Madison Avenue School is at the corner of Orange Ave. and Madison Ave. It was a K-6 school for many years. This was my elementary school and when I was in kindergarten in 1958-59, we were in the “new” building that was at the corner of Madison and Cummings St. that held the Kindergaten, first and second-grade classes. We had two classes per grade.
The original building was closed in 2013 and in need of many updates and repairs. It was determined that the cost of retrofitting the buildings to the current state requirements was cost-prohibitive. So, students from that area were sent to Mt. Vernon Ave. School as a “swing” school during demolition and construction.
The Madison Avenue School buildings (original building and K-2 addition) were demolished in 2016. The new building was opened in September 2019 and is now a pre-K through grade 5 school.
If you are a Madison Avenue School graduate from any year, consider joining our Facebook group and join in the conversation and see many more photos of the school, classes and the neighborhood.
In 1947, Joan Gritz is checking out here new school for kindergarten. This was the entrance on Orange Ave. where many of us enter to spend time on the playground before school started.The Halloween parade
In a classroom, back in the dayClassic classroom – remember those desks, the handwriting border, those clocks that we stared at hoping for 3 PM…The cakewalk at the annual fall carnival where you walked around a painted circle on the playground to music and when the music stopped a number determined who won one of the home-baked cakes.Parents ran all the concessions and games at the carnival. Here a father is cooking burgers and hot dogs.Madison at Mt. VernonThe newer building at Cummings when the school was closed before its demolition.The school in its final years of using the original buildings. (Aerial view via Google Maps 2015)
Demolition begins 2016
Demolition September 2017
Plan for the new buildingConstruction April 2018new construction from the Cummings St. corner
The new building – September 2019.
The new MadisonThe new building as seen from a car driving down Madison and crossing Orange Avenue.The playground side as seen from Madison Ave.Quite different from the old playground!
We had our survey out there this month and have collected a lot of good planning information.
We are now a year out from REUNION 50!
Here’s what you have told us so far:
148 classmates have completed the survey (and we’re looking for more – the link is on our Facebook page and in Reunion mailings but we’ll close it 10/25). In addition we have received some responses directly to our email account.
122 classmates have said yes they are coming and 42 plan on bringing a guest, so that’s 164.
Another 30 people have indicated “Maybe” and if they do come they would bring 12 more guests.
Our advisor, Gary Reece, and his wife Mary have indicated they will come. We can’t locate Ms. Braunstein.
I will post the comments and suggestions culled from the survey here when the survey is closed. We may very well use another survey later to help finalize some items as we get closer to our proposed October 2021 date.
Our Facebook class group has lots of photos from classmates, some of which will be collected o this site, but please join in if you use Facebook. (It’s not as scary as the media might make you believe.)
There were 4 movie theaters in Irvington during our school years: The Castle, Sanford, Art Cinema, and Chancellor.
Here’s a look at those theaters, plus two from before our time.
Senior Theater Night for the Class of 1971
The Castle Theater was located at 1115 Clinton Avenue at the intersection with Springfield Avenue. It opened in 1922 and had a balcony and the theater could hold 1400 people. Like many theaters of that time, it had a Wurlitzer organ that was used at first for silent films and for occasional live shows and during intermissions.
Before there was a Castle Theater, Mr. Castle made ice cream
Of course, it was the location for the traditional senior class movie night fundraiser.
When it closed in 1995, it had been redone to have two screens. The building is still there but is now a beauty supply store.
The location of the Castle Theater today.
The Sanford Theatre opened on September 13, 1926, at 1269 Springfield Avenue at the intersection with Sanford Avenue. The theater was in the Spanish Renaissance style, and was originally operated by Fabian Theatres in association with RKO-Stanley Warner Theatres. It was certainly Irvington’s nicest theater and remained in good shape until it closed. Wurlitzer installed their organ opus 1301 (style 235 III/11) for the opening. It was a 1700-seat theater. By 1941, it was operated by Warner Bros. Circuit Management Corp.
from the back of the house
A poor photo that doesn’t do justice to the curtain
lobby
This ad for the 1965 film lists the “Stanley Warner New Sanford Theater”
The Sanford Theater closed in the 1970s, and the building was demolished in 1987. Home Liquors is at the Sanford Theater location.
My somewhat idealized photo memory of the Sanford corner and childhood snowstorms.
On the site of the old Sanford Theater today.
The Chancellor Theater at 750 Chancellor Avenue had also been called the Rex theater in the 1930s and pre-war. It had a single screen from its opening until it closed. It held 1141 people.
According to the film, King of Comedy, Jerry Lewis made several live appearances in town during his career, including at the Rex and Chancellor, which makes sense since it was his local theater. He worked briefly there as an usher. He lived above the nearby Roxy Drug Store. He attended Union Avenue School, which is around the corner, and Irvington High School, but left in his sophomore year. He also worked as a “soda jerk” making drinks and sundaes at Gerstein’s Drug Store on Chancellor Avenue. Jerry appeared in 1938 at a Red Cross benefit show at the Rex Theater, which was not so different from the vaudeville shows he had been doing with his parents.
The theater was originally operated by RKO until the 1950s, when the theater group fell apart. I recall it not having air-conditioning, which was a big draw for theaters in the 1950s and 1960s, so it closed during the summer. It was a successful operation into the 1970s when changing demographics and movie studio booking policies made business more difficult. In the end, it became a bargain theater showing second-run films. The building was demolished.
a 1942 playbill for the Liberty Theater
The Art Cinema at 1077 Springfield Avenue was a small, single-screen theater. It had earlier been known as the Liberty Theater. When it reopened as the Art Cinema (cinema, not theater), it actually did show “art house” films in the 1960s. It was a rare place where you could see foreign films by Ingmar Bergman, Francois Truffaut, etc.
Apparently, there wasn’t a big market in the Irvington area for art films as the decade ended. The Art Cinema’s final few years found it as an X-rated theater. I actually saw the Truffaut film, Fahrenheit 451 at the Art Cinema. And, in their transitioning years, I saw the Swedish film I Am Curious (Yellow) in 1968. I didn’t even look 15, but the lady at the box office didn’t seem to care that I was seeing an “artsy porn” film.
The theater closed in the mid-70s and after being left empty for several years, it was (kind of ironically) converted into a senior citizens’ center in 1978.
The Hindenberg Theater at 346 16th Avenue was in a section of Irvington that was mostly German- American. It was across the street from Olympic Park. When America became involved in WWII, suspicions of anything connected to Germany pushed the owners to change the name of the theater to the Grove International Theater.
It was a small theater that specialized in foreign language films still including a few German films, but also catering to the mainly Polish, but also Hungarian, Lithuanian and Czech immigrants who settled in the area in the 1940’s and 50’s.
The theater closed before our theater-going days. After the theater closed, the building became a branch of the Irvington Public Library System, and in 2015 the building housed the Irvington Neighborhood Improvement Corp.
A 1940 playbill for a German-language film.
The Roxy Theater is one that didn’t survive into our lifetimes. I couldn’t find any photos of it or even a location for it, but it opened in September 1928. The only modern mention of it I found online listed it as being “defunct and converted into a mini-mall.” But, like the Olympic Park carousel that lives on in Disney World Florida. The Roxy’s Wurlitzer organ has survived in Oregon.