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The Old
Lyceum, the New Lyceum, the Chester
Theater - they are ingrained in our memories. Movie houses were the
stuff dreams were made of for a child growing up in America before the
advent of television.
In downtown Chestertown, Maryland those movie
dreams began at the turn of the 20th century. The departing Russell
family brought the movie to town and the Prince family carried on the
tradition before the close of the theater in 1993.
The first "movies"
involved outdoor summer shows on the parking lot of the Bates Russell
Motor Company building in the early 1900's. In 1909 Mr. Russell
bought Stam's Hall from a company that included Hope H. Barroll, Harrison
W. Vickers and R. Harrison Collins. The
second floor theater in the imposing building containing the Town Clock
was "remodeled and greatly" improved at a cost of
$15,000.00. Mr. Russell named his theatre the Chestertown Lyceum and
appointed brother Fred S. Russell manager. On Saturday, September 4,
1909 the movie house opened for a 7:30pm show with an admission charge of
five cents. A "new picture" was promised every night. Within
twenty years the growing popularity of moving pictures dictated that Mr.
Russell purchase the butcher shop next door and build a new movie
house. On October 25, 1926 the New Lyceum opened. Construction
was strictly local. Plumbing and heating were by William C.
Sutton. The oil burner heating system was installed by George W.
Baldwin. Floor coverings and mezzanine suite furniture were from
John Bartley & Son and G.E. Noland. A new piano was bought from
W.P. Newnam. Plastering was done by the Coleman brothers of Rock
Hall. Supervising construction was A.M. Culp. Seating capacity
was 650 chairs with admission of 25 cents for children, and for adults 30
cents in the gallery, 35 cents in the balcony and 50 cents on the main
floor. The
theater saw the advent of "talkies" and boomed along under the
direction of Mr. Russell's sons, the late Emerson R. Russell and Harry S.
Russell until after World War II. Then it was leased to C.A.
Wingfield and F.B. Klein in 1946. In 1957 Charles E. Prince
purchased the business. "Pete" Prince, who started in the
movies in 1922 at the age of nine selling popcorn at a Nashville movie
house, had never lost his love for the movies. He preserved the old
theater until his death in 1988. Then his wife Kit kept it open
until 1991. Joyce
Huber bought the property on Friday, March 15, 1991, remodeled the
facility and opened it on Friday, May 17 with the Academy Award Winning
"Dances With Wolves". It
remained open for two years, three months and nine days, closing with John
Grisham's "The Firm" on August 26, 1993.
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