Historic
Lost Washington:The Knickerbocker Theater
The Knickerbocker Theater — once located at the southwest corner of Columbia Road and 18th Street, NW — was designed by the young Washington architect, Reginald W. Geare, to seat 1,700 movie goers at a time. When it opened in October, 1917, it was the newest theater in Harry Crandall's string of Washington theaters. This was by far Crandall's largest theater at the time and was a good example of early-twentieth-century architecture inspired by neoclassicism.
Unfortunately, the Knickerbocker Theater will always be linked in people's minds to tragedy. On Friday, January 21, 1922, a heavy snowfall began in Washington and continued for thirty hours. It left the city paralyzed under 28 inches of snow in the worst storm the city had seen since 1889.
Despite these conditions, the theater opened as usual the following Saturday evening. As the movie was ending and the organist was playing at 9:10 p.m., a groaning and cracking sound began from above. Two minutes later, there was a mad rush to the exits as the roof crashed in under the weight of the snow.
98 people had died and 136 were trapped under the rubble. The crowd of about 3,000 bystanders made it difficult for rescuers to assist the victims until a company of marines arrived to restore order at 11 p.m.
The subsequent investigation determined that the contractor had inserted the steel beams supprting the roof only 2 inches into the walls rather than the 8 inches Geare had specified, and Geare and Crandall were found innocent of any wrong doing.
Crandall rebuilt the Knickerbocker in 1923 and reopened it as the Ambassador. As the Ambassador, the building survived until it was razed in 1969. Added by David: While nowhere near as tragic as the loss of 98 lives, replacing this building with the bank that's there today is a tragedy all its own. The Wikipedia article claims residents cheered the building's demise, even saying, "Whatever happens can only be an improvement," but that seems a little too convenient to believe without corroboration.
Geare and Crandall didn't fare so well. His career ruined by the disaster, Geare committed suicide in 1927. Similarly, Crandall ended up bankrupt and took his own life in 1937.
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by gern on Jul 7, 2009 5:42 pm
Never forget the past!! That is importaint to know the past to understand the future/present time..
Anita.
by anicath on Jan 3, 2010 10:57 am
On the other hand, the neighborhood could have fared much, much worse. Urban renewal plans from the '60s would have blasted a freeway (the "inner Beltway") roughly along the path of Florida Avenue and replaced the turreted townhouses of 18th Street with something that looked like Crystal City, VA.
So I guess you gotta count your blessings.
by stewie on Feb 6, 2010 12:29 pm