The
Opera House
is located in the Claremont City Hall Building. Dedication of
the building occurred on June 22, 1897. The cost was
$62,000. The style of the building is Italian Renaissance
Revival. The architect was Charles A. Rich. Rich
was a native of Beverly, Massachusetts, and graduated from Dartmouth
College. Hira Beckwith, an architect in Claremont, was the
contractor. Many of the construction materials for the
edifice came from the New England area. The foundation was
built of Green Mountain Rock and the base was dressed Connecticut River
Brownstone from Springfield, Massachusetts. On the major part
of the exterior are nearly one million Lebanon bricks.
On
the ground floor is an entrance lobby which originally led to an
assembly hall which seated 700 and was used for town meetings and
balls. In 1960 the first floor was remodeled, turning the
former hall into offices and a City Council chamber.
Above
the city offices is the Opera House. It has a
frescoed ceiling and a decorative wall frieze culminating with a
proscenium arch
adorned with a combination of basswood, painted cream, and a gold
leafed molded
plaster-work in high relief. Above the proscenium arch there
is a circular
multicolored fresco of the New Hampshire state seal. The
auditorium has a
total capacity of 783.
In
the early 1900's the Claremont Opera House was the
entertainment center for the area. Helping make this a
reality was a
Claremont druggist named Harry Eaton. Eaton managed the Opera
House for 32
years. He brought stock companies for plays, road companies
for one night
stands, musicals, vaudeville minstrel shows, and films. In
1906, Sousa's
Band of fifty, with three soloists, appeared in a Saturday matinee.
Because
of the lack of use, the doors at the Opera House were
closed in 1963. The city contemplated removing the auditorium
in favor of
a more modern building for the city offices and the District
Court. A
Restoration Committee was formed in 1972. Through its
efforts, the Opera
House was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973
and funds
were raised to hire an architect by 1975. With the joint
effort of the
City Council and the Opera House Restoration Committee, a N.H. Historic
Preservation Grant was received for a feasibility study in
1976. In 1977,
the Restoration Committee became a non-profit organization, Claremont
Opera
House, Inc. With plans and studies completed, the city
applied for and
received a grant from the Federal Economic Development
Administration. The
municipal complex became a reality. Interior restoration was
funded by a
federal grant from Heritage Conservation and Recreation Service,
Claremont Opera
House, Inc. and friends.
Since
the grand re-opening of the Opera House on May 26, 1979,
the Friends and Boards of Directors have raised funds, both publicly
and
privately, to re-equip the house. We have been able to expand
and improve
our programming and hire a director so that, once again, we are the
entertainment center of the area.