1911 establishments in West VirginiaBuildings and structures in Charles Town, West VirginiaEastern Panhandle Registered Historic Place stubsEvent venues on the National Register of Historic Places in West VirginiaNational Register of Historic Places in Jefferson County, West Virginia
Opera houses in West VirginiaOpera houses on the National Register of Historic PlacesTheatres completed in 1911Theatres on the National Register of Historic Places in West Virginia
Old Opera House WV1
Old Opera House WV1

The Old Opera House is located in the Shenandoah Valley in Charles Town, West Virginia, once known as the New Opera House or simply The Opera House, is a restored theater, designed by T.A. Mullett of Washington, D.C., son of architect Alfred B. Mullett. The theater opened in 1911, bringing minstrel shows, vaudeville, touring theater groups, circuses and wild west shows to Charles Town. By the 1930s a projection machine was installed, but the theater closed in 1948. It has since re-opened as a community-supported performance space. The building consists of a two-story street front with offices on the second floor in an old apartment building, pre-dating the theater portion by about twenty years. The house and stage occupy the interior of the lot.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article New Opera House (Charles Town, West Virginia) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

New Opera House (Charles Town, West Virginia)
West Liberty Street,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 39.289722222222 ° E -77.860833333333 °
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Address

West Liberty Street 180
25414
West Virginia, United States
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Old Opera House WV1
Old Opera House WV1
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Charles Town Mining, Manufacturing, and Improvement Company Building
Charles Town Mining, Manufacturing, and Improvement Company Building

The Charles Town Mining, Manufacturing, and Improvement Company Building in Ranson, Jefferson County, West Virginia is a Romanesque Revival building that now serves as Ranson's City Hall. It was built for the Charles Town Mining, Manufacturing and Improvement Company (CMM&I) in 1891 as its headquarters. The CMM&I sought to develop industry in the area that in 1910 became the City of Ranson. The company was formed in 1890 by Roger Preston Chew, Frank Beck, Forrest W. Brown, T.C. Green, W.F. Lippitt, A.W. McDonald and B. C. Washington, with Chew as president. Using 850 acres (3.4 km2) of land purchased from the Ranson family, a planned community was laid out by D.G. Howell, a Washington, D.C. landscape architect and civil engineer. In 1891 the 3½ story headquarters was built, designed by J.C. Holmes. By 1893 the CMM&I was facing hard times, possibly as a result of the Panic of 1893, and the headquarters was sold to the Board of Education of Charles Town, and served as the white Charles Town High School from 1893 to 1912. The school was sometimes known as both the "Keyhole School,” due to its distinctive entrance, and as the Wright Denny School. In 1917 the Board of Education sold the school to former mayor Gerard D. Moore, and upon his death the property went to H.C. Getzendanner for $4500. Part of the building was used as a confectionery and the north half became the Ranson Post Office. In 1936 the City of Ranson bought the building for $3000 as its City Hall, although apartments occupied the upper floors until the 1970s.