Marlinton Opera House
The Opera House also serves as a community center. Many organizations host suppers, meetings square dances, and even weddings at the facility. The Foundation also hosts music jams and movie nights for Pocahontas County, West Virginia residents.
History
The Pocahontas Opera House was originally built in 1910 by lumber businessman and publisher of the Marlinton Messenger, J. G. Tilton. Marlinton was the epicenter of the regions lumber business at the time.
In the early twentieth century, groups from as far away as New York performed in this booming railroad town. In 1912, Tilton's newspaper, the Marlinton Messenger, was published in the Opera House. County fairs, basketball games, and other community events took place in the space as well. As the railroad economy changed, Tilton sold the building. Throughout the rest of the century it was used for various purposes such as a lumberyard and a car dealership.
In 1991, the Pocahontas County Historic Landmarks Commission bought the property. At that time, there was no floor or stage in the Opera House. Through community donations and support, the Commission restored the Opera House to its present state in 1998 when the Pocahontas County Opera House Foundation formed. The Foundation oversees the performance series which includes various musical genres from bluegrass to salsa to classical to jazz. The season also includes dance and theater.
The Opera House received a facelift in 2021, with patching of the mortar parging of the historic building and new exterior paint by a company specializing in such work on historic buildings.
References
- ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
- ^ Bowers, Megan and Jessica Rhodes."Stage Set Again At Opera House" Charleston Daily Mail. 6 November 2008.
- ^ Tanner, Drew. "The House That Tilton Built" Mountain Times. December 2004.
- ^ Gioulis, Michael (November 1, 1999). "Marlinton Opera House" (PDF). West Virginia Department of Arts, Culture and History. National Park Service. Retrieved 18 November 2024.
- ^ Bennett, Laura Dean (2 September 2021). "Opera House gets a facelift". Pocahontas Times. pp. 1, 5.
- ^ Pocahontas Opera House Web site http://www.pocahontasoperahouse.org/index.php?s=about
- ^ "The House that Tilton Built"
- ^ West Virginia Uncovered: http://wvuncovered.wvu.edu/stories/pocahontas_county/the_pocahontas_county_opera_house
- ^ "The house That Tilton Built
- ^ Pocahontas Opera House Web site: http://www.pocahontasoperahouse.org/index.php?s=about