Historical Marker

Galvan Ballroom

Marker installed: 2016

The Galvan Ballroom was established near downtown Corpus Christi in 1950. Rafael Galvan hired Corpus Christi architect Everett E. Hamon to design the streamline moderne building. Galvan was a prominent citizen of Corpus Christi. He was the city’s first Hispanic police officer, as well as a businessman, fisherman, and real estate agent. The modern building housed retail space on the ground floor consisting of Galvan Music Co., owned by Bobby and Alicia Galvan, and King Furniture Co., owned by Salvador and Angela Varela. A 9,000-square-foot ballroom was on the second floor.

Originally built as a venue for his children’s popular music band, the Ralph Galvan Orchestra, the ballroom also served as a space for wedding receptions, quinceañeras, school dances, and a meeting space for various social clubs. The ballroom hosted locally and internationally acclaimed jazz, big band, swing, and conjunto acts. The space became a venue to showcase Hispanic musical acts that had developed during the 1940s and 50s.

The Galvan Ballroom helped bridge the gap between Mexican and American jazz bands, as well as help bring into the spotlight talented Hispanic musicians that may not have had access to popular jazz clubs at the time. Noteworthy jazz performers at the Galvan Ballroom during the 1950s were Tommy Dorsey, Duke Ellington, and Count Basie, as well as dozens of notable local and regional performers. The Galvan Ballroom’s legacy cannot be overstated as a center for Hispanic musical heritage. The Galvan Ballroom is still in operation and continues to provide the area with a rich musical tradition.

(2016).