The Demopolis Theater District

Side A

Establishing a history of theaters in this district, the Braswell Theater introduced its ornate interior to

Demopolis on October 23, 1902, with a performance of

the melodrama Unorna. Built by Frederick Henry Braswell in galleries above his hardware store on Strawberry Avenue, the theater provided a local stage for operas, plays and minstrel shows into the 1920s. A popular silent screen star from Alabama, Henry B. Walthall, appeared live in the drama Taken In at the Braswell on April 15, 1921. The Elks Theater, the city’s first “picture show,” opened October 1, 1915, in the building with a front palladium window constructed by John Cox Webb, Jr., on the corner of Strawberry and Washington Streets. Braswell Theater partners Harry Simon and Tom Nonnenmacher acquired the Elks and gave it a new name, the Si-Non, for a February 1, 1916, opening.

Side B

The Si-Non Theater featured silent motion pictures

and personal appearance by celebrities until 1929

when it began a regular schedule of “talkies,”

Famous boxer Jack Dempsey and escape artist Harry

Houdini appeared at the Si-Non. After a management

change in January, 1931, the Si-Non operated

as the Lido Theater for its final four years. On

September 14, 1935, the Marengo Theater at the intersection of Washington and Cedar celebrated its grand opening as the city’s exclusive showplace

for movies. A capacity crowd enjoyed the picture

Two for Tonight, but a phone call from Hollywood star Jean Harlow to Mayor N.C. Floyd proved to be the evening’s highlight. Originally operated by

an Atlanta company, the Marengo was subsequently

purchased in 1940 by Henry W. Webb, its first

local owner.

Marker is on East Washington Street near Strawberry Avenue, on the right when traveling west.

Courtesy hmdb.org

Credits and Sources:

HMDB