Shea's Teck Theatre: Buffalo, NY

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trismegistus
SH.org OP Date
2019-03-21 16:38:11
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8
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trismegistus

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Seems like every time I dig into research on my city of birth I always dig up some interesting stuff for this forum. Hopefully some enterprising Buffalonians can help me out with this, as yet again we have examples of some amazing buildings with very little explanation on how they were built. This post is a bit looser than usual, hopefully those familiar with my previous material and many other posts on this forum will follow the logical progression of these finds.

Sheas-Teck_Buffalo-NY_1887-music-hall_etching.jpg

Sheas-Teck_Buffalo-NY_1887-interior.jpgproxy.duckduckgo.com.jpgSheas-Teck_Buffal-NY_dinner-1900s.jpglarge.jpg
From Performing Arts Archive:

Also known as: Music Hall, Shubert Teck, Loew's Teck.
Location: 766 Main Street, Buffalo, NY
(Southwest corner of Main and Edward Streets, across the street from St. Louis RC Church)
Architect: August Esenwein Style: French Renaissance Revival
Status: Closed/Demolished

The Teck Theatre was built on the site of the great 1883 Greman Saengerhalle (a concert venue which was destroyed by fire in 1885). The Music Hall opened on October 18, 1887 and later was completely remodeled into Shea's Teck Theater in 1900, with a seating capacity in two separate halls of 3,350. In 1908 it was taken over by the Shubert organization, which ran it as a live theatre until 1933 when it was closed during the Depression.

Mainstream Timeline:

  • 1882 - Home of Judge Ebenezer Walden, mayor of Buffalo 1838-1839, demolished for the Music Hall
  • 1883 - Music Hall designed by August Esenwein and built by the German Young Men's Association
  • March 25th, 1885 - Fire destroys first Music Hall
  • 1887 - Construction of second Music Hall, designed by Richard Waite
  • 1900 - Building became known as the Teck Theatre
  • 1933 - The theater closed
  • 1945 - The building became a movie theater, also named Teck. The building underwent significant interior and exterior changes.
  • 1980s - The rear of the building was demolished to make way for a Pearl Street connector as a drain from the 33 into downtown
  • 1992 - The remainder of the theater was demolished
Greman Saengerhalle
Sheas-Teck_Buffalo-NY_1885-music-hall.jpg

06barker.jpg

TMG: That's one hell of a fire they had there. Wonder how much dynamite it took to put that fire out...?

Also, note yet another example of a cable-less trolley in the foreground. Guess they figure that most people just won't ask questions about the tech of that time which is why you can still find these photos...
From bscottholmes.com:

Sængerhalle (German Young Men’s Association Building Concert Hall) included:
Concert Hall 16 July or 7 December 1883–25 March 1885
760–768 Main Street,
SW corner Edward Street
ARCHITECT: August C. Esenwein
NOTE: Capacity of 2500 seats. Seating arrangement varied to accommodate different shows. Concert Hall occupied the upper two stories above the lobby, and had 1100 seats. The Buffalo Orpheus society moved here from Riegelmann’s Hall upon the opening in November 1883. Burned down in 1885. Buffalo Orpheus then moved to Bächer’s Halle. Replaced by a more elaborate building. OTHER THEATRES WITH THE SAME NAME: Not to be confused with Shea’s Music Hall, with Concert Hall at 155 Main Street., or with the later Concert Halls here.
CURRENT STATUS: Empty lot and Pearl Street.


August C. Esenwein
esen.jpg

220px-Wappen_Deutsches_Reich_-_Königreich_Württemberg.jpg
TMG: While it is not explicitly mentioned, dollars to donuts the above bolded statement refers to the architectural school L'ecole des Beaux Arts.
From Buffalo as an Architectural Museum:

After Green & Wicks, Esenwein & Johnson enjoyed the most active architectural practice in Buffalo, New York, at the turn of the twentieth century. The firm had offices at 775-793 Ellicott Square.

The firm was one of the eight official architects for the Pan-American Exposition. Its most notorious structure was also the shortest lived. The Temple of Music was the site of President McKinley's ill-fated meeting with assassin Leon Czolgosz in September 1901.

TMG: Please read through the Buffalo Pan-Am post on SH, if you haven't already, as to why this is a somewhat noticeable find.

Like a Phoenix/Griffin From the Ashes...
Sheas-Teck_Buffalo-NY_stone-carvers.jpg

Ostensibly, this seal was created to commemorate the opening of Teck theatre on the grounds of the Saengerhalle. Can any other armchair symbologists help me break this one down? Also, what is the significance of holding chisels and hammers? I think it's pretty clear that they did not just finish chiseling that seal before they took the photo. Is that a freemason thing?

05sever.jpg
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Username: Onthebit
Date: 2019-03-21 19:27:17
Reaction Score: 6
Freemason probably means literally 'free' masonry.......They found it or took it...
 
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Username: Plissken
Date: 2019-03-21 22:38:25
Reaction Score: 5
I thought the same thing about the picture with the workers. The caption on the link you provided:

Stone carvers take a break from their work on the rebuilt Music Hall about 1886.

Bwahahaha:ROFLMAO:

I know that I wear a prom dress and my husband wears a suit all the time but if we need to mow the lawn or roto-till the garden, we just throw a duster coat over the top. They obviously aren't workmen.

On the symbolism, that definitely looks like a phoenix rising from flames to me. What is weird is the phoenix is above the crown, usually the phoenix is crowned ie under the rule of a king or monarch. Considering this building burned and rebuilt, the phoenix symbology is not a surprise. The position of the crown bothers me. Great Post! Keep Buffalo coming!

Plissken?
 
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Username: BStankman
Date: 2019-03-22 08:41:13
Reaction Score: 1
Another great post. That line cracked me up.

definite mason thing for buffalo.

19292

Looking forward to a post about Buffalo town hall.
 
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Username: anotherlayer
Date: 2019-03-22 14:07:44
Reaction Score: 3
Here is the house (1830s) that was torn down (1882) to make way for the first rendition of the Music Hall at Main St. and Edward:

walden_home1.jpg
Everything about this photo is goofy. If you squint, it looks like a Monty Python segue. Who drew those chimneys in after the fact? And why so many stacks for 2k sq. ft of space? I dunno... maybe there was a building behind it.
 
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Username: jd755
Date: 2019-03-22 16:58:17
Reaction Score: 3
Looked at that house in gimp and it seems to me it has been entirely painted in.
 
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Username: BrokenAgate
Date: 2019-03-22 17:28:40
Reaction Score: 2
All the people are well-dressed. In all these photos, when people are visible, they are always wearing nice, tailored clothing. There are no poor people anywhere, no homeless people on park benches, nobody dressed in shabby, cheap clothing from the second-hand shops. I find it interesting that the only place we see farmers, shepherds, and other poor folk are in those drawings by Piranesi. They are often seen amongst the ruins, sometimes appearing to be scavenging blocks of stone.

I guess it's a good thing they didn't find free toilet facilities, or their name might be very different.
 
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Username: trismegistus
Date: 2019-03-24 15:59:56
Reaction Score: 1
At this point, this is a direction this research seems to point to.

I was watching a documentary the other night about Hitler and the Freemasons. The story goes when the Nazis took over Paris, one of the first things Hitler did was to confiscate all of the Freemasonic lodge's archives. It then goes that after the war was over, all of those archives were split amongst the "winners" - - US, Britain, and Russia all took varying amounts and hid them in their own basements. Who knows how much of that documentation is still sitting in a dusty box somewhere in a government office nowadays.

At the risk of derailing my own thread, I'll leave the thought there if only to say that Freemasonic archives seemed very important to some very powerful governments/groups in the 20th century. Considering how many of the "students" of L'ecole Beaux Arts seemed to be Freemasons, I would imagine these governments would take no chances in having this Stolen History accessible to the future generations. If our postulation turns out to even be somewhat correct, I would be surprised if there are any lodges that managed to keep this knowledge intact amongst themselves in the 21st century.
 
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