E Elliott Street, Beeville, Texas.
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E Elliott Street, Beeville, Texas.
Coke sign, Beeville, Texas (LOC) by The Library of Congress Margolies, John,, photographer. Coke sign, Beeville, Texas 1979.
Mercury Grand Marquis in Beeville TX, USA
Rialto Theater, Beeville, Texas Source: The Portal to Texas History
Beautiful Art Deco interior.
Background on the building, from the Portal to Texas History:
Photograph of the interior of the Rialto Theater. The Rialto Theater was built in 1922, as the flagship for the 22-theater chain owned by H.W. Hall and family. After a fire in 1935 destroyed the interior, the theater was remodeled in an Art Moderne style by the original architect, W.C. Stephenson and the theatre architect John Eberson, famous for the Majestic Theater in San Antonio. John Eberson (1875-1964) was a Romanian born American architect best known for movie palace designs in the atmospheric theatre fashion. Eberson attained national and even international acclaim for his atmospheric theatres, many of them executed in exotic revival styles, including Italian Renaissance, Morrish Revival, and others. He specialized in depicting outdoor settings with no formal walls, and made the whole auditorium a gigantic stage set that enveloped the whole audience. He became renown in 1923, when he designed the Holblitzelle’s Majestic Theatre in Houston, the world’s first “atmospheric theatre”.
Provided Bee County Historical Commission Bee County, located in the Rio Grande plain in South Central Texas, grew out of the early settlement of the area by Irish and Mexican settlers and the 19th-century cattle ranching that continues to this day. Bee County's history has been preserved through the work of the Commission as well as the Rescuing Texas History Project.
What would you do with this blank canvas?
E Elliott Street, Beeville, Texas.
N Avenue C, Beeville, Texas.
Take me back to Beeville Away from San Antone It’s the only patch of histamines I ever knew as home