utahtheaters.info
 
  •Home •Theaters •News •Recent  
 
Gem Theatre
162 South State Street
Salt Lake City, Utah
•Main Page •News Articles (10)
•Photos
•Sign Guestbook
•Facts & Figures  

Kingsbury Hall
Salt Lake City, Utah

The University of Utah dedicated its first auditorium, Kingsbury Hall, on 22 May 1930.   The $275,000 assembly hall was funded by the State of Utah and named in honor of Joseph T. Kingsbury, who served as President of the University from 1897 until 1926.   Kingsbury Hall is one of nine buildings in the University Circle historic district, which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978.  The auditorium was built with a projection booth and an organ loft, to accommodate silent films.

 
 
  Home   »  Theaters   »  Gem Theatre  »  Main Page
   
 
Black and white drawing of the Liberty Theatre.

Salt Lake Tribune, page 14
Date: 6 November 1910

Gem Theatre
(Liberty Theater)
 
162 South State Street
Salt Lake City, Utah
 
Status:
Demolished 
Open:
1 February 1911  
Closed:
2 September 1968  
 

Construction of the $20,000 Liberty Theatre was under way in November 1910, with an expected opening date of 1 February 1911. The “photo-playhouse” was to be “one of the most modern motion picture houses in the west.” Plans included “many new features which have not before been incorporated in plans for a motion picture house.”[1]

The theater had a seating capacity of 1,900, including 100 loge seats. Private loges allowed patrons to enjoy “the exclusiveness and comforts of the opera box.” The dimensions of the building were 44 feet wide and 180 feet long.[1]

The Liberty Theatre was “practically fireproof,” promising that the “danger to patrons from fire will be removed as far as possible.” The theater had “private retiring rooms for both ladies and gentlemen” and a ventilation system that could provide a complete change of air every three minutes. C. W. Midgley, manager of the Casino Theatre, was also have the management of the Liberty.[1]

About 1919,[2] the theater was renamed the Gem Theatre.  The theater closed on 2 September 1968.[3]  The building was later demolished and the site is now a parking lot for a fast food restaurant.
 

1. “Modern Picture Theatre”, Salt Lake Tribune, 6 November 1910, page 14
2.
Newspaper ad, Salt Lake Tribune, 21 November 1919, page 17
3.
Newspaper ad, Salt Lake Tribune, 2 September 1968, page 9