Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Mort Glosser Amphitheater

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Built
  
1935 (1935)

Architectural style
  
English Picturesque

Opened
  
1935

Phone
  
+1 256-549-0351

Architect
  
Paul W. Hofferbert

NRHP Reference #
  
88001581

Area
  
4,000 m²

Added to NRHP
  
28 September 1988

Mort Glosser Amphitheater

Location
  
336 1st St., S., Gadsden, Alabama

Address
  
90 Walnut St, Gadsden, AL 35901, USA

Similar
  
Gadsden Museum of Art, Imagination Place, Noccalula Falls Park, Lookout Mountain

Mort Glosser Amphitheater (formerly known as the Legion Park Bowl and Gadsden Municipal Amphitheatre) is an amphitheatre in Gadsden, Alabama. Built in 1935, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.

Contents

History

The amphitheater was constructed in 1934–35 by the Works Progress Administration. It was built alongside the Gadsden Municipal Auditorium along the Coosa River. The American Legion, who owned the amphitheater, used it as a USO center during World War II to entertain soldiers stationed at Camp Sibert. Outside of wartime, it hosted boxing matches, concerts, plays, and political rallies, among other events. The City of Gadsden purchased the amphitheater in 1986 and began restoration of the facility.

Architecture

Designed by local architect Paul W. Hofferbert, the amphitheater was constructed using stone quarried from Lookout Mountain. The seating area is a half-hexagon with the stage on the north end. The stage is partially covered by a timber-frame proscenium arch finished with stone. A club room, rectangular with a steeply pitched roof, sits to the northwest of the stage. Entrances to the amphitheater are behind the seating area, with a hexagonal gatehouse, and a lower entrance next to the club room, accessible through a stone-walled courtyard. The amphitheater seats 1600.

References

Mort Glosser Amphitheater Wikipedia