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Grand Forks Metropolitan Opera House Records
Grand Forks Metropolitan Opera House Records, 1890-1971
Collection Overview
Title: Grand Forks Metropolitan Opera House Records, 1890-1971
ID: OGLMC319
Extent: 0.5 Linear Feet
Date Acquired: 00/00/1981. More info below under Accruals.
Subjects: Grand Forks, Theater and Film
Languages: English
Abstract
Scope and Contents of the Materials
Collection Historical Note
The Grand Forks Opera House Company was incorporated August 2, 1889. The Board of Directors included S.S. Titus (president), George Winship (vice-president), Burke Corbett (secretary), George Batchelder (treasurer), and E. J. Lander and John Birkholz (directors).
The foundation for the Metropolitan Opera House was laid in the fall of 1889 and construction was completed the following year. The total cost was over $90,000. The Met held its debut on November 10, 1890, with a performance of "Martha" by the nationally renowned Emma Abbott. This performance was unique in that it was a three night engagement in addition to a matinee. The first governor of North Dakota, John Miller, came to Grand Forks to deliver the dedication speech. The first manager of the Met was George Broadhurst, hired away from the Hennepin Avenue Theater in Minneapolis.
After 1907, the Met began showing motion pictures and, by the 1930s, was only showing movies. In 1940, the interior was gutted and a bowling alley was installed. The Met survived the 1997 Red River Valley Flood, and the building still stands in downtown Grand Forks.
Sources:
Bell, John. The Metropolitan Theatre in Grand Forks, North Dakota: The Years of Decline, 1911-1933. Call number: T1997 b413 (Master's thesis)
Drake, Dawn. Production Activity and Performers at the Metropolitan Theatre, Grand Forks, North Dakota: 1898-1911. Call number: T1993 d789 (Master's Thesis)
Kelsey, Vera. Red River Runs North. New York: Harper, 1951. Call number: F612.r27k4
They Came to Stay: Grand Forks, North Dakota Centennial, 1874-1974. Call number: F644.g8t48x
Tomasek, Paul. The Metropolitan Opera House of Grand Forks, North Dakota. Call number: UT1971 t59 (UND Honor's Thesis)
Tweton, D. Jerome. Grand Forks: A Pictorial History. Norfolk, VA: Donning, 1986. Call number: F644.g8t84 1986
Subject/Index Terms
Administrative Information
Repository: Elwyn B. Robinson Department of Special Collections
Additional materials were donated by:
Barbara Lander, Grand Forks, North Dakota, March 25, 1997
Sandy Slater, Department of Special Collections, Fall 1999 (99-2397)
Peg O'Leary, Grand Forks Historic Preservation Commission, Grand Forks, North Dakota, November 2000 (2001-2487).
Access Restrictions: Open for inspection under the rules and regulations of the Elwyn B. Robinson Department of Special Collections.
Acquisition Source: Edward P. Dow and Edward Lander, Grand Forks, North Dakota
Acquisition Method: Donation; 81-774
Preferred Citation: (Description of Item). Grand Forks Metropolitan Opera House Records, OGLMC 319. Elwyn B. Robinson Department of Special Collections. University of North Dakota, Grand Forks.
Finding Aid Revision History: Finding aid added to Archon in April 2015.
Box and Folder Listing
Browse by Box:
[Box 1],
[All]
- Box 1
- Folder 1: Inaugural Performance Programs, November 1890
- Folder 2: List of Performances, 1898-1903
- Folder 3: Programs, 1906-1910
- Folder 4: Programs, 1911-1913
- Folder 5: Programs, 1914-1929
- Folder 6: Performance/Employment Contracts
- Folder 7: Specifications/Estimates
- Folder 8: Legal Materials
- Folder 9: Financial Materials
- Folder 10: News Clippings
- Folder 11: “The Metropolitan Opera House of Grand Forks, North Dakota,” a paper written for Honors Humanities at UND by Paul Tomasek, December 1971
- Folder 12: Petition of King Lear Production, 20 April 1896
- Signatures of 74 people requesting to attend the play. Also includes a written transcription of the names by Jane Arnegard Ryan. Her father, Ole Arnegard, was one of the petitioners.
- Folder 13: Program for 1908 Syttende Mai festival
- Folder 14: Photographs