Edna Theatre

201 W. Main St., Edna, TX
The Edna Theatre is adjacent to the county courthouse in the heart of downtown Edna, the seat of Jackson County, Texas. Between 1950 and 1978, the Edna Theatre served as an important focal point for the rural county, as "the picture show" was the most popular gathering place for young and old residents alike. Although the Edna Theatre was built to be the entertainment center for the county, it arrived just at the time when commercial television programming brought entertainment directly into people's homes, and, consequently, its popularity waned until the theater closed after less than thirty years in service. Today, a group of residents who fondly recall the excitement of the movie palace is pursuing its restoration, hoping to return the building to its place as the social center for the community.

At the time of its opening on March 14, 1950, the Edna Theatre featured state-of-the-art technology and was the epitome of architectural style for a movie theater of its size. Contractor W.D. Peck & Company, Inc., of Houston, designed and constructed the Edna Theatre, which served as the flagship of the sixty theaters operated by the Long Theaters chain in central and south Texas. One thousand moviegoers could fill the single-screen auditorium and enjoy the same films being screened in larger cities around the country, and the theater was fully air-conditioned at a time when very few homes or businesses featured such comforts. The exterior and interior of the building still maintain their Moderne-styled details, including the elaborate marquee and vertical signage, brilliantly lit with multicolored neon, and its aluminum poster display cases and storefront windows. The Edna Theatre is nominated to the National Register, at the local level of significance, under Criterion A for Entertainment/Recreation, and under Criterion C for Architecture.

A Brief History of Edna, Jackson County, Texas
Construction of the New York, Texas and Mexican (NYT&M) Railway line between the Texas towns of Rosenberg and Victoria began in September 1881, and it bypassed Texana, then the seat of Jackson County; consequently, the town of Edna was established along the railroad line in 1882. Laid out on land owned by Lucy Flournoy-who conveyed right-of-way and a half-interest in the townsite to the NYT&M-the town of Edna was named for a daughter of Joseph Telfener, owner of the railroad. Nicknamed the "Macaroni," the NYT&M was constructed by Italian laborers, most of whom Telfener, himself an Italian immigrant, had brought from the Lombardy region. On July 4, 1882, the first train arrived in Edna. Gideon Egg was the first merchant to establish a business in Edna, having relocated his general merchandise store from Texana in 1882. Also in that year, a baby girl named Edna Louise Traylor was the first child born in the new community.

In an election held on January 22, 1883, Jackson County residents voted to name Edna as the county seat. The contract to build a new county courthouse was awarded on February 11, 1884, and a post office opened in 1886. The congregation of the Texana Presbyterian Church moved its sanctuary, constructed in 1859, over eight miles to a new location in Edna, where it was used by other denominations for worship services; it is the oldest public building remaining in Jackson County, and it has been rehabilitated to serve the area as a cultural center. The Jackson County Progress was the town's first newspaper, but the printing plant, along with a large part of Edna's business district, was destroyed in 1906 in the town's second large fire. The Edna Herald, first published on November 22, 1906, succeeded the Progress.

The population of Edna steadily increased from 1,000 in 1896 to 2,500 residents by 1929, and by 1958-during the heyday of the Edna Theatre estimated 6,500 people lived in Edna. In addition to the county courthouse, today the city has a hospital, library, museum, city park with a swimming pool, three banks, two savings and loan associations, a country club with a nine-hole golf course, and the retirement community of Oak Creek Village. Edna is the center of a prosperous agricultural area with petroleum and natural gas production and has an active chamber of commerce, oilfield service industries, and two-grain elevators. The city is also the gateway to the 11,000-acre Lake Texana, which now covers the former site of Texana. After a decline in the late twentieth century, the population of Edna again slowly increased; in 1990 there were 5,343 residents, and in 2000 there were 5,899 residents of Edna. This number was slightly smaller (5,845) in September 2009.

Local significance: Entertainment and Recreation
A single-screen movie theater Ed Tex-opened in Edna on Monday, June 30, 1930, and it served the community until a fire destroyed the building in 1942. Due to U.S. involvement in World War II and related shortages of construction materials and capital for investment, a new theater could not be built in replacement at that time. Between 1942 and the opening of the Edna Theatre in 1950, residents throughout the largely rural Jackson County attended movie screenings in Edna in a remodeled storefront building with very limited seating capacity.

Late in 1949, construction began on the Edna Theatre at the corner of Ed Linn and Main streets, and the movie palace-a spectacular in itself-opened on the evening of Tuesday, March 14, 1950. The theater was designed and constructed by W.D. Peck and Company, Inc., of Houston, for the movie theater chain of J.G. Long Theaters, Inc., of Bay City, Texas. The Long Theaters owned and operated sixty theater venues throughout central and south Texas at that time, and the Edna Theatre was as modern in its design and equipment as any of its theaters in larger metropolitan areas, including Dallas and Houston. In addition to the latest in projection and sound equipment, and the most eye-catching of marquee lighting and signage, the Edna Theatre featured "eighty tons of refrigeration [to] cool the theater in summer, and a large heating plant [to] make it equally as comfortable during the winter." The Victoria Advocate reported that the Edna Theatre "is as modern as one can be built at this time."10 The final cost of construction exceeded $200,000, a large sum for its day.

"With true carnival spirit," approximately 3,000 people from Edna and the surrounding towns attended the grand opening of the theater on a Tuesday night. Jackson County residents celebrated the opening of the new movie palace with a parade, followed by a concert by the Edna Cowboy Band, conducted by R.J. Kluge. On the 450-square-foot stage in the single-screen auditorium, a short dedication ceremony was held, with L.O. Wallace of the Long Theatres chain acting as master of ceremonies; also in attendance was another Long employee, Glenn McClain, who briefly addressed the crowd. Harry Mauritz, the mayor of Edna, and Dr. R.E. Lee, president of the chamber of commerce, also spoke briefly, and Wallace introduced the audience of 1,000 to the manager of the new theater, Fred M. Smith. The first feature shown at the Edna Theatre was Father Is a Bachelor, starring William Holden and Coleen Gray; this romantic comedy, directed by Abby Berlin and Norman Foster, had just been released nationally on February 22, making its Edna debut on March 14 quite current.

Many in Jackson County today fondly recall the vibrant atmosphere of the Edna Theatre and its significance as an important social center for the surrounding towns during the mid-twentieth century. Saturday matinees cost ten cents and included headline news clips, the latest adventures of a weekly serial hero, a cartoon, and one or two full-length feature films. Teenagers flocked to the Edna Theatre on Saturday nights, as "the picture show" was the best place to take a date; midnight screenings of horror films also were a popular attraction for teenagers on Saturdays. Local merchants helped to bring patrons to the movie theater on Tuesdays, when people would queue all the way down the block for giveaways; the merchants donated prizes that were awarded to the lucky holders of numbered ticket stubs, or owners of cars with license plate numbers drawn by lottery. Treats at the concessions stand included popcorn for ten cents, candy for five cents, and dill pickles from a one-gallon jar. The Edna Theatre stage also was used for high school plays and talent shows, and occasionally live entertainment was also provided before a movie on Saturday night.

Although attendance at the Edna Theatre was very strong in its first years of operation, the opening of the theater coincided with the rise of television's popularity among American households, and over time the number of moviegoers dwindled as the number of television sets rose. The later development of television-related technologies-including home video cassette players and recorders in the mid-1970s, and the introduction of cable or "pay" television channels also contributed to the eventual demise of the Edna Theatre. Throughout the United States, large single-screen theaters like the Edna, located in the heart of downtown, commonly fell victim to the rising popularity of multi-screen theaters associated with shopping centers and regional malls. The Edna eventually succumbed to these pressures and closed its doors in 1978,14.

Local Significance: Architecture
The local newspaper claimed that the Edna Theatre was "the largest and most modern [movie theater] between San Antonio and Houston."15 Larger in size than many other single-screen theaters of the Long Theatres chain- including the Grove Theatre in Dallas, Dallas County, and the Ganado Theatre in Ganado, also in Jackson County- the Edna Theatre was certainly the chain's most opulent venue in 1950. Designed in the popular Moderne style, the building was the epitome of glamour and excitement, suggestive of Hollywood itself.

The horizontality of the one-part commercial block, which includes several storefronts and a grocery store, is countered by the two-story volume that contains the 1,000-seat auditorium and its screen. Minimal decoration on the brick building allows the elaborate theater marquee and 60-foot-tall vertical signage to serve as both advertisement and the focus of ornamentation. Extensive neon lighting both inside and outside the theater, including more than one mile of neon tubing on the main façade alone, draws attention to the building in the dark of night, even at a considerable distance. Texas architectural historian Jay C. Henry claimed that the "Streamlined marquee and the neon-illuminated advertising beacon became the leitmotifs of [the 1930s] modernization," on the major thoroughfares of downtown, a pattern that continued in the postwar years in the smaller towns of Texas. Henry identifies "the suspended electric sign [that] has now become a vertical advertising pylon of monumental scale" as the dominating feature of movie theaters constructed throughout the state during this period, "the building as billboard-as an immediately recognizable trademark and advertisement for the goods and services purveyed."

The Edna Theatre is one of the finer examples of a Moderne-style movie palace still extant in southeast Texas. Its integrity is excellent, as its elaborate signage, ticket booth, poster display cases, and entrances all remain in place and unchanged. The adjacent storefronts still feature their aluminum-framed display windows and their continuous bands of metal awnings, which were designed to be fireproof. The interior of the theater still includes the stage, screen, and sculptural ceiling ornamentation. The Moderne railing of extruded aluminum with glassy panels of corrugated, clear acrylic still graces the interior staircase to the balcony and manager's office.

A group of local businessmen, seeking to save the building from demolition and restore it to its former glory, purchased the Edna Theatre in 1986. These owners, in conjunction with the Jackson County Historical Commission, restored the marquee and most of the exterior neon lighting at a cost of nearly $30,000, much of which came from contributions from the community. In June 2008, nearly 1,200 people attended the marquee relighting ceremony, and since then the neon lights and signage have been illuminated every night between 9 and 11 o'clock. The City of Edna and the Chamber of Commerce now rent the marquee for public and private messages, and the Texana Arts Council, a local non-profit group, is currently pursuing full restoration and reuse of the Edna Theatre.

For its important role as a social center for Jackson County for nearly thirty years, providing entertainment for residents throughout the area, the Edna Theatre is nominated to the National Register of Historic Places under Criterion A for Entertainment/Recreation, at the local level of significance. As one of the finest examples of a Moderne-styled single-screen movie theater in southeast Texas, the Edna Theatre is also nominated to the National Register under Criterion C for Architecture. The period of significance begins in 1950 and continues through 1961, the current fifty-year mark for historic resources, in accordance with National Register guidelines.
Bibliography
Digital Sanborn Maps. "Edna, September, 1949." Proquest, LLC. Environmental Data Resources, 2008.

"Edna Theatre Will Open June 30." El Campo News, vol. 2, no. 35 (May 30, 1930), page not known.

"Grand Opening of Long's New Edna Theatre. Dedicated to the Edna Cowboys. Edna, Texas. March 14, 1950." Program booklet in possession of Jackson County Historical Commission, Edna, Texas.

Hardin, Stephen L. "Jackson County," in Handbook of Texas Online, accessed February 14, 2011, at: .
Hauschild, Henry. "Telfener, Joseph," in Handbook of Texas Online, accessed February 14, 2011, at: .
Henry, Jay C. Architecture in Texas, 1895-1945. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1993.

Heritage Quest Online. "Fifteenth Census of the United States: 1930. United States Federal Census Bureau. Department of Commerce - Bureau of the Census.

Jackson County Deed Records, Record Book K, p. 137, 1882.

Longstreth, Richard. The Buildings of Main Street: A Guide to American Commercial Architecture. Washington, D.C.: Preservation Press, 1987.

Malsch, Brownson. "Edna, Texas," Handbook of Texas Online, accessed February 12, 2011 at: .
"New Long Theatre in Edna Will Open Tuesday Evening." Edna Herald (March 9, 1950), sec. 1, p. 1.

"New Theater at Edna Opened." Victoria Advocate (March 16, 1950), page not known.

Walsh, W.C. Commission of the General Land Office of the State of Texas. 1880 Map of Jackson County.
Local significance of the building:
Architecture; Entertainment/recreation

Listed in National Register of Historic Places in 2011.

The National Register of Historic Places is the official list of the Nation’s historic places worthy of preservation. Authorized by the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966, the National Park Service’s National Register of Historic Places is part of a national program to coordinate and support public and private efforts to identify, evaluate, and protect America’s historic and archeological resources.

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The state of Texas was once an independent country known as the Republic of Texas. It gained independence from Mexico in 1836 and was a separate nation until it was annexed by the United States in 1845.
Jackson County, Texas, located on the Gulf Coast in southeastern Texas, has a rich and diverse history. It was originally inhabited by various Native American tribes, including the Karankawa and the Coahuiltecans. European exploration of the area began in the 16th century when Spanish explorers arrived, but it wasn't until the early 19th century that Anglo-American settlers began to establish permanent settlements.

The history of Jackson County is closely tied to significant events in the development of Texas. In 1821, the area became part of the newly independent Mexico, and Stephen F. Austin, known as the "Father of Texas," received a land grant in what is now Jackson County. The first Anglo-American settlers arrived in the 1820s and began establishing communities, such as Texana and La Placita, which would later become the county seat, Jackson County.

During the Texas Revolution, Jackson County served as an important site for the Texian forces. The Battle of Dimitt's Landing took place in Jackson County, where Texian rebels launched an attack on a Mexican garrison, leading to their retreat. The county also witnessed the playing of the "The Yellow Rose of Texas," a popular folk song believed to have originated during the Battle of San Jacinto.

By the mid-19th century, Jackson County experienced significant growth due to the expansion of the railroad industry and the discovery of oil and gas reserves. Towns like Edna sprung up as trade and transportation centers for the area's agricultural and industrial activities. Today, Jackson County continues to thrive economically with a diverse economy that includes agriculture, manufacturing, and energy production.

Throughout its history, Jackson County has played a prominent role in Texas' development, from its early days as a Mexican territory to its contributions in the Texas Revolution and its subsequent growth and prosperity in the 19th and 20th centuries. The county's rich history is reflected in its museums, historical sites, and the legacy of its residents who have shaped the community over the years.

This timeline provides a glimpse into the major events and milestones that have shaped the history of Jackson County, Texas.

  • 1829 - Jackson County is established as part of Mexico's Coahuila y Tejas state.
  • 1836 - Texas gains independence from Mexico, and Jackson County becomes part of the Republic of Texas.
  • 1837 - Jackson County is officially organized as a county.
  • 1845 - Texas is admitted to the United States, and Jackson County becomes one of its counties.
  • 1850s - The county experiences rapid growth due to the arrival of settlers, primarily from southern states.
  • 1861-1865 - Jackson County is heavily involved in the American Civil War, with some residents supporting the Confederacy.
  • 1875 - The first railroad, the New York, Texas and Mexican Railway, reaches Jackson County, boosting the local economy.
  • 1886 - The county seat is moved from Texana to Edna.
  • 1900 - The 1900 Galveston hurricane causes significant damage and loss of life in Jackson County.
  • 1920s-1930s - The discovery of oil leads to a boom in Jackson County's economy.
  • 1940s-1950s - The county experiences a decline in agriculture as the oil industry becomes the primary economic driver.
  • 1970s-Present - Jackson County continues to rely on the oil and gas industry, while also diversifying its economy with manufacturing and agriculture.