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                    <text>Pamphlet No. 13.

y CONSTITUTION J
and

^&lt;S;|bY-LAWS'^M
of the

Wfe \ Rotary Club .fc
of
COLDWER, Michigan

and
The Objects, Benefits, Obligations of a Rotary Club
The. Rotary Code of Ethics for Business Men
The Rotary Platform

Furnished by the
INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF ROTARY CLUBS
Headquarters: 910 S. Michigan Avenue, Chicago, U. S. A.
FOR ADOPTION BY EACH ROTARY CLUB

(Edition of July, 1921)

�THE ROTARY CLUB
Meets once each week for luncheon or dinner.
Membership formed on the unique plan of one active and
representative man from each line of business and profes­
sion in the community.
OBJECTS
To encourage and foster:
(a) High ethical standards in business and professions.
(b) The ideal of SERVICE as the basis of all worthy
enterprise.
(c) The active interest of every Rotarian in the civic,
commercial, social and moral welfare of his community.
(d) The development of a broad acquaintanceship as an
opportunity for service as well as an aid to success.
(e) The interchange of ideas and of business methods as
a means of increasing the efficiency and usefulness of Rotarians.
(f) The recognition of the worthiness of all legitimate
occupations and the dignifying of the occupation of each
Rotarian as affording him an opportunity to serve society.

BENEFITS
Making the acquaintance of men you ought to know.
Genuine, wholesome good-fellowship.
Developing true and helpful friends.
Enlightenment as to other men’s work, problems and
successes.
Education in methods that increase efficiency.
Stimulation of your desire to be of service to your fellow­
men and society in general.
Business returns that come from enlarging your ac­
quaintance and inspiring confidence in you and your business.
OBLIGATIONS
To attend meetings, regularly.
'y
To pay my dues promptly.
To do my part when called upon.
To be a big-hearted, broad-minded man—a man of en­
ergy and action—a real man—a Rotarian.

�The Constitution of the International Association of Rotary Clubs, adopted
at San Francisco, U. S. A., July, 1915, requires that each Rotary Club
thereafter organized shall adopt the prescribed standard constitution:

\

CONSTITUTION
of the

ROTARY CLUB
of

COLDMTER, Michigan
ARTICLE I.
Name.
The name of this organization shall be Rotary Club of

Coldwater, Michigan
(Affiliated with the International Association'of Rotary Clubs)

ARTICLE IL
Objects.
To encourage and foster:
(a) High ethical standards in business and professions.
(b) The ideal of SERVICE as the basis of all worthy
enterprise.
(c) The active interest of every Rotarian in the civic,
commercial, social and moral welfare of his community.
(d) The development of a broad acquaintanceship as
an opportunity for service as well as an aid to success.
(e) The interchange of ideas and business methods
as a means of increasing the efficiency and usefulness of
Rotarians.
(f) The recognition of the worthiness of all, legitimate
occupations and the dignifying of the occupation of each
Rotarian as affording him an opportunity to serve society.
ARTICLE III.
Membership.
Section 1. There shall be two classes of membership,
namely: active and honorary.
Sec. 2. The active membership shall consist of but one
man in each classification of business or profession (except
as provided in Sections 6 and 8 of this Article) and each mem­

—3—

�ber's -classification shall be that of his principal and recog­
nized occupation.

Qualifications
Sec. 3. Active Membership:
Any adult male of good character and good business
reputation,
—engaged as proprietor, partner, corporate officer or
manager of any worthy and recognized business,
—or holding an important position in an executive ca­
pacity with discretionary authority in such business,
—or acting as the local agent or branch representative of
any worthy and recognized business, having entire charge of
such agency or branch in an executive capacity,
—or any man engaged in any worthy and recognized pro­
fession,
—may be eligible to membership.
Sec. 4. Honorary Membership. Any adult male who
has distinguished himself by some unusual service may be
considered eligible for honorary membership.
(Persons not holding active membership in Rotary may
be elected to honorary membership only in and by the club
within whose territorial limits they reside.)
Honorary members shall be exempt from admission fee
and due^ and shall have no vote. They shall be permitted
to enjoy all other benefits of the club, but shall not be con­
sidered as representing any business or professional classi­
fication in the club, and shall have no interest in any funds
or other property of the club.

Sec. 5. No local representive or agent of a foreign
corporation shall be eligible to active membership when a
suitable member may be available, whose principal place of
business is within the territorial limits of this organization.
Sec. 6. Any member may recommend for active mem­
bership one additional representative of his concern, if such
additional representative is qualified under the terms of Sec­
tion 3 of this article.
Upon retirement from membership of the original mem­
ber, the membership of such additional representative shall
cease. Such additional representative may, however, be
elected to original membership under the same classification,
without obligation to pay a second admission fee.

�Sec. 7. Persons holding elective or appointive public
office, for a specified term only, shall not be eligible to active
membership as a representative of such office.
This shall not be deemed to apply to persons holding
office in schools, colleges, or other institutions of learning.
Sec. 8. The classification of “newspaper representative”
shall be considered non-duplicative, the intent being to pro­
vide for an active member from each of the principal news­
papers. Such members shall, however, occupy a position in
keeping with the qualifications set forth in Seption 3 of this
article.

ARTICLE IVDuration of Membership.
Section 1. Active membership shall endure for life
(unless forfeited as hereinafter provided). Membership shall
terminate when any member shall sever his connection with
the firm, corporation or institution with which he was con­
nected when elected as a member, or, if he abandons the
business or profession in which he was engaged when elected.
If he makes new application whether tinder the same classi­
fication • or another classification, his application shall be
considered in advance of any other application for member­
ship. in the classification under which he now applies; pro­
vided that the Board of Directors in its discretion may
reassign to a new classification any member in good standing
if the circumstances warrant such action and no duplication
of classification is caused by such action.
Sec. 2. Any member who by personal or business con­
duct violates any of the rules, purposes or ethics of Rotary
may be expelled from membership by a two-thirds vote of
the board of directors at a meeting called for that purpose,
provided that said member shall'have been given at least
ten days’ notice in writing of such pending action. Service
of such notice may be made by personal delivery or by regis­
tered letter, mailed to his last known address. Said member
may be represented at the hearing before the board of di­
rectors by counsel, and in case of being expelled by the
board, may appeal to the club at its next regular meeting.
Sec. 3. Any member failing to pay his dues within
thirty days after the prescribed time shall be notified in

�writing by the secretary at his last known address, and if
said dues are not paid on or. before ten days from date of
such notification said membership shall automatically cease.

Sec. 4. Any member who is absent from four consecu­
tive meetings, which shall include both weekly and monthly
meetings, shall automatically cease to be a member of the club
unless he shall have been in attendance at a meeting of an­
other club during the same week, or unless excused for good
and sufficient reason by the Board of Directors.
Sec. 5. Any member whose attendance average shall be
less than sixty per cent, for any period of six months, unless
otherwise excused, shall cease to be a member, providing,
however, that the six month’s period may be divided into two
three-month periods in which the member may be permitted
to offset a poor attendance record in the first period by an ex­
cellent one in the second.
Sec. 6. Honorary membership shall endure for life,
provided however, that the board of directors may for good
cause at any time cancel the membership of an honorary
member on condition that each member of the club shall
be served in writing with a notice at least ten days in ad­
vance of such action by the board.
Sec. 7. Resignations. The resignation of any member
from this club shall be in writing addressed to the president
or secretary, and shall be accepted by the board of directors
provided that all indebtedness of said member to the club
be paid.
Sec. 8. Forfeiture. Any member whose connection with
this club shall be severed by resignation, death, expulsion
or otherwise, shall forfeit all interest in any funds or other
property belonging to the club.

ARTICLE V.
Territorial Limits.

The territorial limits of this organization shall be as
follows

——

�ARTICLE VI.

Meetings.
Section 1. This club shall meet regularly once each week
as provided in the By-Laws.
Sec. 2. The annual meeting of this club shall be held in
the month of April as provided in the By-Laws.

ARTICLE VII.
Officers.
Section 1. The governing body of this club shall be a
board of directors to be constituted as the by-laws of the
club may provide.
Sec. 2. The decision of the board in all club matters
shall be final, subject only to an appeal to the club. The Board
shall have general control over all officers and committees and
may, for good cause, declare any office vacant. It shall con­
stitute a board of appeal from the ruling of all officers and
actions of all committees. Appeal may be taken from any
decision of the board of directors to the club and such appeal
shall be determined by a two-thirds vote of the members
present, at any regular meeting, a quorum being present,
notice of such appeal having been given by the secretary to
all members of the club at least five days in advance of such
meeting.
Sec. 3. The officers of this club shall be a president, a
vice-president, a secretary, a treasurer, an immediate past
president and a sergeant-at-arms, any or all of whom may or
may not be members of the board of directors as the by-laws
of the club may provide.
■
'
Sec. 4. These officers shall be elected annually in the
manner prescribed in the by-laws of this club and shall hold
office for one year or until their successors are elected
and qualified.

ARTICLE VIII.

Avoidance of Politics.
Section 1. This club shall at no time endorse or recom­
mend any candidate for public office nor shall political candi­
dates or partisan questions as such be discussed or voted
upon at any club meeting.
— 7—

�ARTICLE iX.

Official Publication.

By accepting membership in this club, each person so
. doing voluntarily becomes a subscriber to the official maga­
zine publication of the International Association of Rotary
Clubs.
The subscription is understood to run in six-month
periods and shall continue as long as a subscriber is a mem­
ber of the club and to the end of any six-month period dur­
ing which he may cease to be a member of the club.

The amount of the subscription shall be collected by the
club from each member, semi-annually in advance, as part
of or in addition to his regular dues.
The secretary shall enter such subscriptions and the
amounts so collected in a special subscription account and
forward them to the business office of said publication.

ARTICLE X.
Amendments.
Any amendment proposed to this constitution shall be
referred in writing to the International Secretary and by him
be submitted to the Board of Directors of the International
Association of Rotary Clubs. Upon their written consent to
such amendment, it may then be adopted at any regular
meeting of the club, a quorum being present, by a two-thirds
vote of the members present, provided that notice of such
proposed amendment has been mailed to each member at
least ten days before such meeting.

—B—

�These by-laws are recommended only by the International Association
and may be changed by any Rotary Club to meet its own conditions, pro­
vided such changes are not but of harmony with the club constitution or
with the constitution and by-laws of the I. A. of R. C.&lt; If any doubt
exists, the proposed changes should bo submitted to the Secretary-General
for the consideration of the International Board. .
(Note: Where alternative sections are provided in these by-laws, only
one of the alternatives, is to be adopted by the club. The text of the other
should be crossed out.)

BY-LAWS
of the

ROTARY CLUB
of

COLDWATER, Michigan
ARTICLE I.
Election of Directors and Officers.
Section 1. At the regular
Section 1. At the regular
meeting one month prior to meeting one month prior to
the annual meeting nomina­ the annual me e t i n g, t h e
tions shall be called for by presiding officer shall ask for
the chairman for candidates nominations by members of
for the board of directors; the club for president, vicenominations may be made in president, secretary, treasurer
any number by the members and two members of the
from the floor. These nomi­ board of directors. The nom­
nations shall be placed upon inations may be presented by
a ballot and voted for at the a nominating committee or
annual meeting and the-..^— by members from the floor,
by either or by both, as the
_____ candidates securing
the highest number of votes club may determine. If it is
determined to have a nomi­
shall be declared elected,
nating committee, such com­
Sec. 2. The board of direc­ mittee shall be appointed as
tors shall meet within one the club may determine. The
week after the annual meet­ nominations duly made shall
ing and shall elect from their be placed on a ballot in al­
members a president, vice- phabetical order under each
president, secretary and officer and shall be voted for
treasurer, provided however, at the annual meeting. The
that the secretary or treas­ candidates for president, viceurer at the discretion of the
president, secretary and treas­
board may be elected by urer receiving a majority of
them from the membership
the votes shall be declared
of the club and when so
elected to their respective of­
elected shall be ex-officio a
member of the board. The fices. The two candidates for
newly elected officers shall at directors receiving such a
once assume the duties of majority of the votes shall be
declared elected as directors.
their respective offices.
-9-

�(Note: The sections in the right­
hand column are given as an alter­
native plan which may be adopted
instead of that given in the left-hand
column. CROSS OUT THE SEC­
TIONS NOT ADOPTED.)

Sec. 2. The officers and
directors, so elected, together
with the immediate past
president, shall constitute the
board of directors and shall
meet within one week after
the annual meeting and as­
sume the duties of their re­
spective offices. They shall be
publicly installed into their re­
spective offices at the first
regular meeting of the club
following their election.

Sec. 3. At the first meeting of the newly elected board
of directors they shall appoint some member of the club to
act as sergeant-at-arms.
Sec. 4. A vacancy in the board of directors or any office
shall be filled by the remaining members of the board.
ARTICLE II.
Board of Directors.
Section 1. ■ The governing
Section 1. The governing
body of this club shall be the body of this club shall be the
board of directors, elected in board of directors, consisting
accordance with Art. I, Sec. of seven members of this
club, namely, two directors
1, of these by-laws.
elected in accordance with
(Note: If the alternative plan
Art. I, Sec. 1, of these by­
Article 1 has been adopted, it is
necessary to adopt the alternative
laws, the president, vice-pres­
section given in the right-hand col­
ident, secretary, treasurer and
umn here.
CROSS OUT THE
the immediate, past president.
SECTION NOT ADOPTED.)

ARTICLE III.
Duties of Officers.
Section 1. President. It shall be the duty of the pres­
ident to preside at meetings of the club and board of directors
and to perform such other duties as ordinarily pertain to
his office.
Sec. 2. Vice President. It shall be the duty of the vice
president to preside at meetings of the club and board of
directors in the absence of the president and to perform such
other duties as ordinarily pertain to his office.
■ Sec&lt; 3» Secretary. It.shall be the duty of the secretary
to keep the records of membership, record the attendance
at meetings, send out notices of meetings of the club, board
and committees, record and preserve the minutes of such
meetings, make the required reports to the International
—10—

�Association, including the semi-annual reports of member­
ship, ■ which shall be made to the Secretary-General on
January 1st and July 1st of each year, the report of changes
in membership, which shall be made to the Secretary Gen­
eral on the first of each month, the monthly report of attend­
ance at the club meetings which shall be made to the District
Governor immediately following the last meeting of the
month, and perform such other duties as usually pertain to
his office.
Sec. 4. Treasurer. It shall be the duty of the treasurer
to have custody of all funds, accounting for same to the club
at its annual meeting and at any other time upon demand by
the board of directors and to perform such other duties as
pertain to his office. Upon his retirement from office he
shall turn over to his successor or to the president all funds,
books of accounts or any other club property in his pos­
session.
Sec. 5. Sergeant-at-Arms. The duties of the sergeantat-arms shall be such as are usually prescribed for his office
and such other duties as may be prescribed by the president
or board of directors.
ARTICLE TV
Meetings.
Secti
Section 1. Annual Meet­
1.1 Annual Meeting. The annual meeting of ing. T1 arnual meeting of
thisiclub shall be held on the this clu shall be held the
J&amp;lVM W-of April in
------ of April in
each year, at wnich time the each yea , at which time the
election of directors to serve election f officers and direc­
_
for the ensuing year, shall tors to s ve for the ensuing
take place.
(Note: Each year shallftale place. (Note:
club will designate the 4th Each club\ wi 11 designate the
Thursday- or whatever day it 4th Thurdda. or whatever
chooses for its annual meet­ day ' it chbos.es for its annual meeting.)
ing.)
(Note: It will be necessary to adopt the alternative section given in
the right-hand column if the alternative plan in Art. I has been adopted.
Cross out the section not adopted.)

Sec. 2. The regular weekly meetings of this club shaH. be
held as follows:
—
Sec. 3. One-third of the membership shall constitute
a quorum at the annual and regular meetings of this club.

—11—

�Sec; 4. Regular meeijngs of the board of directors shall
be held on„;
L.'„...J.!.x.,.,jLliil.-^;:;...i......'......of each month.
Special meetings of the board of directors shall be called by
the president whenever deemed necessary, of upon the
request of two meinbers of the board, due notice having
been, given.
Sec. 5. A majority of the board members shall Consti­
tute a quorum of the board of directors.

ARTICLE V.
Fees and Dues.

i C?

Section 1. The admission fee shall be $...!............. ■. ......
to be paid before the applicant can qualify as a member.
Sec. 2. The membership dues shall be $..^Hz-...
per annum, payable semi-annually on the first day of May
and of November.
(Cautionary Note to New Clubs: Great care should be
used on the part of newly organized clubs in fixing the
amount of their annual dues, it being important that the
income of the club be sufficient to cover all of its local ex­
penses, and provide a fund in addition sufficient to send
delegates to the district conference and the International
Convention each year. The Directors of the International
Association believe that anything less than a $10.00 admission
fee and $20.00 annual dues will prove insufficient and they
will hot grant affiliation to any club that does hot make its
fee at least $10.00 and its dues at least $20.00.)

ARTICLE VI.
Method of Voting.

The business of this organization shall be transacted
by viva voce vote except election of directors which shall be
by ballot.
ARTICLE VII.
Committees.

Section 1. The president shall, subject to the approval
of the board of directors, appoint the following committees:
Membership, entertainment, fellowship, public affairs, educa­
tion, publicity, boys work, relations with I. A. of R. C. Head­
quarters, and "any other committees that he may deem
necessary, and also one member as the club correspondent

�for THE ROTARIAN magazine. The president shall be exofficio member of all Committees. The committees shall
consist of at least three members exclusive of the president.
Sec. 2. Each committee shall transact such business as
is delegated 'to it in the by-laws and such additional business
as may be referred to it by the president or the board of
directors. Except where special authority is given by the
board of directors such committees shall not take final
action until a report has been made to the board and
approved by them.
ARTICLE VIII.

Duties of Committees.

Section 1. Membership Committee. This committee
shall investigate the character, business, social standing and
general eligibility of persons proposed for membership and
shall report their decision on all applications to the board
of directors.
Sec. 2. Entertainment Committee. This committee shall
prepare and arrange programs for the regular and special
meetings. They shall prepare and arrange such social
functions as may be directed by the board of directors or
president.
Sec. 3. Fellowship Committee. This committee shall
promote acquaintance and friendship among the members
and do such work in pursuance with the general objects of
the club, as may be assigned by the president or the board
of directors.
Sec. 4. Public Affairs Committee. This committee shall
report from time to time upon matters affecting the public
welfare. They shall devise and execute plans for the benefit
and improvement of the community.
Sec. 5. Education Committee. • This committee is to ed­
ucate the members as to the accepted meaning, purpose, re­
sponsibilities, and limitations of Rotary.

Sec. 6. Boys Work Committee. This committee shall
acquaint itself, through surveys and by other means, with
the needs of the boy life of the community. It shall recom­
mend to the club such action as it believes may promote the
development of boys into good citizens, and carry out such •
boys work as the club may authorize.
—13—

�Sec. 7. Relations with International Headquarters Com­
mittee. This committee shall study ways and means of
promoting a closer relationship between this club and the
International Association and shall prepare itself to enlighten
those club members who may need enlightenment regarding
the problems and activities of the International Association
and the club’s responsibility for co-operation with the Inter­
national Association.
Sec. 8. Publicity Committee. This committee shall de­
vise and execute plans which will tend to secure proper
publicity for Rotary in general and for the club in particular.
ARTICLE IX.
Leave of Absence.
Upon written application to the board of directors, setting
forth good and sufficient cause leave of absence may be
granted excusing a member from attending the meetings of
the club for a specified length of time. (Note: Such leave of
absence does operate to prevent a forfeiture of membership
but it doesnot alter in any way the member’s attendance record
nor that of the club.)
ARTICLE X.
Finances.
Section 1. The treasurer shall deposit all funds of the
club in some bank to be named by the board of directors.
Sec. 2. All bills shall be paid only by checks signed
by the treasurer upon vouchers signed by any two officers.
A thorough audit by a certified public accountant or other
qualified persons shall be made once each year of all the
club’s financial transactions.
Sec. 3. Officers having charge or control of funds shall
give bond as may be required by the board of directors for
the safe custody of the funds of the club, cost of bond to
be borne by the club.
Sec. 4. The fiscal year of this club shall extend from .
May 1st to April 30th, and for the collection of members’
dues shall be divided into two semi-annual periods extending
from May 1st to October 31st, and from November 1st to
April 30th. The payment of per capita dues and magazine
subscriptions to the International Association shall be made
on July 1st and January 1st of each year on the basis of the
membership of the club on those dates.
(Note: Magazine subscriptions for members joining dur­
ing a semi-annual period are payable upon invoice from Inter­
national Headquarters.)

�Sec. 5. At the beginning of each fiscal year the board
of directors shall prepare or cause to be prepared a budget
of estimated income and estimated expenditures for the
year, which, having been agreed to by the board, shall stand
as the limit of expenditures for the respective purposes
unless otherwise ordered by action of the board.
ARTICLE XI.

Method of Electing Members.
Section 1. The name of the newly proposed member,
having been proposed by a member in good standing, shall
be submitted first to the board • of directors, through the
secretary, on a blank form known as the proposal card (use
form prescribed by I. A. of R. C.). The board of directors
shall then refer it to the membership committee. The mem­
bership committee after making due investigation shall then
proceed to vote and if not to exceed one negative vote is
cast the name of the proposed member shall be considered
eligible. The membership committee shall then report back
to the board of directors the action that they have taken
thereon. The board of directors shall then review the action
of the membership committee and sustain or reject the deci­
sion or refer it back to the membership committee for further
consideration and action.
If the membership committee has reported favorably
upon the name of the newly proposed member and the board
of directors has sustained the action, the proposer shall be
notified by the secretary and the regular form of application
blank shall be filled out by the newly proposed member and
signed by . him. If the membership committee reports ad­
versely and the board of directors sustains the action the
proposer shall be so notified by the secretary.
After the application has been secured from the proposed
new member the secretary shall notify each member of the
club in writing, giving the name of the proposed candidate,
the firm represented and the classification under which he
seeks membership. A ten-day period shall then be allowed
during which any member objecting to the election of the
applicant shall notify the board of directors in writing, stating
reasons for his objections.
After the expiration of the ten days the board shall meet
and consider such objections as may have been submitted.
—15—

�They shall then proceed to ballot and, if not 'to exceed
negative votes are cast, the proposed member shall .be con­
sidered duly elected. The applicant and the proposer shall
then be notified by the secretary of the applicant’s acceptance
or rejection.
Sec. 2. Honorary Members. The names of proposed
candidates for honorary membership shall be submitted to
the board of directors in writing, and the election shall be
in the same form and manner as prescribed for an active
member, no signed application being required.
(Suggestion: Clubs so desiring may substitute in lieu
of a final ballot for members by the board of directors, a
ballot by the club members at a regular meeting, and a
three-fourths vote of all members in attendance be neces­
sary to an election, a quorum being present.)
ARTICLE XII
Resolutions and Subscriptions.

Section 1. No resolution or motion to commit this club
on any matter shall be considered by the club until it has
been considered by the board of directors. Such resolutions
or motions, if offered at a club meeting, shall be referred,
without discussion, to the board, which after having given
consideration to the matter, shall submit its recommenda­
tions to the club. Having received the recommendations of
the board, the club may then proceed to take such action
as may seem proper to the majority.
Sec. 2. Any appeal for charitable or other subscriptions
to be made by the club or its members as Rotariaps shall
conform to the procedure prescribed in Section 1 qf this
article.

ARTICLE XIII.
Order of Business.

Opening. Roll Call.
Reading of minutes.
Report of Committees.
Unfinished business.

New business.
Adjournment.

�ARTICLE XIV.

Amendments.
These by-laws may be amended at any regular meeting,
a quorum being present, by a two-thirds vote of all members
present, provided that notice of such proposed amendment
shall have been mailed to each member at least ten days
before such meeting. No amendment or addition to these
by-laws can be, made which is not in harmony with the club
constitution and with the constitution and by-laws of the
International Association of Rotary Clubs.

r cA
^\x\Q£&gt; cussessed,

—17—

-

�The Rotary Gode of Ethics
For Business Men of All Lines
Adopted by the Sixth Annual Convention of the International
Association of Rotary Clubs at San Francisco, July 19-23, 1915.

My business standards shall have in them a note
of sympathy for our common humanity. My bus­
iness dealings, ambitions and relations shall always
cause me to take into consideration my highest duties
as a member of society. In every position in bus­
iness life, in every responsibility that comes before
me, my chief thought shall be to fill that responsi­
bility and discharge that duty so when I have ended
each of them I shall have lifted the level of human
ideals and achievements a little higher’ than I found
it. As a Rotarian it is my duty:

FIRST: To consider my vocation worthy, and as
affording me distinct opportunity to serve society.
SECOND: To improve myself, increase my effici­
ency and enlarge my service, and by so doing
attest my faith in the fundamental principle of
Rotary that he profits most who serves best.

THIRD: To realize that I am a business man and
ambitious to succeed; but that I am first an ethical
man, and wish no success that is not founded on
the highest justice and morality.
FOURTH: To hold that the exchange of my goods,
my service and my ideas for profit is legitimate
and ethical, provided that all parties in the
exchange are benefited thereby.
FIFTH: To use my best endeavors to elevate the
standards of the vocation in which I am engaged,
and so to conduct my affairs that others in my
vocation may find jt wise, profitable and con­
ducive to happiness to emulate my example.

�SIXTH: To conduct my business in such a manner
that I may give a perfect service equal to or even
better than my competitor, and when in doubt to
give added service beyond the strict measure of
debt or obligation.

SEVENTH: To understand-that one of the greatest
assets of a professional or of a business man is his
friends and that any advantage gained by reason
of friendship is eminently ethical and proper.
EIGHTH: To hold that true friends demand
nothing of one another and that any abuse of the
confidences of friendship for profit is foreign to
the spirit of Rotary, and in violation of its Code of
Ethics.

NINTH: To consider no personal success legitimate
or ethical which is secured by taking unfair
advantage of certain opportunities in the social
order that are absolutely denied others, nor will I
take advantage of opportunities to achieve material
success that others will not take because of the
questionable morality involved.

TENTH: To be not more obligated to a Brother
Rotarian than I am to every other man in human
society; because the genius of Rotary is not in its
competition but in its co-operation; for provincial­
ism can never have a place in an institution like
Rotary, and Rotarians assert that Human Rights
are not confined to Rotary Clubs but are as deep
and as broad as the race itself; and for these high
purposes does Rotary exist to educate all men and
all institutions.

ELEVENTH: Finally, believing in the universality
of the Golden Rule, AU things whatsoever ye
would that men should do unto you, do ye even so
unto them, we contend that Society best holds
together when equal opportunity is accorded all
men in the natural resources of this planet.

�THE ROTARY PLATFORM
Recognizing the commercial basis of modern life as a
necessary incident in human evolution, the. Rotary Club is
organized to express that proper relation between private
interests and the fusion of private interests which constitutes
■ society.
To accomplish this purpose more effectively the prin­
ciple of limited and representative membership has been
adopted, the Rotary Club consisting of one representative
from each distinct line of business or profession. Each mem­
ber is benefited by contact with representative men engaged
in different occupations and is enabled thereby to meet more
intelligently the responsibilities of civic and business life.

The basis of club membership insures the representation
of all interests and the domination of none in the considera­
tion of public questions relating to business. On account of
its limited membership the Rotary Club does not constitute
itself the voice of the entire-community on questions of
general importance, but its action on such questions is of
great influence in advancing the civic and business welfare
of the community.

□

“ i
I

»,

The Rotar^Club demands fair dealings, honest methods
and high standards in business. No obligation, actual or
implied, to influence business exists in Rotary. Election to
membership therein is. an expression of confidence of the
club in the member elected, and of its good will towards him.
As his business is an expression of himself, he is expected
actively to represent it. •

: '

■ ..... ... ..

:..

:;.

Membership in the Rotary Club is a privilege and an
opportunity and its responsibility, demands honest and
efficient service and thoughtfulness, for one’s fellows.

Service is. the basis of all business.

He profits most who serves best.

�</text>
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                    <text>��—

COLDWATER f®? ROTARY CLUB-------------------------- ,
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Coldwater Rotary

Club

Charter No. 1044

Service ■

�ROTARY CLUB

COLDWATER

-To-

Raymond M, Havens
International President

and

John P. Olds
Governor Eighteenth District

This is Dedicated

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oervice —

�=—COLDWATER

ROTARY CLUB-------------------

W

RAYMOND M. HAVENS
Kansas City, Mo.
President of International Rotary

�“He Profits Most
Who Serves
T)
,a

Service

�COLDWATER

ROTARY CLUB^

JOHN P. OLDS
Sault St. Marte, Mich.
Governor Eighteenth District

�----- ----- —

-COLDWATER f|| ROTARY CLUB

Officers and Directors of
Coldwater Club 1044
Frank A. Rowe

President

C. 0 Neill Carroll

Vice President

Hugh W. Clarke

Secretary

John R. Thompson

Treasurer

DIRECTORS

Herbert L. Sloman
Harry D. Lansing

Harrison L. Milnes

Frank Treat

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Sergeant-at-Arms

.

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——COLDWAT
s
I
|
I

I
II
I
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■

I

History of The Club

|
I

E IDEA of forming a Rotary Club in Coldwater came into
the minds of several people at several different times before
the actual establishment of the club. Dame rumor has it
that at least three different attempts were made and that
various stages of progress were reached. However, in view of the
fact that but two or three of the Charter Members of the Coldwater
Rotary Club as organized and chartered as of December 1st, 1921,
were previously approached or have any knowledge of the earlier
history of the movement, it is probable that no authentic data will
ever be secured covering this period of time.
Consulting the files of the general office of Rotary Interna­
tional in Chicago, we find that on January 8th, 1920, Hugh VandeWalker of Ypsilanti, who at that time was Governor of the ninth
district of Rotary clubs, took up with headquarters the question of
establishing a Rotary club in Coldwater. At his request, on January
15 th, Harrison Fletcher was named as chairman of the organizing
committee, and on January 27th, Fred L. Gallop of Ypsilanti, as
Special Representative.
The records at headquarters are silent as to what immediately
followed, but from members who were approached at that time, it
is authoritatively established that Mr. Fletcher made an active cam­
paign to establish a club and that considerable progress was made.
Report has it that fifteen Charter Members were selected,
when, without much warning, the project was suddenly declared
dead. Again we fall back on rumor, although it seems pretty
clearly established that the sudden demise of the club at this stage
was ,due to the objections of one man, who not understanding the
theory, ideas or ethics of Rotary and being unwilling to study or
learn them, believed most honestly, we think, that Rotary would

�r---------------------- —COLDWATER

ROTARY C.T.UR.

interfere with such organizations as were already established in
Coldwater and create an ill feeling. He prevailed on the interested
parties to cease their activities.

Hugh VandeWalker’s term as District Governor came to an
end in July of 1920, and Ray Davis of St. Joseph, became Governor.
At his request, Eddie Duesenberg of Kalamazoo, was appointed
special representative for Coldwater. From the records at head­
quarters it appears that Mr. Fletcher still held his appointment as
chairman of the organizing committee. Mr. Duesenberg never
reported any progress to headquarters.
In February of 1921, Frank Rowe came to Coldwater from
South Bend, Indiana. He was in the employ of Armour &amp; Company
as Special Representative for that company, with a considerable
territory under his charge. Frank had been a worker in South Bend
in Church Classes, Boys Work and other jobs where service without
visible reward is the rule. He had been the guest of his manager,
Frank Eby, of the South Bend Rotary Club, at several Rotary lunch­
eons and had become extremely interested in Rotary.
On coming to Coldwater, and finding he was eligible to mem­
bership, he set about canvassing the field with a view to organizing
a Rotary Club. He did this quietly, meeting some rebuffs and con­
siderable interest. Finally, some time in the summer he had a
long ta'k with Charles Rufus Osborn, then minister of the Baptist
church, who advised Frank to talk with three men, one of wiom
was Fred Chambers. Before doing this, however, Frank, feeling
pretty sure of his ground, wrote Secretary General Chesley Perry in
Chicago, asking about the prospect of establishing a Rotary Club in
Coldwater.
On the 6th day of October, Frank received word from Chicago
that they were pleased to note a desire for a Rotary club in Cold­
water, and that his letter had been referred to George Barnes of
Flint, who had become District Governor the previous July. George
Barnes immediately got into communication with Frank and from
that time on the work of organization went forward rapidly.
On October 15th the appointments of Harrison Fletcher as
Chairman of the Organizing Committee, and of Eddie Duesenberg
as Special Representative, which had never been recalled, were ter­
minated by authority. On the same day, George Lyons of Hillsdale,

�■COLDWATER O? R

was appointed by Governor George Barnes as his Special Repre­
sentative, and on the 24th of October, Frank Rowe was named as
chairman of the organizing committee.
Frank then called on Fred Chambers, and these two men
kicked as the three other members of the committee O’Neill Carroll,
Herbert Sloman and Hugh Clarke. These five men met with George
Lyons and the other Directors of the Hillsdale Club at the home of
Mr. Chambers and planned the forming of a Club. A second meet­
ing, a couple of days later, resulted in the selection of the Charter
Membership list and within a few days twenty men were signed up.
On Thursday evening, November I Oth, twenty of these
twenty-two—the other two being out of town—met at the Arling­
ton Hotel for dinner. President George Lyons of the Hillsdale Club,
and twenty-nine of his club were present. George presided at the
meeting and under his guidance a temporary organization was ef­
fected, with Frank Rowe as temporary chairman and Hugh Clarke
as temporary secretary. It was voted to hold a meeting for per­
manent organization a week from the next Friday night.
Accordingly on the evenmg of November 18th, the new Club,
together with thirty-seven Rotarians from Angola, eleven from
Adrian, ten from Sturgis, four from Hillsdale, and three from Battle
Creek, met at the St. Mark s Parish House. Frank Rowe and George
Lyons presided and the temporary organization was made perma­
nent, with the adoption of the standard Rotary Constitution and
By-Laws and the election of a Board of Directors—Frank, Rowe,
Fred Chambers, O’Neill Carroll, Herbert Sloman, Harry Lansing,
Rollo Thompson and Hugh Clarke were named directors.
Application was also made for a charter from Rotary Interna­
tional. The Board of Directors organized by electing Frank Rowe,
President; 0 Neill Carroll, Vice-President; Rollo Thompson, Treas­
urer, and Hugh Clarke, Secretary.
The two final acts in the organization of the Coldwater Rotary
Club came on December 12th, 1921, and on the evening of January
5th. On the first date, the charter of the Coldwater Club, num­
ber 1044, was granted by the Board of Directors of the Interna­
tional Association of Rotary Clubs. On the last named date Gover­
nor George Barnes of Flint, was present with us and in an address
which will always be remembered by those who heard it, presented
the Club with its Charter.

" ■ ... — ..... » oCTVICC

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........... .....

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�=—^COLDWATER |^| ROTARY CLUB—

■

A Message From President Frank
HE MORE I see of Rotary at work, the more I realize how it
influences men in their daily life. One has seen in the past
so many good men living for themselves alone; not knowing
the beauty and widespread influence in the Rotary Spirit. Finally,
however, Rotary caihe into this community, and finally into their
lives, and they began to live anew, transforming a seemingly selfish
life mto one of usefulness. Nothing is more helpful in any commu­
nity than to see a group of business and professional men lending
their efforts unto a spirit of ‘‘Service.”

Time was when the busmess man was looked upon with an
eye of suspicion. Now the Spirit of Service has gripped the busi­
ness and professional men and they now stand as the leaders of any
community.
Our own club is no exception. Rotary has chosen men from
so many classifications that hidden talent, hitherto unknown, has
blossomed and bloomed into real fruitage. It is needless for me to
recount the many instances where this is a fact in our club. A
glance at any undertaking is sufficient proof to you.
It would be idealistic,to predict the future life and activities of
Rotary in Coldwater, but I know Rotary, and you, and what is good
for you and what is good for Rotary will be good for our city and
community.
Let us extend Rotary to our community, our relations to our
rural brother should be cultivated and made a reality.

Service is our watchword and the community that now pros­
pers, will be budded on “Service,” therefore, be of “Service,” for
ie “profits most, who serves best.”

o er vice

��COLDWATER

ROTARY CLUB

“Service Above Self”
Let It Carry On

Through The
Ages.

oervice

l( Q

�ROTARY

—COLDWATER

_____s

W

Brief History of Rotary

OTARY came into being” with a group of four Chicago
business men, each representing a different calling. One a
------ coal dealer, one a mining operator, one a merchant tailor,
and the fourth an attorney.
To the attorney, Paul P. Harris, belongs the credit for the con­
ception of the club which has grown from the first meeting in Chi­
cago on February 23rd, 1905, until this year, on the 18th anniver­
sary, it has attained the marvelous growth of over 1,325 clubs, with
a membership of over 90,000 m twenty-seven countries of the world.
It was Paul Harns idea the club should be unique among clubs;
that it should promote friendship and understanding, knowledge and
broad mindedness, and an interest in the other fellow and mutual
helpfulness; and that only one man from each line of business or
profession should be admitted to membership. The first meeting
was held on the evening of February 23rd, in the Unity building, on
Dearborn street. Chicago.
The name ‘‘Rotary” was chosen for the club because of the
custom of having the meeting in rotation at the places of business
of the different members, where each member acted as host and
after the luncheon exhibited his office, shop or place of business
and explained his business to the other members. As time went on
and the membership increased it was found impracticable to hold
the weekly meetings in their business places and it was not long be­
fore the meetings were held in the various hotels and restaurants of
Chicago.
The growth of Rotary during the past eighteen years has been
marvelous and it is still growing by leaps and bounds. Rotary is in
a class by itself—it is unlike any other organization in the world. It
draws men together in one great bond of fellowship. It is impossi­

R

1I
I
I
I

�——COLDWATER

ROTARY CLUB

ble for any one person or any one business to dominate in Rotary.
Each member is benefited by his membership, which tends to lift
him to a higher plane and out of his business rut and routine.
The Rotary creed is fully set forth in the “Rotary Platform” and
in the “Rotary Code of Ethics.” Every Rotary club demands fair
dealings, honest methods and high standard in business, amplify­
ing the Rotary Slogan, ‘‘Service above self—he profits most who
serves best.”

The Rotary club has one rule which must never be violated.
This is the rule in regard to attendance, whereby a member who is
absent four meetings in succession is dropped from the club. A care­
ful record is kept by every club secretary and nothing short of sick­
ness or death can excuse a member.
The general policy which Rotary invariably follows with re­
gard to community service is that the club or any combination of
Rotary clubs does not undertake to carry through any enterprise for
the doing of which there already exists some other organization, but
lends itself, either as a club, or more often and more particularly
through its individual members, to the organization interested in the
project. Where no organization exists the Rotary Club usually
either adopts the plan of organizing an agency or during an emer­
gency the Rotary Club carries on the project until some other organ­
ization is formed for the purpose.

New Rotary history was created on the night of Friday, Febru­
ary 23rd, the 18th anniversary, when Raymond M. Havens, inter­
national president of Rotary, broadcasted his address throughout
the United States, Canada and Mexico to hundreds of clubs. Through
the co-operation of the broadcasting stations of the country who
agreed to leave the air free for this experiment and with the aid of
powerful stations in different sections, the address was heard with
great clearness wherever the atmospheric conditions permitted.

Do not be afraid of criticism. Criticise yourself often.
Handle the hardest job first each day. Easy ones are pleasures.
Be fair and do at least one decent act each day.

�.COLDWATER S® ROTARY CLUB—
w

Rotary Code of Ethics

Adopted by the Sixth Annual Convention of the International Association of Rotary
Clubs

at

San

Francisco,

California,

July

Nineteenth

to

Twenty-third, Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen.

' BUSINESS standards shall have in them a note of sym­
pathy for our common humanity. My business dealings,
ambitions and relations shall always cause me to take into
consideration my highest duties as a member of society. In every
position in business life, in every responsibility that comes before
me, my chief thought shall be to fill that responsibility and discharge
that duty so when I have ended each of them, I shall have lifted the
level of human ideals and achievements a little higher than I found
them. In view of this, it is my duty as a Rotarian—

] st—To consider my vocation worthy, and as affording me distinct
opportunity to serve society.
2nd—To improve myself, increase my efficiency and enlarge my
service, and by so doing attest my faith in the fundamental
principle of Rotary, that he profits most who serves best..

3r(j_To realize that I am a business man and ambitious to succeed;
but that I am first an ethical man, and wish no success that is
not founded on the highest justice and morality.
4th—To hold that the exchange of my goods, my service and my
ideas for profit is legitimate and ethical, provided that all
parties to the exchange are benefited thereby.
5th—To use my best endeavors to elevate the standards of the
vocation in which I am engaged, and so to conduct my affairs
that others in my vocation may find it wise, profitable and
conducive to happiness to emulate my example.

5th—To conduct my business in such a manner that I may give a
perfect service equal to or even better than my competitor,
and when in doubt to give added service beyond the strict
measure of debt or obligation.

c
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— h Service

—---------- —

�COLDWATER

ROTARY CLUB^

7th—To understand that one of the greatest assets of a professional
or of a business man is his friends and that any advantage
gained by reason of friendship is eminently ethical and proper.

8th—To hold that true friends demand nothing of one another and
that any abuse of the confidence of friendship for profit is
foreign to the spirit of Rotary, and in violation of its Code of
Ethics.
9th—To consider no personal success legitimate or ethical which is
secured by taking unfair advantage of certain opportunities
in the social order that are absolutely denied others, nor will
I take advantage of opportunities to achieve material suc­
cess that others will not take because of the questionable mor­
ality involved.
I Oth—To be not more obligated to a Brother Rotarian than I am to
every other man in human society; because the genius of
Rotary is not in its competition, but in its co-operation; for
provincialism can never have a place in an institution like
Rotary, and Rotarians assert that Human Rights are not
confined to Rotary Clubs, but are as deep and as broad as the
race itself; and for these high purposes does Rotary exist to
educate all men and all institutions.

II th-Finally, believing in the universality of the Golden Rule, “All
things whatsoever ye would that men should do unto you,
do ye even so unto them,” we contend that Society best holds
together when equal opportunity is accorded all men in the
natural resources of this planet.

‘Tor the world is a mirror of king and slave;

It’s just what we are, and do.

So give to the world the BEST you have,
And the BEST will come back to you! ”

�y■

f

—

COLDWATER

7

ROTARY CLUB—

Club Red Letter Days

January 5, 1922—Charter presented by Governor George
Barnes.

February 15 First annual Ladies Night. One big night with
a big attendance of Rotary Anns and their husbands. Big feed,
Rotary program and dance.

April 25—Annual meeting and election of officers.
May 9—Evening meeting in honor of Boys’ Week. Addressed
by Past District Governor Hugh VandeWalker. Entire Boys’ Week
Program put through by a committee on Boys’ Work.

May 12 Boys Picnic and eats at Water Works Park.
August 8—State School Picnic. About 300 children from
the School were transported to Coldwater Lake and given the time
of their life. Swimming, boating and playing games passed the time
from 2 till 5, when a big supper was served. Glenn Cowell was in
general charge. Larry Eckel planned the supper and Mrs. Rotary
Ann Shattuck headed the ladies’ committee.
August 22 State School day at the circus, by kindness of
Harry Lansing and the Coldwater Daily Reporter. The Rotary Club
acted as general transportation committee.

October 24—Evening meeting in charge of the Boys’ Work
Committee.
November 21
of their club.

Intercity meeting with Battle Creek as guests

December 9—Ray Havens meeting in Battle Creek. Eight
Rotarians and their wives attend from Coldwater club.
February 23—John Olds, district governor, visits club on
18th anniversary of Rotary.

oerviee

(( Q

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�| ROTARY CLUB

Membership and Classification
George M. Branch....
C. O’Neill Carroll
Hugh W. Clarke
Oliver J. Deabler
Dr. Edward C. Freeland
Albert J. Fiske
Clarence C. Jones.......

Robert A. Kerr
Edward D. Legg
Harry L. Milnes
Frank A. Rowe
Dr. Samuel Schultz..
Roy J. Shattuck
Herbert L. Sloman ..
Frank W. Treat.......
John Rollo Thompson
Bert R. Warner
Herbert A. Sebald...
Sigmund L. Wing....
W. Glenn Cowell....
Charles L. Keep
Charles L. Conover..
Warner B. VanAken.
Frank B. Moore
Dr. Walter J. Bien...
Dr. George D. Vail..
Carl J. Martin

Walter F. Titus
Herbert F. Lee..............
Judge Clayton C. Johnson

........... Retail Dry Goods
................ Retail Grocer
.................. Retail Drugs
Furniture Dealer
Dentist
Retail Coal Dealer
,... Manufacturer Cement
... Superintendent Schools
Retail Hardware
Newspaper
Lumber Dealer
Wholesale Grocer
Wholesale Meats
Doctor
Undertaker
Retail Clothier
. .Machinery and Supplies
Banker
Automobile Dealer
Gas Service
Live Stock Man
Lawyer
Fire Insurance
. Masonic Grand Secretary
Florist
Farm Loans
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
............. Roentgenologist
......... Produce Marketing
Hotel Man
................ Iron Foundry
.... Paints, Oils and Glass
Honorary

�COLDWATER

ROTARY CLUB

Standing' Committees
BOYS’ WORK

EDUCATIONAL

Ira King

Samuel Schultz

Charles Conover

Ira King

Warner VanAken

Edward Freeland

Herbert Sloman

Carl Martin

Bert Warner

Walter Bien

Bert Fiske

ENTERTAINMENT
PROGRAM

Hugh Clarke

Harrison Milnes

Harrison Milnes

Robert Kerr

Robert Kerr

George Branch

George Vail

Herbert Sebald

Sigmund Wing

FELLOWSHIP
Herbert Lee

BUSINESS METHODS

Roy Shattuck

Glenn Cowell

Frank Treat

John Thompson

O’Neill Carroll

PUBLICITY
Harry Lansing

PIANIST

Ollie Deabler

Herbert Sebald

PUBLIC AFFAIRS
SONG LEADER

Edward Legg

George Vail

Charles Keep

(Q
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�Wise Saying's of Our Members
“If you lose, your judgment was faulty; if you win, you should
have risked more.”—Rollo Thompson.
“I have no time to quarrel with the mistakes of my past;
there is a long road ahead of me.”—Edward Freeland.
My friends trust me and that is one more prop to hold me
up.”—Walter Bien.
You might as well try to dam Niagara with a shingle as to
attempt to hold a man back who thinks straight and works hard.”
—Herbert Sebald.
“The world is your cow, but you must do the milking.”—
Charles Keep.
The man who lives to himself alone is dead long before the
undertaker is notified.”—Roy Shattuck.
The man who does his best today will be a hard man to beat
tomorrow.”—Frank Rowe.
My boy blows his tin whistle—I blow my silver mounted
flute. We both make discords but we don’t know it, and if you
don’t tell us we are happy.”—Robert Kerr.
Do not place yourself m a position where you have to ex­
plain.”—Sig Wing.
Do not take it to heart. There never yet was a fine cabinet
maker whose work was not criticized by men who could not
sharpen a lead pencil.”—Hugh W. Clarke.
If all who are crippled in the head were unable to use their
feet, wheel chairs would be at a premium.”—Sam Schultz.
It is much easier to love our customers than it is to even tol­
erate the man who trades across the street.”—George Branch.
Never accept a man as your leader who hasn t been over the
ground and knows the way. —Harry Lansing.
Tears wash away the stains of the world so that the soul may
shine through.”—Walter Titus.
Conducting a business is like driving an automobile—the less
you know about it the more likely you are to land in the ditch.”—
O’Neill Carroll.

Service' —

�—COLDWATER

ROTARY CLUB—

The spring doesn t run dry. We simply grow careless and
lose the way.”—Oliver Deabler.
Owls have acquired a reputation for wisdom simply by look­
ing wise all the time and hooting only occasionally.”—Bert Warner.

“Don’t crawl under life’s tent; the only way to enjoy the
show is to pay your way.”—Bert Fiske.

“It is impossible for you to throw mud at the other fellow
without soiling your own hands.”—Edward Legg.
‘‘One of the hardest things to restore to its owner is lost con­
fidence.”—Herbert Sloman.

Every time the sewing society meets the heavenly choir list
is materially cut down.”—Carl Martin.
We have noticed that the man who is always pointing to his
family tree never breaks any planting records himself.”—Warner
VanAken.
Refusing to look the naked truth in the face is what might be
termed false modesty.”—Frank Moore.
“It is usually on our detours that we pick up the tacks.”—
Clarence Jones.
The man who thinks it is good business to knock a competi­
tor, would make fun of his wife s false teeth at a dinner party.”—
Harry Milnes.
Noises do not affect some people. They sleep the soundest
while their neighbors are building up their town.”—Herbert Lee.
“The man who thinks he can’t, is right about it.”—Charles
Conover.
,The surest way to hold a soft job is to put a lot of hard work
into it.”—Ira King.
“I have.no time to quarrel with your conscience—I am busy
with my own.”—George Vail.
When a man feathers his own nest, there are usually several
picked chickens standing around who are mournfully thinking it
over.”—Glenn Cowell.
‘ The longer the sbde, the harder the climb.”—Frank Treat.
The longer the act, the shorter the encore.”—Larry Eckel.
Judge others as you would be judged. —Clayton Johnson.

�—

-COLDWATER

ROTARY CLUB

Honor Roll In Attendance
JANUARY 1, 1922—JANUARY 1, 1923

O’Neill Carroll................................ 100%
Hugh Clarke................................... 100%
Edward Freeland.................. .

100%

Harry Milnes................................... 100%
Frank Rowe.............. . .................. 100 To
Herbert Sloman............................... 100%

Oliver Deabler................................ 98%
Harry Lansing................................. 96%
Frank Treat..................................... 96%

Bert Fiske........................................ 94%
George Branch................................. 94%

Samuel Schultz.............................

90%

Rollo Thompson.............................. 90%
The following honor records were made by members who
became Rotarians some time after January 1st, 1922:
Warner VanAken............................ 100%

George Vail.................................... 100%
Larry Eckel.................................... 100%.

Walter Titus..................................... 95%
Charles Keep...............................

93%

Walter Bien.............................. .

.91 %

Average attendance of Club for year 1922—90.25%?,
High Month, November................. 97.05%

Low Month, July.......................... 84.56%?

(c C

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�^COLDWATER ffil ROTARY CLUB—

iL

|
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The Rotary Spirit
By Edgar A. Guest.

|

I

Red roses for the living, and handclasps warm and true,
A heart that’s tuned to giving, and strength to dare and do;
The sound of honest laughter, the joy of honest toil;
For those that follow after, to leave a finer soil.
All this has been and ever will be the Rotary plan,
A man’s sincere endeavor to serve his fellow-man.
■

A little less self-seeking, a little more for men,
Less bitter in our speaking, more kindly with the pen;
A little, less of swerving from paths of truth and right,
A little more of serving and less of dollar might.
More peaceful with our neighbors, and stauncher to our friends,
For this all Rotary labors, on this its hope depends.

To smooth the way for others, to make of life the most;
To make the phrase “our brothers’’ mean more than idle boast;
To praise sincere endeavor, when praise will spur it on,
Withholding kind words never until the friend is gone;
This is the Rotary spirit, this is the Rotary dream,
God grant that we may near it, before we cross the stream.
i
i

it Q
• &gt;&gt;
Service ———------------------ —J

J

�COLDWATER ®| ROTARY CLUB.

W1

The Rotary Wheel
Rotary is symbolized by a gear wheel having six arms or spokes and twenty-four teeth.
At its center is conscience, sleepless guard of
conduct. Its Hub may represent Faith in
God and Man. Its arms stand for Hope, the
anchor of the soul. Its rim forms the un­
broken circle of Love, which thinketh no evil.
And its twenty-four teeth, which, engaging in
the various activities of life, perfect its opera­
tions by the exhibition of—

Freedom, Liberty, Unity, Fraternity or
Friendship, Opportunity, Loyalty, Gentleness,
Goodness, Peace, Joy, Truth, Confidence,
Wisdom, Knowledge, Courage, Meekness,
Faithfulness, Generosity, Humility, Mercy or
Charity, Purity of Heart, Temperance, Broth­
erly Kindness and Godliness.

(( Q
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----- oervice —

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                    <text>MEMBERSHIP

IN ROTARY

INTERNATIONAL

The Rotary Club of

Coldwater, Michigan, USA
admitted 1 December

1921

is recognized for its dedication
to the Object of Rotary and its commitment

le

—buis-Vieehite
Gt
President, Rotary International

to the ideal of Service Above Self.

ne
Date

SNS

See

Geoffrey S. Large
General Secretary, Rotary International

�</text>
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                    <text>“We Build”

oouth Flaven

Kiwanis

Club

South Haven, Michigan

April

lst,

1936.

Mr. L. D. Watson
Secretary, Kiwanis Club
Coldwater, Michigan
Dear

Kiwanian

Watson:

At the district convention of Kiwanis to be held at
Mackinac Island in July the South Haven Kiwanis Club
will offer the services of Stanley Johnston for the
office of District Governor for the year 1947.
Stanley Johnston is the outstanding Kiwanian in
South Haven Club, of which he has been a member
fourteen

years.

He

is

an

excellent

speaker

the
for

and

pre-

siding officer, having been toastmaster for the State
Horticultural Society banquet for the past eight years.
He is an active community worker and organizer and
easily secures the cooperation of his fellow-workers.
In

the

past

Governor

been

of

twelve

Kiwanis

represented.

candidate
for

this

years

Division

two

South

Haven

never

while

office

We are extremely proud of
that he will give Kiwanis

if given the opportunity.
ment. of his qualifications

every

until

other

has

this

has

not

Division

year.

had

has

offered

South

Hav

We are enclosing a stateand his activities.

Kiwanis

OE:

Fe

ee

am

a

Stanley Johnston and know
an outstanding administration

s

nt

a

south

Club
Haven

Kiwanis

Club

�</text>
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                <text>Original document was lent to Branch District Library, from the Kiwanis Club of Coldwater, for digital preservation. </text>
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                <text>Chuck Woodward</text>
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                <text>Harvey Randall</text>
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                <text>Luella Senker</text>
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                <text>Jim Grohalski</text>
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                    <text>Stephanie Burdick
Tiffin University
HUMA 600
Dr. Mary Grennen, TU Advisor
The Tibbits Opera House: 1912

�Burdick, 2

Table of Contents
I. Background/Introduction of the Study
II. John Jackson Management, 1912
A. Legitimate Drama
B. Concerts
C. Lectures, Campaigns, and Misc. Uses
D. Travelogues, Animated Illustrations, &amp; Moving Pictures
E. Vaudeville, Minstrels, &amp; Magic
F. Summary

III. Works Cited
IV. Appendix A-Advertisements of 1912
V. Appendix B-Press Release Photos of 1912
VI. Appendix C-Opera House Datebook of 1912

�Burdick, 3
I.

Background/Introduction of the Study:
The Tibbits Opera House, a Victorian opera house in Coldwater, MI, still

performs live stage-shows via children's theatre, community theatre, and professional
theatre. It also functions as a roadhouse for other entertainers like magicians, tribal
dancers, and musicians. The Tibbits was built in 1882 by Barton S. Tibbits and has gone
through several renovations in its time. Currently, the Tibbits Opera Foundation is in the
process of restoring the theater to the glorious opera house that it was over 100 years ago.
To date, only one book has been published on the Tibbits Opera House, which is a
history of the theater from 1882 to 1904. Compiled by Carolyn Gillespie, a Coldwater
resident who used the Tibbits as her dissertation subject in the 1970s, the book contains
information from 1904 to the present that was scattered around the Coldwater community
and in the newspaper archives in the Branch District Library.
When I began my research, I intended to compile information from 1905 to 1912,
when the archives of the early newspapers ended, or—depending on the amount of
research available—from 1905 to the 1950s, when it was used as a movie theater. As I
began researching, what I assumed was just a few folders of information and a handful of
newspaper clippings was actually thousands of newspaper articles and photos.
While I relied on the Holbrook Index, it quickly became apparent that the indexes
for both the The Courier and Republican papers were severely lacking, and no listing for
the The Daily Reporter was in existence. Instead of relying solely on this index, I began
scanning through every published issue of the The Courier newspaper, which is on
microfilm. Using this method, I was able to acquire over 130 additional newspaper
advertisements, photos, and articles that had not previously been archived for 1912.

�Burdick, 4
In Gillespie's book, A History of the Tibbits Opera House, she mentioned that by
1900, The Courier and Republican newspapers had such a poor relationship with John
Jackson, the manager of the Tibbits Opera House, that they furthered their "attack on
Jackson by not carrying Tibbits ads or providing pre-show publicity and reviews" (104).
This relationship must have remained the same until 1912, when The Courier finally
began documenting advertisements, photos, press releases, and critiques for the Tibbits
almost daily. Prior to that, press coverage regarding the Tibbits came only if it was
publicity for the YMCA, the schools, or local clubs that were holding fundraisers or other
events. Many times between 1905 and 1911, the coverage was as small as a sentence,
naming pertinent information, such as the event and date, which was easily lost in the
disorganized, text-heavy newspaper.
Meanwhile, The Daily Reporter consistently covered theatrical events at the
Tibbits by running advertisements, pre-show publicity, and reviews. In the entire year of
1905, The Courier mentioned the Tibbits only five times, and one of those was for a city
land auction that the powers-that-be decided to host at the Tibbits because of the
possibility of inclement weather. Compared to the 162 advertisements or articles found in
The Daily Reporter from January to May of 1905, it is evident that the coverage from
The Courier continued to be unfair and uneven.
Additionally, there was no set format for where theatrical information could be
found in The Courier. Some information was found under the "Local Happenings"
heading several pages into the paper, which at many times was a mere date and title of
the show or event, and other times it was buried elsewhere in the paper. Many times
there was no headline at all. Furthermore, when headlines appeared above the actual

�Burdick, 5
articles carried by The Courier, they did not lend much help in identifying what was
actually in the article. For instance, one front-page article was titled "Just Heard the
News," when it could have been better titled "Horses Spook: Corwin Pinned in
Accident." The Daily Reporter's formatting had a much cleaner look with specific
headings, such as "Things Theatrical," which was usually found on the second or third
page. Partway through 1912, John Jackson himself began submitting information about
what was happening at the theater, and he titled his column, "Tibbits' Opera House (By J.
T. Jackson)."
The information gathered for this project—specifically the year of 1912— was
compiled from The Courier and The Daily Reporter archives, both located in the
Holbrook Heritage Room at the Branch District Library in Coldwater, MI. Local historian
Randall Hazelbaker supplied some photos of the early years of the Tibbits Opera House,
in addition to the photos that he had published in his books Images of America:
Coldwater (MI) and Images of America: Branch County (MI).

�Burdick, 6

II.

John Jackson Management: An Overview of 1912
John Jackson assumed management of the Tibbits in the spring of 1894, soon

after his marriage to Huldah Henning, the daughter of Joseph Henning, who had
purchased the theater from Barton Tibbits (Gillespie, 99). Gillespie's research covers the
first ten years of Jackson's management of the Tibbits, when he helped his father-in-law,
Joseph Henning. This does not end the Jackson management era, as he was transferred
the property in 1904 by Henning, and managed until 1920, when it was sold to Dennis
Vanes (Gillespie, 99). As previously mentioned, research was lacking for the years 1905
through 1911, in the sense that only one newspaper, The Daily Reporter, covered Tibbits
events, and that newspaper was not indexed. While there is much information that could
yet be gathered from The Daily Reporter for those years, at this point in the researcher's
schedule, researching each day of the microfilm would require an inordinate amount of
time. Therefore, this section will be limited to the year 1912—just over halfway through
Jackson's management of the theatre with his wife—a period about which a plethora of
information from both The Daily Reporter and The Courier is available.
Like those who managed before him, Jackson brought in a vast array of
entertainment for the people of the Coldwater area. Gillespie mentioned that some of the
popular stars were unwilling to perform in Coldwater at the town's lower prices, so
Jackson found it necessary to raise admission prices in 1894, which led to complaints
from the press (Gillespie, 103). Some articles, like one titled "The Edward Doyle
Company," gave insight to the people of Coldwater regarding the cost of actually
mounting a show. The article delves into the fact that there are heavy royalties to pay on
up-to-date plays, that there are heavy company payrolls "whose combined salary in one

�Burdick, 7
week is equal to the entire pay of the old time companies for a month," and that along
with the full company of actors, a vaudeville show of four or five acts is carried ("The
Edward Doyle Company").
Booking the best shows at the Tibbits Opera House was something that the public
wanted, as mentioned in that same article, but a Courier article of Sept 6, 1912 p3, "An
Entertainment Worth While," also states that the public "want scenery and new plays."
Jackson tried to educate the public, while giving them the best pricing that he could.
From 1894 until the end of the research in 1904, many advertisements and press releases
were loaded with the phrase "Popular Pricing," for shows that were 50 cents and under.
Furthermore, for stock company shows that played for a week's engagement, Jackson
admitted ladies free on Monday nights, as long as they were accompanied by someone
who held a paid ticket.
Other advertising tricks, such as testimonials scattered throughout the newspaper,
were used in previous years. In regards to one YMCA lecture series event held at the
Tibbits, Mrs. L. J. Byers said, "I have heard Campanari on three occasions. I consider
him to be worth the price of the course" (No title. Courier, Oct 28, 1910 p2). Another
testimonial in a 1910 paper was by Mrs. L. Sloman, who said, "I heard Campanari last
spring. Am I going? Oh! Certainly. He is perfectly grand" (No title. Courier, Oct 28,
1910 p3). Between testimonials that told the public that the show was well worth the
price, and advertisements or articles educating the public about discounts or about
reasons for high prices (after all, they wanted quality entertainment), Jackson was able to
keep a high attendance at the opera house.

�Burdick, 8
A.

Legitimate Drama
The biggest draw for the Opera House was legitimate drama, whether through a

special one-night engagement from a traveling company or amateur event, or through a
stock company's week-long engagement. Throughout 1912, at least 67 plays or musicals
were produced onstage (see Appendix C-Datebook of 1912). Some additional shows
were mentioned in newspaper articles, but no specific dates were listed, omitting from the
datebook the dates of some 15 other shows.
Even though shows were, for the most part, well attended, as previously
mentioned, the audience wanted a high-caliber show. As early as 1882, the scenery that
was provided by the Opera House had lost its glamour, and by 1886, traveling companies
began bringing in their own elaborate sets (Gillespie, 67). The fascination with the set
pieces still continued in 1912, as many press releases touted how many railroad cars of
scenery were needed for each production. A revival of Uncle Tom's Cabin, which was
seen at the Tibbits in October, was advertised to require "two seventy-foot cars to
transport the special scenery, 30 head of horses, ponies, donkeys, burros, bloodhounds,
log cabin and other novelties to make it the largest production of Uncle Tom's Cabin ever
attempted" ("Martin-Kibble Big Company: Children's Night With Uncle Tom's Cabin").
In September, an Edward Doyle Stock Company production was promoted by saying,
"Not only do they carry all of their own scenery, but furniture, properties, draperies and
light effects ("The Rosary").
The audience's fascination with the technical aspect of productions must have
escalated because newspaper reviews began to include information on costuming as well.
Some articles briefly mentioned the costuming, like one on the Edward Doyle Stock
Company: "Costumes and scenery were in keeping with the company, being much better

�Burdick, 9
than generally seen in the traveling stock" ("The Stock Co. Well Received: Large
Audience Attended First Production Last Evening"). Other articles, like one on the
LeBrun Grand Opera Company, dove into detail. Though the LeBrun Grand Opera
Company appeared in 1912, one particular article from The Courier that mentioned
costuming appeared at the end of December, 1911. This article expressed that this "finest
musical organization of its kind" used the best in costuming—costing over $5,000 for
their show. One $500 gown worn in the show was covered completely with solid silver
spangles and was imported from Paris. Another costume weighed 40 lbs and had metal
that was gold-washed, including the helmet and sword scabbard. Another costume was
made of heavy satin, and embroidered with gold lace. Still another was a tapestry,
trimmed in ropes of pearls. Finally, the jewelry worn during the production was
appraised at several thousand dollars ("LeBrun Grand Opera Co.: The Fourth Number on
Y.M.C.A. Course Next Wednesday Evening"). The same detailed costume report was
given for a local production of Fi Fi and the Toy Shop. One article touted, "The costumes
are pronounced dreams of loveliness, being attractive and artistic in appearance" and that,
"the paper dolls are most unique, dainty creations of crepe paper with large flower picture
hats to match" ("Costumes for FiFi are Here").
Local amateur productions, like Fi Fi, were appreciated as much as professional
shows. While there were only a few local productions per year, there was a good deal of
coverage leading up to the production, including coverage of how rehearsals were
progressing. The musical Fi Fi was a large local production with a two-night showing,
and it was said that, "It is probable that a more difficult dramatic production has not been
attempted by local people in the last 20 years" ("Characters in 'Fi-Fi' Difficult").

�Burdick, 10
Admission prices for amateur events topped off at 50 cents, which was higher than the
cost of some shows brought in by professional traveling companies. Fi Fi was even
compared to some of these professional companies. It was said that "those going to see
Fi Fi [would] be given a little idea of how close to the professional an amateur
performance can be made" ("Characters in 'Fi-Fi' Difficult"). Other amateur productions
in 1912 included Under the Stars and Stripes, which featured Lew Johnson, a Coldwater
boy ("'Under the Stars and Stripes' a Rare Treat"), and the operetta Sylvia, which drew a
large audience that showed its support by attending this high school production
("Operetta 'Sylvia' To-Morrow Night" and "Operetta a Great Success: 'Sylvia' Drew a
Good House and Delighted Everyone Fortunate Enough to be Present").
The variety of stock companies coming to the Tibbits drew the audience during
1912. Advertisements were placed in The Daily Reporter almost daily, and shows were
promoted with articles, ads, and photos at least a week in advance. If a show was coming
straight from New York or Chicago, that was always in the description. When the "great
American play" Paid in Full was shown in February, it was known that it was being
presented by a New York cast and production ("The Great American Play Paid in Full").
The Alvarado Players, who performed in April, were promoted with an article that touted
their stage achievements in other locations. They had "been having remarkable success in
the large towns of the middle west, having played a forty weeks engagement at the
Garrick Theatre, Grand Rapids last season" ("One Year in Grand Rapids"), which was
meant to stir up excitement about their coming engagement.
Though sometimes complaints about ticket costs arose, the audience was
generally forgiving, especially when the performing company was one of their favorites.

�Burdick, 11
When the Dixie Chorus had to postpone its performance until after 9 o'clock due to
baggage issues of the company delaying their arrival at the train station, the "audience
was patient and had forgotten the tiresome wait earlier in the evening" because the
entertainment was so excellent ("The Dixie Chorus: Gave a Novel and Excellent
Entertainment at the Opera House Last Evening"). The Shannon Stock Company, which
held a week's engagement at the Tibbits, was also a favored company, with reviewers
saying, "This company is far above the average one at small prices" ("Shannon Stock Co.
Good"). One particular show that was of great interest to the Coldwater audience was
Captured by Wireless, a play about the famous murder case of Coldwater native Harvey
Crippen, who was found guilty in England of murdering his wife and was hanged in
November, 1910. He was the first criminal to be captured by the aid of wireless
communication, hence the title of the play. The Alvarado Players presented it in April of
1912, a year and a half after Crippin's hanging. Critics wrote, "The play starts at the
point in the famous criminal case where the murderer is first discovered so that the
author, by using the many sensational incidents connected with Dr. Crippen's escape and
final capture by aid of the wireless telegraph, has written an intensely interesting play
without resorting to the more gruesome incidents of the crime" ("They Are Here
Tonight"). Prior to Captured by Wireless, one review of the company said that the
Alvarado Players "easily proved themselves one of the best stock companies that has ever
appeared in Coldwater" ("The Show Last Night"). There was no review given for
Captured by Wireless; however, newspapers went on to promote the next stock company
and its production of The Cat and the Fiddle, which had a company of 40 singers,
dancers, and comedians, along with a beauty chorus and the promise of "novelties, stage

�Burdick, 12
illusions and transformations, magic and beautiful stage settings" ("At the Opera House:
The Cat and the Fiddle").
Mutt and Jeff, a play based on Bud Fisher's original cartoons, was performed at
the Opera House one night in April of 1912, and was promoted with the fact that the
show was "undoubtedly the most talked of play in a number of years, not only among
theatrical people, but by theatergoers all over the country" ("'Mutt and Jeff' Next
Wednesday"). Later in April, the same company that brought The Cat and the Fiddle
returned with The Cow and the Moon. Reviews for it were favorable, but did not top
those for The Cat and the Fiddle:
Those who have witnessed The Cat and the Fiddle were delighted with its
numerous illusions, its variety of stage mechanisms and its wealth of
scenery and stage effects, were just as much delighted with The Cow and
the Moon. As a musical show, The Cow and the Moon is not the success
that The Cat and the Fiddle is. There are none of the pieces in it which
compare with those in the latter production. The general effect, however,
is good and the piece accomplished its main mission and makes the
audience laugh most o the time. The scenery used is gorgeous and there is
a great deal of it used. The properties of the production are enormous.
("The Cow and the Moon Good")

It is surprising that even though The Cow and the Moon had many special effects—such
as the company on stage in a replica of the latest sleeping car model, or an "approaching
locomotive, commencing with a tiny speck of light in the distance and gradually
approaching, little by little until the huge bulk of a giant engine appears and stops at the

�Burdick, 13
footlights, the grinding of wheels and the breaks hissing of steam and the clanging of
bell" ("The Cow and the Moon")—it was still incomparable to The Cat and the Fiddle.
In May, Beverly came to the Tibbits, with upcoming star Dorothy Howard, who,
"although young in years, is a thoroughly experienced actress, having as a mere child
played prima donna soubrette roles in comic opera and later an ingénue in leading stock
organizations of the principal cities" ("Seat Sale Tomorrow"). While the Ben Greet
Players were supposed to appear in June, their engagement was postponed until August 6,
which was the season opener. From May to August, the theater was dark in terms of
plays being performed.
With the opening of the new season came a successful start, as headlines boasted
about the Greet Players. Prior to their engagement, one article said that the players "seem
to possess a quality of freshness and spontaneity quite unequalled by any form of
dramatic production. It's been said that many people attend these performances, who
rarely, if ever, go to the regular theatre" ("Ben Greet Players: Big Advance Sale of
Seats"). Once the players presented their production of A Midsummer Night's Dream, the
reviews that followed were equally complimentary, saying that "last night's production
was the finest of its kind ever seen in Coldwater. It is certain that ne'er before has a
Coldwater audience been favored with such a perfect interpretation of the text of
Shakespeare as was the performance of last evening" ("Greet Players were Excellent").
The Margy South Stock Company (at other times referred to as Culhane's Comedians and
still other times referred to as the Arlington Stock Company) spent a week at the Tibbits
in August, with lead actress Margy South, "one of the youngest and best stock actresses
in the profession" ("The Straight Road the Play Tonight"). Special mention was also

�Burdick, 14
given to crowd favorites, such as Will Culhane, Clementina St. Felix, and Harry Warner.
Each production from that company got rave reviews night after night. One such review
appeared after the company's performance of A Final Settlement, which "delighted both
young and old and found approval on every hand" ("Stock Company is Well Patronized:
Production Last Evening at Opera House Brought Forth Many Favorable Comments").
With fall and winter came larger shows with larger admission prices. The top
priced shows of the year at $1.50 per ticket were in September and October, beginning
with The Flirting Princess starring Harry Bulger and several present stars who numbered
on the same program at Tony Pastor's New York Theatre ("Harry Bulger in The Flirting
Princess"), and The Littlest Rebel, which advertised a cast of 50 onstage during a battle
scene ("'The Littlest Rebel' Soon"). In September, The Rosary returned to the Tibbits
stage, and The Daily Reporter said, "The story is interestingly told with an excellent cast
and its scenic effects that are brilliant; the production is worth attending" ("The Rosary").
Even though Faust had appeared before at the Tibbits, it was also a hot-ticket show, with
admission prices topping off at $1 each. One article noted that because of the advanced
cost of living, this particular show actually had a reduction to the price of admission so
that the company would be guaranteed a full house ("Faust: "Will Be at the Opera House
This Week-Matinee and Night").
The White Sister, a production that was three years old, arrived in November and
was interesting in the fact that unlike other shows, this show had only one company
playing on the road. Also, with the exception of the lead, the cast remained original.
Until it was staged in Coldwater, it had never been played in a city that had fewer than
25,000 people in population. This particular show had been performed in 14 different

�Burdick, 15
state penitentiaries and was the only play allowed to be shown in Sing Sing ("The White
Sister"). Advertisements for this show were heavy, as were articles leading up to the
performance. The same held true for The Only Son, featuring Thomas Ross, which was
said to be one of the "most discussed plays of the last two seasons" (The Courier Nov 28
1912 p3). Satan Sanderson was a show that touted the only woman stage director in the
dramatic profession, Miss Jessie Bonstelle, who was also a well-known stock actress in
over four hundred plays ("Hackett- 'Satan Sanderson' Tonight").
Jackson was finally given a nod in December for his efforts at the Tibbits, as
reviews from Satan Sanderson said, "Manager Jackson deserves great credit for being
able to give to Coldwater theatergoers the opportunity to see such productions." The
article went on to say that Jackson's "greatest accomplishment is bringing Thomas Ross
here tomorrow night" ("Last Night's Show was Fine"). In that same article, Ross was
acknowledged as one of America's greatest actors. Finishing out the year was The
Divorce Question, a play that was considered a little daring because it was an argument
against divorce. It was said to be morally strong— a "Wonderfully gripping play, and
one that ably portrayed sad conditions arising through the numerous divorces of the
present day." Even though it was the last play of the year, the audience was noted as
being "exceedingly poor," since fewer than half of the seats were filled ("The Divorce
Question Good").

B.

Concerts
Aside from legitimate drama, concerts were also popular (in terms of drawing a

crowd and creating excitement) at the Tibbits. Even though there were only seven

�Burdick, 16
concerts in 1912, they were with well-known musicians such as Grilley and Rogers,
Vanda Enos, the LeBrun Grand Opera Co., the Ellery Band, and the Sousa Band.
The first concert of the year brought a YMCA entertainment course, Rogers and
Grilley, who had previously performed in Coldwater. Articles prior to their engagement
claimed, "Mr. Grilley is a reader and storyteller of exceptional talent, while Mr. Rogers
has perhaps no equal as a harpist in this country" ("Y.M.C.A. Course Next Monday:
Rogers and Grilley will be the Attraction at the Opera House"). The Courier also gave
this promo, saying that Grilley and Rogers were "always a great treat" ("Always a Great
Treat"). After the performance, The Courier noted that it was a sold-out house and that
the program was "much enjoyed by all present" ("Saturday At Opera House: Good
Matinee and Night Performance Promised"). Vanda Enos appeared in March with her
violin as an attraction alongside a double show of comedy and vaudeville. Enos was
billed as "a brilliant and widely known music artist and violin virtuoso" and that those
who attended the program were witnessing "a unique and uncommon event [that was] of
great benefit to musicians, students of music, and music lovers" ("Three Days Only").
The LeBrun Grand Opera Co.was at the Tibbits for only a one-night engagement
and left the following day for Mount Pleasant, MI. Over the course of 30 weeks, it had
performed six entertainments each week, traveled 25,000 miles, and appeared in 28
different states. In May the company appeared at the Tibbits and delighted the audience,
as already mentioned with the article regarding their costuming. Reviews were favorable,
giving credit to Madame LeBrun for her "wonderful soprano voice" and acting ability "of
unusual ability." Miss Dorothy Wilson, the contralto, was also given credit for her
"splendid voice" and "clever acting." Fritz Huttmann, the tenor, and Arthur Deane, the

�Burdick, 17
baritone, were given credit for winning their "full share of applause" ("Entertained in
Fine Style: Large Audience Delighted with LeBrun Grand Opera Company").
The Ellery band, "recognized among the best authorities as being the foremost
concert band in this country," also caused a great stir in town ("Ellery's Greatest Band").
Numerous articles with accompanying photos advertised their coming, and after the
performance the reviews said that the band gave "one of the best concerts that the people
of this city have listened to in some time" ("Gave a Fine Concert"). Ellery's band had a
successful run in England and Scotland, and one notice published for the Glasgow
Exposition where the band played to tens of thousands daily said, "Never in history of
band music has a musical organization achieved such an amazing triumph in so short a
time as has the Ellery Band. Sousa had his victories and none will gainsay their worth,
but the Ellery Band has out-Sousa-ed Sousa…Mr. Channing Ellery, the founder of the
Band, has openly admitted that his aim in organizing it was to surpass the standard of
perfection set by Sousa" ("Greatest Concert Band"). Ticket prices for the Ellery Band's
engagement were in line with Sousa's band, which appeared at the Tibbits five months
later.
Having two bands of this magnitude in one year was a feat for Jackson, and he
was commended for "being able to secure for the citizens of Coldwater such a rare
musical treat" ("Sousa's Band Drew Crowd"). Much hoopla surrounded Sousa's coming,
and it was assumed that many people would find it impossible to gain admission to his
performance. Sousa, who had given more concerts than any other man in the history of
music, drew many people from out of town, exhausting the capacity of the Opera House
(No Title. The Courier, Oct 31, 1912 p3). There wasn't much of a review for Sousa in

�Burdick, 18
The Courier, but it did say that, "it is unnecessary to say that the program was excellent
and that it was enthusiastically appreciated, for Sousa is known better and appreciated
more throughout the civilized world than any other of the many famous conductors"
("Sousa's Band Drew Crowd"). The year was rounded out with smaller acts, such as the
Hussars and the Oberlin College Glee Club.

C.

Lectures, Campaigns, and Misc. Uses
Most lectures were brought to the Tibbits through the YMCA entertainment

course. The first of the YMCA lectures was in February, when Adrian Newens appeared,
having replaced Phidelah Rice, who missed his train connection (due to poor railroad
service in Toldeo, Ohio, according to The Daily Reporter) earlier that month and couldn't
make it to perform ("Adrian Newens Pleasing to All"). The audience was pleased with
Newens, who had previously entertained in Coldwater: "From the beginning to the end of
his work last evening, the audience was his. Mr. Newens is an impersonator of rare
ability and combines that gift with a rare good judgment in the selection of subjects with
which to entertain" ("A.M. Newens at Opera House").
The next number (and the last of the season) sponsored by the YMCA was Albert
L. Blair, whose topic was "The Whir of the Newspaper Press". Blair asserted that while
inventions such as the telephone, the telegraph, type setting machines, and high speed
presses now in use were wonderful, there would come a day with "still more remarkable
inventions." He affirmed that "the future holds still greater possibilities" ("Albert L. Blair
at Opera House"). Unfortunately, the reviewer for The Daily Reporter found his lecture to
be "the longest, driest, and most uninteresting discourse that was ever thrust over the

�Burdick, 19
footlights at a local audience. Facts were given as facts without any attempt to
garnishment in the way of figurative language or interesting detail. They were simply
piled up and thrown at the audience in chunks, much as cement blocks of good size
would be handled." The reviewer went on to say that while Mr. Blair knew what he was
talking about, no one else did, and that his hearers were so stupefied that they either fell
asleep or went home ("Gave Lecture on the Press").
Locals used the stage as a platform for their campaigns as well. In February, there
was a local option meeting hosted by the Branch County Anti-Saloon League, with
Senator Seaborn Wright speaking about whether or not saloons should be banished from
the state ("Meeting at Opera House"). In March, Mr. Woolley, a candidate for the
presidency on the prohibition ticket, spoke to a packed Opera House. The reviewer for
the newspaper said that his lecture was given "in a quiet and logical way, [presenting] the
cause which he champions, and [carrying] his arguments and illustrations through in such
a way that they are clearly understood and hard to combat ("Opera House Was Packed:
Hon. John G. Woolley Greeted by a Splendid Audience and Gave a Stirring Address").
Father Dennis A. Hayes, of the local Catholic church, spoke on two occasions to
influence the number of "Dry" voters, regarding prohibition ("Last Local Option
Meeting" and "Fr. Hayes at Opera House"). Interestingly, one article requested no
children be brought to the theater, that "Children can co-operate best in this campaign
next Sunday by giving their seats to the adults" ("Last Local Option Meeting"). This was
reminiscent of a request made by Barton S. Tibbits, when he asked in a Coldwater
Republican article titled "Darling Little Baby" that children be left at home so as not to
disturb the theater-goers who paid to see the show on stage, or the actors and actresses,

�Burdick, 20
who deserve to be given the limelight (Gillespie, 288). In October, both the Republican
and Democratic parties also held rallies at the theater. Other miscellaneous uses for the
Tibbits included holding a festival in May, and commencement ceremonies in June.

D.

Travelogues, Animated Illustrations, &amp; Moving Pictures
Travelogues, animated illustrations, and moving pictures were also on the scene

during 1912. Though Lyman Howe brought his motion picture travelogues, or Travel
Festivals, regularly two times a year, documentation shows that three occurred in 1912.
These popular Travel Festival shows gave the audience an opportunity to see far-off
places that they might not otherwise have seen. January's travelogue was titled Reaching
the World's Highest Altitudes: Hunting from an Aeroplane. October brought a collection
of death-defying races in air and sea, the burial of the Maine, and a tour along Paris and
Versailles. With December came All the World's a Stage. In regards to the travelogues,
a December Courier article commented, "Superficial observers regard its success as
phenomenal. They are wrong because it is based on sound principles of actual merit:
Because it furnishes as inspiring and beautiful a form of entertainment as the human mind
could conceive ("Success is Based on Actual Merit").
The only animated illustration listed during 1912 was Dante's Inferno, which for a
10 cent admission fee, was said to be "impressive at many moments and disappointing at
others," according to the St. Louis Post ("Dante's Inferno"). The Brooklyn Standard
Union found it to be the "most elaborate film ever prepared in the moving picture world."
In their showing, they found that the audience was "much impressed with the vast amount
of work that must have been necessary to depict such a strange story with its wonderful
setting" (The Daily Reporter, March 5, 1912 p3). Motion pictures also included a

�Burdick, 21
September showing of Oliver Twist, with Nat Goodwin as Fagin. Goodwin had been
playing the character in New York, but was the only one of the "all-star cast" who
appeared in the revival to be seen in the pictures. Even so, "the other characters are
splendidly taken and the films themselves are remarkably clear and distinct" ("'Oliver
Twist' in Moving Pictures"). The final set of pictures shown at the Opera House were
shown for the Michigan National Guard in December, who used it (and the
accompanying lecture by Major M. M. Phillips of Owosso) to secure new recruits for
Company A ("Dandy Dixie Minstrels Soon").

E.

Vaudeville, Minstrels, &amp; Magic
Aside from legitimate drama, other forms of entertainment held at the Opera

House included a variety of vaudeville shows, minstrel shows, and magic shows, among
others. Although only eleven vaudeville, minstrel, and magic shows are listed in the
1912 datebook (Appendix C), that is a very deflated number from what actually appeared
at the Tibbits, because with touring stock companies came vaudeville acts that
entertained the audience during intermission of the main feature. For our purposes, those
additional vaudeville acts will not be mentioned in this section.
In January, the Manhattan Gaiety Girls took to the stage, with the slogan
"Everything new, everything best," the company having replaced the "faded beauties"
with a new cast of "handsome young women" ("Manhattan Gaiety Girls"). However,
these beauties received no comment after the fact from either The Daily Reporter or The
Courier, as they were overshadowed by the publicity for J. C. Rockwell's Sunny South
Company, which was said to be a "first-class colored organization" in an article in The

�Burdick, 22
Courier ("J.C. Rockwell's Sunny South Co."), and "one of the strongest, brightest, most
complete and capable colored organizations ever sent on tour" with "more new songs,
new music, new ideas, new specialties, new dances than any similar organization and it is
brim full of laughable situations and charming musical numbers that are new and catchy"
in an article in The Daily Reporter ("J.C. Rockwell's Sunny South Co."). Apparently,
plantation shows were in vogue because later in February, Thomas P. Kelley's Colored
Carnival arrived at the Tibbits.
May brought two nights' worth of local vaudeville shows from the ladies of St.
Agatha's Guild, and while the attraction provided "a constant change of color, music and
singers that made the attraction most enjoyable," there was only a fair-sized audience
("The National Troubadours"). Other local vaudeville included two performances
sponsored by the Phi Gamma Sorority.
Other entertainment included Reno the Magician, who was met with the utmost
favorable reviews ("Reno is Certainly a Great Magician"). Reno was contracted in by the
YMCA committee as entertainment at no cost to the audience, in order to make up for its
last lecture that caused "great dissatisfaction" ("New Course of Entertainment"). The
next YMCA entertainment wasn't until November, when Miss Bargelt, an accomplished
crayon artist, took to the stage along with her company of musicians ("First Number
Excellent: Bargelt Company Opened the Y.M.C.A. Lecture Course Last Night").
Another type of entertainment was a dog and cat circus in October that was
coupled with a vaudeville show. It was given one sentence of publicity prior to the
engagement, and none thereafter (No Title. The Daily Reporter, Oct 15 1912 p3).

�Burdick, 23
The only true minstrel company to visit Coldwater was the DeRue Bros.' Ideal
Minstrels, which promised a clean, classic and honest show ("Minstrels Coming: We
Guarantee This Attraction"). Furthermore, a handful of the performers from this group
had the distinction of being some of the few acrobatic duos who had performed and
appeared before royalty ("DeRue Bros.' Ideal Minstrels"). Reviews indicated approval of
the group, and "it was the general opinion that the minstrel was better than many
attractions demanding a large entrance fee ("A Good Show Last Evening"). The local
Fortnightly Ladies Minstrel Club held a minstrel show just after the DeRue Bros. left
town, and reviews were equally favorable, boasting the show as "one of the best of the
kind that was ever staged in Coldwater ("Crowded House First Night"). The other local
paper commented that there was "not a weak point in the cast and the songs and jokes
were well chosen and well given. The chorus was especially fine and the dancing girls
were excellent" ("First Night of Minstrels was Success"). While the show might have
been good, it seems as though reviews for local productions were a bit more flowery than
reviews for traveling shows.
One of the final entertainments of the year was a vaudeville production by the
National Theatre, which had prices of up to 50 cents per ticket. Jackson explained that the
high prices for the show were commensurate with the performers' merit. "Recognized
vaudeville performers are expensive people" ("Vaudeville for Thanksgiving"). Gus Sun's
Ohio Vaudeville Circuit came for Christmas, and the final entertainment of the year (on
the 31st of December) was LeVard's Dixie Minstrels, another colored company who had
"won distinction on the vaudeville stage" ("From Fiske University").

�Burdick, 24
F.

Summary of Findings
Though the public demanded more, John Jackson had a successful year of

managing the Tibbits Opera House in 1912 by supplying Coldwater with a constant array
of entertainments. Admitting ladies free on some Monday evenings was a good business
practice, as was advertising "Popular Prices." Legitimate drama was seen most often on
the stage of the Tibbits, with successful shows starring greats like Dorothy Howard, the
Ben Greet Players, Margy South, Will Culhane, Harry Bulger, and Thomas Ross. Stock
companies would play a rotation of shows for a week's engagement. The audience was
fascinated with the technical aspects of the show, and newspapers reflected that with
articles on royalties, costuming, lighting effect, and scenery.
Some of the finest concerts were given at the Opera House, with popular
musicians such as Grilley and Rogers, Vanda Enos, the LeBrun Grand Opera Co., the
Ellery Band, and the Sousa Band. The most popular performers were Sousa and Ellery,
who was said to "out-Sousa Sousa."
Aside from drama and concerts, lectures, campaigns, and general local events
were held at the Opera House. Most lectures were brought there through sponsorship of
the YMCA lecture and entertainment series. When a dry, uninteresting program was
delivered to the audience in the way of Albert L. Blair, the YMCA tried to set things right
by offering a free magic show to make up for the disappointment of the lecture.
Candidates--both Republican and Democrat--used the stage for campaigns and rallies.
Meetings were also held to discuss prohibition and the role of saloons in Michigan.
Other local events included a May Festival and commencement ceremonies.
Travelogues allowed people to experience what they might not otherwise have
had the opportunity to, and they were popular, with showings at least twice a year. Other

�Burdick, 25
moving pictures shown at the Opera House included Oliver Twist, Dante's Inferno, and a
recruiting program for the local National Guard unit.
Vaudeville and minstrel shows were also popular. Colored carnivals and
plantation shows were booked several times throughout the year and were well-received.
Other varieties of entertainment included magicians, a crayon artist, and a dog and cat
circus.
In closing, Jackson provided entertainment for the community almost year-round
on at least a weekly basis, with the theatre unused during the month of July. He strived to
bring in a variety of plays, entertainments, lectures, and concerts, and also allowed locals
to use the theatre for their needs, such as school festivals, plays, and commencement
ceremonies.

�Burdick, 26
III. Works Cited
Gillespie, Carolyn L. A History of the Tibbits Opera House, 1882-1904. Kent State
University: June 1975.
"Adrian Newens Pleasing to All." The Courier 26 Feb. 1912.
"Albert L. Blair at Opera House." The Courier 27 March 1912.
"Always a Great Treat." The Courier 17 Jan 1912.
"A.M. Newens at Opera House." The Daily Reporter 24 Feb. 1912, p3.
"At the Opera House: The Cat and the Fiddle." The Courier 27 March 1912, p2.
"At the Opera House (St. Louis Post Dispatch)." The Courier 6 March 1912, p3.
"Ben Greet Players: Big Advance Sale of Seats." The Courier 4 Aug. 1912, p3.
"Characters in 'Fi-Fi' Difficult." The Daily Reporter 15 April 1912, p3.
"Costumes for FiFi are Here." The Daily Reporter 9 April 1912, p3.
"The Cow and the Moon." The Daily Reporter 17 April 1912, p3.
"The Cow and the Moon Good." The Daily Reporter 27 April 1912, p3.
"Crowded House First Night." The Daily Reporter 13 Nov. 1912, p3.
"Dandy Dixie Minstrels Soon." The Courier 28 Dec. 1912, p3.
"Dante's Inferno." The Daily Reporter 5 March 1912, p3.
"DeRue Bros.' Ideal Minstrels." The Daily Reporter 4 Nov. 1912, p3.
"The Divorce Question Good." The Courier 13 Dec. 1912.
"The Dixie Chorus: Gave a Novel and Excellent Entertainment at the Opera House Last
Evening." The Courier 8 March 8 1912.
"The Edward Doyle Company." The Courier 14 Sept. 1912, p2.

"Ellery's Greatest Band." The Courier 12 June 1912, p2.

�Burdick, 27
"Entertained in Fine Style: Large Audience Delighted with LeBrun Grand Opera
Company." The Courier 1 May 1912.
"An Entertainment Worth While." The Courier 6 Sept. 1912, p3.
"Faust: Will Be at the Opera House This Week-Matinee and Night." The Courier 10 Nov.
1912, p3.
"First Night of Minstrels was Success." The Courier 13 Nov. 1912.
"First Number Excellent: Bargelt Company Opened the Y.M.C.A. Lecture Course Last
Night." The Courier 16 Nov. 1912.
"Fr. Hayes at Opera House." The Courier 1 April 1912, p3.
"From Fiske University." The Daily Reporter 30 Dec. 1912, p3.
"Gave a Fine Concert." The Courier 19 June 1912.
"Gave Lecture on the Press." The Daily Reporter 26 March 1912, p4.
"A Good Show Last Evening." The Daily Reporter 7 Nov. 1912, p3.
"The Great American Play 'Paid in Full'." The Courier 7 Feb 1912.
"Greatest Concert Band." The Daily Reporter 10 June 1912, p3.
"Greet Players were Excellent." The Daily Reporter 7 Aug. 1912, p3.
"Hackett- 'Satan Sanderson' Tonight." The Courier 3 Dec. 1912, p3.
"Harry Bulger in 'The Flirting Princess'." The Courier 21 Sept. 1912, p3.
"J.C. Rockwell's Sunny South Co.". The Courier 31 Jan. 1912.
"J.C. Rockwell's Sunny South Co.". The Daily Reporter 3 Feb. 1912, p3.
"Last Local Option Meeting." The Courier 29 March 1912, p2.
"Last Night's Show was Fine." The Courier 4 Dec. 1912.

�Burdick, 28
"LeBrun Grand Opera Co.: The Fourth Number on Y.M.C.A. Course Next Wednesday
Evening." The Courier 22 Dec 1911.
"'The Littlest Rebel' Soon." The Courier 8 Oct. 1912, p2.
"Manhattan Gaiety Girls." The Courier 29 Jan. 1912.
"Martin-Kibble Big Company: Children's Night With Uncle Tom's Cabin." The Courier
16 Oct. 1912, p3.
"Meeting at Opera House." The Courier 28 Feb. 1912, p3.
"Minstrels Coming: We Guarantee This Attraction." The Courier 2 Nov. 1912, p3.
"Mr. Hackett Coming." The Courier 28 Nov. 1912, p3.
"'Mutt and Jeff' Next Wednesday." The Courier 1 April 1912, p3.
"The National Troubadours." The Daily Reporter 22 May 1912, p3.
"New Course of Entertainment." The Daily Reporter 5 April 1912, p4.
No Title. The Courier 28 Oct. 1910, p2.
No Title. The Courier 28 Oct. 1910, p3.
No Title. The Courier 31 Oct. 1912, p3.
No Title. The Daily Reporter 15 Oct. 1912, p3.
"'Oliver Twist' in Moving Pictures." The Daily Reporter 21 Sept. 1912, p2.
"One Year in Grand Rapids." The Daily Reporter 4 April 1912, p3.
"Opera House Was Packed: Hon. John G. Woolley Greeted by a Splendid Audience and
Gave a Stirring Address." The Courier 25 March 1912.
"Operetta a Great Success: 'Sylvia' Drew a Good House and Delighted Everyone
Fortunate Enough to be Present." 13 March 1912.
"Operetta 'Sylvia' To-Morrow Night." The Courier 11 March 1912.

�Burdick, 29
"Reno is Certainly a Great Magician." The Courier 27 May 1912.
"The Rosary." The Daily Reporter 14 Sept. 1912, p3.
"Saturday At Opera House: Good Matinee and Night Performance Promised." The
Courier 24 Jan. 1912.
"Seat Sale Tomorrow." The Daily Reporter 30 April 1912, p3.
"Shannon Stock Co. Good." The Courier 28 Feb. 1912, p3.
"The Show Last Night." The Daily Reporter 11 April 1912, p3.
"Sousa's Band Drew Crowd." The Courier 2 Nov. 1912.
"Stock Company is Well Patronized: Production Last Evening at Opera House Brought
Forth Many Favorable Comments." The Courier 14 Aug. 1912.
"The Stock Co. Well Received: Large Audience Attended First Production Last
Evening." The Courier 10 Sept. 10 1912.
"The Straight Road the Play Tonight." The Daily Reporter 12 Aug.1912, p3.
"Success is Based on Actual Merit." The Courier 22 Dec. 1912, p2.
"They Are Here Tonight." The Daily Reporter 8 April 1912, p3.
"Three Days Only." The Daily Reporter 12 March 1912, p3.
"'Under the Stars and Stripes' a Rare Treat." The Courier 8 Jan. 1912.
"Vaudeville for Thanksgiving." The Courier 26 Nov. 1912, p3.
"The White Sister." The Courier 20 Nov. 1912, p3.
"Y.M.C.A. Course Next Monday: Rogers and Grilley will be the Attraction at the Opera
House." The Daily Reporter 16 Jan. 1912 p3.
"You Will Like Louise," The Courier 4 Sept. 1912, p3.

�Burdick, 30

IV. Appendix A:

Tibbits Opera House
1912 Newspaper Advertisements

�Burdick, 31

January Ads

The Man on the Box. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Jan 1 1912 p2.

�Burdick, 32

Our Navy. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Jan
1 1912 p3.

�Burdick, 33

Under the Stars and Stripes. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Jan 9 1912 p2.

�Burdick, 34

February Ads

Paid in Full. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
Feb 6 1912 p3.

�Burdick, 35

Kelley's Colored Carnival. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Feb 9 1912.

�Burdick, 36

Shannon Stock Company. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Feb 22 1912 p3.

�Burdick, 37

The Village Gossip. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Feb 27 1912 p3.

�Burdick, 38

March Ads

The Flower of the Ranch. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, March 18 1912 p3.

�Burdick, 39

The Cat and the Fiddle. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, March 23 1912 p2.

�Burdick, 40

The Missouri Girl. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, March 26 1912 p3.

�Burdick, 41

Dante's Inferno. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, March 4 1912, p2.

�Burdick, 42

Vanda Enos. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, March 9 1912, p2.

�Burdick, 43

The Power of the Cross. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, March 15 1912, p3.

�Burdick, 44

April Ads

Mutt &amp; Jeff. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, April 3 1912, p2.

�Burdick, 45

Mutt &amp; Jeff. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, March 29 1912, p6.

�Burdick, 46

The Alvarado Players. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, April 4 1912, p3.

�Burdick, 47

Fi Fi of the TOYSHOP. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, April 13 1912, p2.

�Burdick, 48

The Cow &amp; the Moon. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, April 24 1912, p4.

�Burdick, 49

May Ads

May Festival. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, May 24 1912, p2.

�Burdick, 50

Beverly of Graustark. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, May 1 1912, p4.

�Burdick, 51

June Ads

Ellery's Band. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, June 12 1912 p4.

�Burdick, 52

August Ads

Ben Greet. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, July 31 1912, p2.

�Burdick, 53

The Straight Road. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Aug 7 1912, p2.

�Burdick, 54

Victor E. Lambert Ad. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Aug 24 1912 p3.

�Burdick, 55

September Ads

Culhane's Comedians. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Sept 27 1912, p4.

�Burdick, 56

Louise Brown. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Sept 5 1912, p2.

�Burdick, 57

The Rosary. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Sept 11 1912, p2.

�Burdick, 58

Nat C. Goodwin. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Sept 25 1912, p5.

�Burdick, 59

October Ads

Big Republican Rally. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Courier, Oct 6 1912 p4.

�Burdick, 60

Rally. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier, Oct 15 1912
p3.

�Burdick, 61

Great Republican Rally Ad. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Courier, Oct 17 1910.

�Burdick, 62

November Ads

Ladies' Minstrels Ad. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
Courier, Nov 5 1912 p3.

The

�Burdick, 63

Evelyn Bargelt Concert Co. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Courier, Nov 10 1912 p2.

�Burdick, 64

Sousa and his Band. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Oct 29 1912, p2.

�Burdick, 65

Ladies Minstrels. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Nov 08 1912, p3.

�Burdick, 66

Faust. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Nov
13 1912, p2.

�Burdick, 67

Ideal Minstrels. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Nov 5 1912, p2.

�Burdick, 68

Satan Sanderson. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Nov 29 1912, p3.

�Burdick, 69

The White Sister. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Nov 21 1912, p3.

�Burdick, 70

Vaudeville. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
Nov 29 1912, p3.

�Burdick, 71

December Ads

Thos. W. Ross. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Nov 30 1912, p2.

�Burdick, 72

Oberlin Glee Ad. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room], Coldwater. The Courier,
Dec 18 1912 p2.

�Burdick, 73

The Divorce Question. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Dec 07 1912, p2.

�Burdick, 74

V. Appendix B:

Tibbits Opera House
1912 Press Release Photos

�Burdick, 75

The Opera House

Tibbits Opera House 1. Circa 1900. Photograph. Randall Hazelbaker Personal Collection,
Coldwater.

�Burdick, 76

Tibbits Opera House 2. Circa 1900. Photograph. Randall Hazelbaker Personal Collection,
Coldwater.

�Burdick, 77

Tibbits Opera House 3. Circa 1900. Photograph. Randall Hazelbaker Personal Collection,
Coldwater.

�Burdick, 78

Tibbits Opera House 4. Circa 1900. Photograph. Randall Hazelbaker Personal Collection,
Coldwater.

�Burdick, 79

Tibbits Opera House 5. Circa 1900. Photograph. Randall Hazelbaker Personal Collection,
Coldwater.

�Burdick, 80

January Engagements

Lew Johnson. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier, Jan 8
1912.

�Burdick, 81

February Engagements

The Dixie Chorus. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Feb 29 1912, p3.

�Burdick, 82

Scene from 'Paid in Full'. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Feb 5 1912, p3.

�Burdick, 83

Lorene Shannon. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Feb 27 1912, p3.

�Burdick, 84

Scene from 'Paid in Full'. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Feb 7 1912, p3.

�Burdick, 85

March Engagements

Frank F. Farrell. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier,
March 29 1912.

�Burdick, 86

The Sailor Boys. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
March 27 1912 p3.

Courier,

�Burdick, 87

Bunch of Beauties. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, March 20 1912, p3.

�Burdick, 88

The Missouri Girl. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, March 29 1912, p6.

�Burdick, 89

Vanda Enos. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, March 12 1912, p2.

�Burdick, 90

George Harris. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, March 21 1912, p2.

�Burdick, 91

A Scene from 'The Cat and the Fiddle'. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, March 26 1912, p4.

�Burdick, 92

A Scene from 'The Cat and the Fiddle'. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, March 27 1912, p2.

�Burdick, 93

Miss Phyllis Jackson. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, March 11 1912, p3.

�Burdick, 94

Miss Margaret Rose. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, March 11 1912, p3.

�Burdick, 95

Clyde Doerr. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
March 8, 1912, p3.

�Burdick, 96

William Alt. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
March 8 1912, p3.

�Burdick, 97

Roscoe Stewart. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, March 9 1912, p2.

�Burdick, 98

Mrs. Fern Doerr Broughton. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, March 9 1912, p2.

�Burdick, 99

A scene from 'Flower of the Ranch'. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, March 22 1912, p3.

�Burdick, 100

William Alt. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
March 11 1912, p3.

�Burdick, 101

A scene from 'The Flower of the Ranch'. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, March 23 1912, p4.

�Burdick, 102

The Missouri Girl. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, March 28 1912, p4.

�Burdick, 103

April Engagements

Cow and the Moon. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
Courier, April 26 1912 p3.

The

�Burdick, 104

Dorothy Howard. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier,
April 29 1912 p2.

�Burdick, 105

Mutt &amp; Jeff. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier, April 1
1912 p2.

�Burdick, 106

Avarado Players. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier,
April 10 1912 p2.

�Burdick, 107

Alvarado Players. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier,
April 8 1912 p2.

�Burdick, 108

Andrew Waldron. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, April 8 1912, p3.

�Burdick, 109

Mutt &amp; Jeff. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
April 3 1912, p2.

�Burdick, 110

Florence Radinoff. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, April 30 1912, p3.

�Burdick, 111

The Minister and the Maid. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, April 5 1912, p3.

�Burdick, 112

A scene from 'Mutt &amp; Jeff''. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, April 2 1912, p4.

�Burdick, 113

The Cow and the Moony. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, April 25 1912, p4.

�Burdick, 114

Cow and the Moon. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, April 24 1912, p4.

�Burdick, 115

Mutt &amp; Jeff Tonight. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, April 3 1912, p2.

�Burdick, 116

No Title. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, April
25 1912, p4.

�Burdick, 117

LeBrun Grand Opera Quartette. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, April 30 1912, p2.

�Burdick, 118

Margaret T. Shayne. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, April 29 1912, p4.

�Burdick, 119

June Engagements

Ellery's Greatest Band. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Courier, June 12 1912 p2.

�Burdick, 120

The Ellery Band. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier,
June 17 1912 p2.

�Burdick, 121

The Ellery Band. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier,
June 14 1912 p2.

�Burdick, 122

Joseph Giulii. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, June 17 1912, p3.

�Burdick, 123

Making out a Program. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, June 17 1912, p4.

�Burdick, 124

August Engagements

Alma Kruger. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier, Aug 4
1912 p2.

�Burdick, 125

The Servant in the House. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Aug 23 1912, p3.

�Burdick, 126

The Drain Man. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Aug 27 1912, p2.

�Burdick, 127

The Servant in the House. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Aug 26 1912, p4.

�Burdick, 128

The Servant in the House. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Courier, Aug 28 1912 p3.

�Burdick, 129

The Servant in the House. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Courier, Aug 25 1912 p2.

�Burdick, 130

September Engagements

Margy Southwell. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier,
Sept 28 1912 p3.

�Burdick, 131

Harry Bulger. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Sept 24 1912, p3.

�Burdick, 132

Miss Louise Brown. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Sept 4 1912, p2.

�Burdick, 133

Miss Melra Clanton. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Sept 7 1912, p4.

�Burdick, 134

Prof. Rego. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
Sept 11 1912, p4.

�Burdick, 135

W.E. LA Rose. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Sept 6 1912, p4.

�Burdick, 136

J.F. Marlow. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier, Sept 7
1912 p3.

�Burdick, 137

The Flirting Princess. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Courier, Sept 24 1912 p4.

�Burdick, 138

Margy Southwell. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier,
Sept 29 1912 p3.

�Burdick, 139

American Beauty Chorus. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Courier, Sept 25 1912 p4.

�Burdick, 140

W.E. LaRose. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier, Sept 10
1912 p3.

�Burdick, 141

The Rosary. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier, Sept 15
1912 p2.

�Burdick, 142

The Rosary. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier, Sept 17
1912 p2.

�Burdick, 143

Edward Doyle Stock Co. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Courier, Sept 8 1912 p4.

�Burdick, 144

Miss Louise Brown. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier,
Sept 5 1912 p2.

�Burdick, 145

October Engagements

Miss Virginia Root. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier,
Oct 31 1912 p3.

�Burdick, 146

Sousa and his Great Band. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Oct 28 1912, p4

�Burdick, 147

Charles E. Townsend. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Oct 3 1912, p2.

�Burdick, 148

The Shepherd of the Hills. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Courier, Oct 5 1912 p4.

�Burdick, 149

Preachin' Bill. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier, Oct
8 1912.

�Burdick, 150

The Shepherd of the Hills. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Courier, Oct 6 1912 p4.

�Burdick, 151

The Littlest Rebel. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier,
Oct 10 1912 p4.

�Burdick, 152

The Littlest Rebel. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier,
Oct 9 1912 p4.

�Burdick, 153

Mr. Farnum. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
Oct 11 1912 p3.

The

Courier,

�Burdick, 154

Sousa. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier, Oct 27 1912
p3.

�Burdick, 155

Lyman Howe Travel Festival. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Courier, Oct 22 1912 p4.

�Burdick, 156

Chameleons Tongue. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier,
Oct 26 1912 p3.

�Burdick, 157

When Horse and Lion Meet. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Courier, Oct 24 1912 p3.

�Burdick, 158

Apollo Concert Companyn. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Courier, Oct 31 1912 p2.

�Burdick, 159

Maine Burial. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier, Oct 27
1912 p4.

�Burdick, 160

Miss Nicoline Zedeler. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Courier, Oct 29 1912 p3.

�Burdick, 161

November Engagements

She Stoops to Conquer. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Courier, Nov 8 1912 p2,

�Burdick, 162

Norman Hackett. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Nov 30 1912, p4.

�Burdick, 163

Mohala and Floyd. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Nov 6 1912, p2.

�Burdick, 164

Sylvester A. Long. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Nov 7 1912, p3.

�Burdick, 165

Scene from Faust. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier,
Nov 10 1912 p3.

�Burdick, 166

George G. Wakefield. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier,
Nov 12 1912 p3.

�Burdick, 167

Scene from Faust. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier,
Nov 14 1912 p4.

�Burdick, 168

Faust. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier, Nov 14 1912
p3.

�Burdick, 169

The White Sister Ad. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier,
Nov 20 1912 p4.

�Burdick, 170

The White Sister Logo. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Courier, Nov 27 1912 p3.

�Burdick, 171

The White Sister. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier,
Nov 23 1912 p3.

�Burdick, 172

Miss Clara Lewis. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier,
Nov 24 1912 p4.

�Burdick, 173

The White Sister. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier,
Nov 26 1912 p3.

�Burdick, 174

December Engagements

Lizzie Hudson Collier. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Dec 5 1912, p4.

�Burdick, 175

Reno B. Welbourn. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Dec 12, 1912, p2.

�Burdick, 176

The Divorce Question. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Dec 11 1912, p3.

�Burdick, 177

The Glee Club. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Dec 10 1912, p4.

�Burdick, 178

The Divorce Question. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Courier, Dec 11 1912 p3.

�Burdick, 179

The Divorce Question. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Courier, Dec 8 1912 p5.

�Burdick, 180

The Only Son. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier, Dec
1 1912 p3.

�Burdick, 181

The Hussara. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
10 1912.

The Courier, Dec

�Burdick, 182

Norman Hackett. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier, Dec
3 1912 p2.

�Burdick, 183

The Only Son Scene. 1912. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Courier,
Dec 5 1912 p4.

�Burdick, 184

VI. Appendix C:

Tibbits Opera House Events
1912 Datebook

�Day

Date

Year

Mon

Jan 1

Tues

Tues

Name of
show/lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

1912

The Man on the Box

Trousdale Bros.

Play

Jan 2

1912

Lyman H.Howe

Travelogue/
Travel Festival

Jan 9

1912

"Reaching the
World's Highest
Altitudes/ Hunting
from an Aeroplane"
Under the Stars and
Stripes

*originally listed 1912
for Jan 16, but
again listed in
the Feb 14 &amp;
Feb 20 papers
as "coming
soon" with no
further articles
Mon
Jan 22 1912

Sat

Jan 27

1912

Tues

Jan 30

1912

Sat

Feb 3

1912

Ticket
price

Play: War
Drama

Matinee: 25
cents adults,
10 cents for
children;
Evening: 2535-50 cents

Matinee: 1025 cents;
evening:
25-35-50

The Hobo and the
Lady

Rogers &amp; Grilley

Concert: Vocal
&amp; Harp

J.M. Hill

Musical:
Farcical
Comedy in 3
Acts

Manhattan Gaiety
Girls
J.C. Rockwell's
Sunny South Co.

Variety/
Vaudeville

Director

Performers

Mr. Will H.
Dorbin, Miss
Bernice Trousdale

Company A
2nd Infantry
M.N.G.

Play: 4 Act
Comedy

The Country Boy

50 cents
upstairs, 75
downstairs

Sponsored
by

Henry B.
Harris

YMCA

Locals George H.
Hoskyn, Lew
Johnson, Mrs.
Susan Hoskyns
Alfred Cooper,
Frank McCormack,
Dean Borup, Frank
E. Jamison, George
Svaheffer, Olive
Templeton, Elda
Furry, Charlotte
Langdon, Nellie
Fillmore
Van Veachton
Rogers, Charles F.
Grilley

Billy
Ward

Variety: Singing,
dancing,
specialties of
Negro

Burdick, 185

�Day

Date

Year

Ticket
price

Name of
show/lecture topic

Company name

cents

Type of event

Sponsored
by

Director

Performers

characteristics

Fri

Feb 9

1912

25-5-75
Paid in Full
cents and $1
25-35-50
cents
50 cents

Tues

Feb 13

1912

Wed

Feb 14

1912

Fri

Feb 23

1912

Mon
Tues
Wed
Thurs
Sat

Feb 26
Feb 27
Feb 28
Feb 29
March
1
March1
and 2
March
2
March
5

1912
1912
1912
1912
1912

1912

No charge

March
7

1912

"Epic of the Negro- a
story of 300 years"

Fri-Sat March
8-9
Tues
March
12

1912

50 cents
downstairs;
75 upstairs
10 cents
25-35-50
cents

Sylvia

C.S. Primrose

Play: American

Thos. P. Kelley's
Minstrel/
Plantation Show
Colored Carnival
Phidelah Rice *missed Impersonation
YMCA

Marvelous Craig

train connection/show

SatSun
Sun
Tues

Thurs

10-20-30
cents

Based readings on
"The Singular Life"
The Last Round Up
The Village Gossips
The Banker's Child
What Money Will Do
The Price He Paid

1912

Old Farmer Allen

1912

The Girl From the
West
"Should saloons be
banished from the
state?"

1912

"Dante's Inferno"

Adrian Newens
*in place of Rice
Shannon Stock Co.

Lecture/
Impersonation
Plays &amp;
Vaudeville

YMCA

Dickinson's
orchestra; Seaborn
Wright, speaker

[Orchestra prior
to ] Lecture/
Meeting

Branch
Co. AntiSaloon
League

St. Charles Catholic
School orchestra,
vocal solos by locals
Mrs. Fern Doerr
Broughton, William
Alt, Mrs. Alliene
Claxton, Mrs. W.A.
Grifith.; sax solo by
Homer Dickinson

YMCA

Mr. Henry F.
Coleman, Mr.
Louis Johnson

Dixie Chorus Concert Play: Musical

Animated
Illustration
Play: Operetta
in 2 Acts

Harry, Hazel,
Lorene, and Harry
Jr. Shannon

Coldwater
High

Phyllis Jackson,
Mrs.
Clyde
Doerr,
Broughton
Burdick, 186

�Day

Date

Year

Ticket
price

Name of
show/lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
by

Director

William Alt, Fern
Doerr Broughton,
Roscoe Stewart,
Margaret Rose

School

Thurs

March
14
March
15

1912

March
16
March
23

1912
1912

25-50-75
cents, $1
and $1.50

March
24
March
25
March
27

1912

No
admission

Sat

March
30

1912

Sun

March
31

1912

Wed

April 3

1912

Fri

Sat
Sat

Sun
Mon
Wed

1912

10-20-30-50 Pardners
cents
Power of the Cross

1912
1912

25-50-75
cents, $1
and $1.50

Matinee:
children 10
cents, adults
25 cents;
Evening: 2535-50 cents

35-50-75

Vanda Enos Players
&amp; the Camiljo Co.

Musical:
Western
Comedy
Mr. Woolley
Alert L. Blair

Lecture/
Meeting
Lecture
Play: Musical
Review

Joseph E.
Howard

Jess Harris, Miss
Betty Caldwell,
house musicians to
augment the
orchestra

YMCA
Charles A. Harry B. Watson,
Nellie Waters,
Sellon

George E. Wakefield,
JO. Campbell,
Lawrence Gotthard,
Matty Martz

Play: Comedy

The Missouri Girl

Influence toward
increasing the
number of dry voters
Mutt &amp; Jeff

Vanda Enos,
violinist

Play: Comedy
Play: Pastoral
Comedy Drama
in 3 Acts
Play

The Girl of the
Sierras
The Flower of the
Ranch

Fighting the liquor
traffic
"The Whir of the
Newspaper Press"
The Cat and the
Fiddle

Performers

Father Dennis A.
Hayes

Local Option
Meeting
Play: Musical

Gus Hill

Mssrs Gray and

Burdick, 187

�Day

Date

Year

Mon

April 8

1912

Tues
Wed

April 9
April
10

1912
1912

Thurs

April
11
April
12

1912

Fri

Sat
Sat
Tues
&amp;
Wed

1912

April
1912
13
April
1912
13
April
1912
16 &amp;17

Ticket
price

cents-$1
10-20-30
cents
Parquet
circle, 30
cents;
parquet, 20
cents; upper
two floors,
10 cents
10-20-30
cents
First floor,
30 cents;
dress circle,
20 cents;
gallery 10
cents
10 cent
matinee

25-35-50
cents

Name of
show/lecture topic

The Minister and the
Maid
The Price of Silence
The Tie that Binds

Company name

Alvarado Players

Type of event

Play: Comedy

Captured by
Wireless–a play
founded on the
famous Dr. Crippen
(of Coldwater) case

Play

The Girl of Eagle
Ranch
FiFi of the Toy Shop

Director

Performers

DeWitt
Andrew Waldron

Comedy
Play: Rural
Comedy Drama
Play
Play: American

A Runaway Match

?

Sponsored
by

Play
Play: Western
Play: Musical
Comedy in 3
Acts

Presbyterian

Sisterhood

Director
Mr. Harry
Emmet
Munsey,
musical
directoress

Miss
Warsabo

Locals; 150 people:
Mare Welch, Clare
Wise, Mrs. Alliene
Claxton, Frank Ott,
Edward Hutchinson,
Chas Hendricks,
Miss Luella Taylor,
Miss Dorothy Pray,
Miss Esther Sloman,
Miss Mae Miller,
Hugh VanAken ,
Guy Finca, Charles

Burdick, 188

�Day

Date

Year

Ticket
price

Name of
show/lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
by

Director

Performers

Daniels, Mrs. Foy
Shattuck, Miss Sallie
Smullen, Clyde
Doerr, Margaret
Rose

Fri

April
26

1912

Prices 3550-75 cents,
$1 and
$1.50

Martha and Il
Trovatore

Charles A. Cast of 40+,
including Ed
Sellon

Play: Musical
extravaganza

Cow and the Moon

Tues

April
30

1912

LeBrun Grand Opera
Co.

Concert: Opera

YMCA

Musical
director
W. H.
Humiston

Fri

May 3

1912

Prices 2550-75 and
$1

Beverly

Play

Thurs

May 9

1912

25-35-50
cents

Across the Rio
Grande

Play: Mexican
Comedy Drama

Coldwater
Lodge
Fraternal
Order of
Eagles

Mr. &amp;
Mrs. Mac
Dowell

Tues
&amp;
Wed

May 21 1912
&amp; 22

The National
Troubadours

Variety:
Character
Sketch, Drills,
Dance Steps,
Solos

St.
Agatha's
Guild of
St. Mark's
church

Miss
Geraldine
Parrotte

Oscar
Eagle

Gilmore, Wm.
Gross, Clarence
Sterling, Walter
Wilson, Hazel
Rice, Maude
Amanda Scott.
Mme. Antoinette
LeBrun, soprano;
Miss Dorothy
Wilson, contralto;
Fritz N. Huttmann,
tenor
Dorothy Howard,
Florence Radinoff,
Lawrence Evart,
Boyd M. Turner
Local talent: Lewis
P. Johnson, S.C.
Creighton, Herbert J.
Revello, W.A.
McDowell, Wm. J.
Roach, W.O.
Larabee, Lulu M.
Newton, June Mack,
Vina M. Noel
Neva Kennedy,
pianist; Grace Jones,
Sallie Smullen, E. L
Miner, Dr. Cook,
Miss Parrotte, Miss
Charlote Brewer and

Burdick, 189

�Day

Date

Year

Ticket
price

Name of
show/lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
by

Director

Performers

Maurice Payne. Guy
inch, Hugh
VanAken, Dorothy
Pray, Hugh
VanAken, Marion
Nestl

Sun

May 26 1912

Fri

May 24 1912

May Festival

Thurs
Wed

June 6 1912
June 12 1912

Commencement
Play

SatSun

June 15 1912
&amp; 16

Tues

Reno the Great
Magician

A Midsummer Night's
Dream
**rescheduled for
August

Magic Show

Ben Greet Players

Vaudeville

June 18 1912

50-75 cents
and $1

Aug 6
******

1912

$1, 75 and
50 cents

1912

10-20-30
cents; ladies
free.

Ellery's Greatest
Band

Concert: Band

A Midsummer Night's
Dream

Ben Greet Players

Play: Musical
Drama

The Straight Road

Margy South Stock
Co./Culhane's
Comedians

Play: Comedy
Drama in 4 Acts

SEASON
OPENER

******
Mon

Aug 12

YMCA
Fern Doer
Broughton,
musician &amp;
instructor;
Neva
Kennedy,pia
nist

Local talent

Phi
Gamma
Sorority
Director
Taddeo di
Girolamo
YMCA

Pupils of different
grades of city
schools; Stone's
orchestra

50+ people; Croce
Margadonna,
Joseph Giulii,
Antonio Decimo
25 players,
including Ruth
Vivian;
accompanied with
Mendelssohn's
exquisite music.
Miss Margy South
Clementine W.
Felix, Lottie

Burdick, 190

�Day

Date

Year

Ticket
price

Name of
show/lecture topic

Tues

Aug 13

1912

15 cents
downstairs,
10 cents
upstairs

The Final Settlement

Play

Wed
Thurs

Aug 14
Aug15

1912
1912

Play
Play

Fri

Aug 16

1912

A False Friend
The Lights of New
York
Du Barry

10-20-30
cents

**replaced previously
announced show**

Sat

Aug 17

1912

Sat

Aug 17

1912

**All of these shows
were originally listed in
the paper as well for the
week's engagements with
the company, but specific
dates were not.

Matinee: 10
cents
evening
10-20-30
cents

Wed

Aug 28

1912

50-75 cents,
$1, Box
chairs are
$1.50

Mon

Sept 9

1912

Tues

Sept 10 1912

10-20 cents,
upper
floors;

Little Miss Nobody

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
by

Director

Performers

Weston, Harry
Warner, Art
Atkins, Robert
Coe, Edwin Ness,
Will E. Culhane

Play: Historical
French
Margy South Stock
Co./Culhane's
Comedians (cont.)

Play

Billy's First Love
That Real Show
For Love and Honor

Play: Comedic
Play
Play

The Midnight Express

Play

St. Elmo
Nedra
The Fighting Chance

Play
Play
Play

Lena Rivers
No Mother to Guide
Her
The Servant in the
House

Play
Play

Alice of Old
Vincennes
Everybody's Doing It

Play

Play: Miracle
and Morality

Edward Doyle Stock

Play: Comedic

Musical
director,
Robert Coe

Henry
Miller,
director;
Merle H.
Norton,
producer

Victor Lambert,
Blanche Morrison

Louise Brown, star;
J.F. Marlow,
leading man;

Burdick, 191

�Day

Date

Year

Ticket
price

Sponsored
by

Name of
show/lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Wed
Sept 11 1912 30-50 cents
Thurs Sept 12 1912
*Originally scheduled for
Thursday night
Fri
Sept 13 1912
Sat
Sept 14 1912 Matinee:
10-20 cents
Sat
Sept 14 1912 10-20-30-50
cents
Tues
Sept 17 1912 25-50-75
cents and $1

The Parish Priest
Last Night
My Wife's Gone to
the Country
The Country Girl
Sapho

Company

Play
Play
Play

The Factory Girl

Edward Doyle Co. (cont.)

Play

The Rosary

Rowland &amp; Clifford

Play

Wed

Sept 25 1912

50-75 cents,
$1 and
$1.50

The Flirting Princess

Play: Musical
Comedy

Fri

Sept 27 1912

Oliver Twist

Motion Pictures:
Photo Play

Mr. Nat Goodwin

Mon
Tues

Sept 30 1912
Oct 1
1912

The One Girl
Thelma

Wed
Thurs
Fri
Sat

Oct 2
Oct 3
Oct 4
Oct 5

1912
1912
1912
1912

10-15-25
cents
10-20-30
cents. First
Night
Courtesies
to Ladies

Play
Play: 4 Act
Comedy Drama
Play
Play
Play
Play

Sat

Oct 5

1912

Margy Southwell,
Harry Warner,
Clementina St.
Fleix Sally St.
Felix, Lottie
Watson, Andrew
Ness, Art Atkins,
Wm. H. Chase,
Harry Cue, Will E.
Culhane

Matinee: 10
cents
Evening:

Director

Rego the famous
Italian harpist;
Doyle Bros,
jugglers; and Miss
Melba Glanton,
W.J. Vance, W. E.
LaRose

Play
Play

Culhane's
The Mountain Girl
Comedians/ the
Lena Rivers
The Turn of the Road Arlington Stock Co.
Tempest and
Sunshine
The Trail of the North

Play

Performers

Mort H.
Singer

Blosser Jennings,
Florence Wright,
Eleanor Rella, Harry
Price, Nettie De
Goursey, Reginald
Knorr, Henry Garron,
Thos. Kilday, A. C.
Van Slyke
Harry Bulger, Helen
Darling, Fileen
Sheridan, Dale
Fuller, Herbert
Heywood, Harry
Dickerson, large
chorus of "American
Beauties."

Burdick, 192

�Day

Date

Year

**All of these shows
were originally listed in
the paper as well for the
week's engagements with
the company, but specific
dates were not.
Mon
Oct 7
1912

Ticket
price

10-20-30
cents
10-20-30
cents

Name of
show/lecture topic

Company name

Sponsored
by

Director

Play
Republican
Rally

Tues

Oct 8

1912

Thurs

Oct 10

1912

Fri

Oct 11

1912

25-50-75
cents, $1
and $1.50

The Littlest Rebel

Play: 4 Act
Civil War

A.H.
Woods

Thurs

Oct 17

1912

25-35-50
cents,
Children
w/parents, 15
cents

Uncle Tom's Cabin

Play

Kibble
and
Martin

Fri-Sat Oct 18- 1912
19

The Shepherd of the
Hills

Performers

Play
Play
Play
Play

From Sire to Son
For Home and Honor
The Story of Life
The Girl from Smoky
Hollow
Money (Honey?) Mad
Senator Charles E.
Townsend,
candidate/speaker

25-50-75
cents &amp; $1

Type of event

Rowland &amp; Clifford

Play

Woodbridge Ferris &amp;
Claude Carney,
candidates/speakers
for governor and
congress

Democrat
Campaign
Lecture

Mullen's (Hellman's?) Circus,
Dog and Cat Circus
Vaudeville

Producers
Messrs
Gaskill
and
MacVitty

Music by
Coldwater male
quartet and city
band
Margaret O'Brien,
Louis Ramsdell,
Thomas Fitzgerald,
Halley Myers, Lew
Silvers,
Montgomery
Holland

Violet Savoy, Mr.
Farnum, Mr.
Walter Ryder (a
local boy)

Wellman the
magician

Burdick, 193

�Day

Date

Year

Thurs

Oct 24

1912

Mon

Oct 28

1912

Thurs

Oct 31

1912

Fri

Nov 1

1912

$1-75-50
cents

John Phillip Sousa &amp;
his Band

Concert

Thurs

Nov 7

1912

25-35-50-75 A Fountain of Mirth
cents

DeRue Bros. Ideal
Minstrels

Minstrel Show:
Vaudeville
Acts,
Impersonator,
Jokesters

TuesWed

Nov
12-13

1912

Fri

Nov 15

1912

Ticket
price

25-35-50
cents

Name of
show/lecture topic

Whaling, Paris, and
Nature
He Fell in Love With
His Wife

Company name

Type of event

Hon. John M.C.
Smith
Lyman H. Howe

Rally

Evalyn Bargelt and
her company

Sponsored
by

Travelogue/
Travel Festival
Play

Director

Performers

Mr. Gus
Bothner

Charles R.
Johnson

Minstrel Show:
Singers,
Dancers

Fortnightly
Ladies

Variety:
Crayoned
Drawings &amp;
Readings,
Musical

YMCA

Virginia Root,
soprano; Nicoline
Zedeler, violinist;
Herbert L. Clark,
cornet virtuoso
Billy and Bobby
DeRue, Fox
Brothers, Gold Dust
Twins, Leo Dube,
Vonder and Delmare,
the Golden City
Quartette, the Empire
Musical Trio
Locals: Laura Pullen,
Charlotte Dunks ,
Alliene Claxton,
Nina Cocks, Florence
Beers, Celia Hurley,
Fern Broughton, Ella
Spofford, Mabel
Hilton, Mrs. Roy
Shattuck, Four
Gnomes, Misses
Root, Calkins, Moore
and Brewer, Mrs.
A.B.Walker, Fern
Broughton

Burdick, 194

�Day

Date

Year

Sat

Nov 16

1912

Wed

Nov 27

1912

Thurs

Nov 28

1912

Fri
Sat

Nov 29
Nov 30

1912
1912

Tues

Dec 3

1912

Thurs

Dec 5

1912

Fri
Wed

Dec 6
Dec 11

1912
1912

Thurs

Dec 12

1912

Ticket
price

Evening: 2535-50-75
cents, boxes
$1; Matinee:
25-35 cents,
children 15
cents
25-35-50-75
cents and $1

Name of
show/lecture topic

The White Sister

35-50-75
cents and $1

Type of event

Dan Cupid &amp; Co.

Play

National Theatre

Vaudeville

Satan Sanderson

Play: Drama

The Only Son

Play

A Hungry People
Scientific
Demonstration
The Divorce Question

Sponsored
by

Program
Play

Faust

10-25 cents
matinee
Evening prices
are 25-35-50
cents.
25-35-50 cents
(other article
says 10-20
cent prices
matinee, night
10-20-30
seats)

35-50-75
cents and $1
35 cents to
$1.50

Company name

Sylvester A. Long
Prof. Reno B.
Wlbourn, scientist
Rowland &amp; Clifford

Lecture
Lecture
Play

Director

Performers

Messrs.
Manley &amp;
Campbell

Mr. George
Wakefield, Mina
Manley

Miss Clara Lewis,
Laura Jean Libby,
Dorothy Dix

Jessie
Bonstelle

Norman Hackett
Thomas W. Ross
and the original
company

YMCA

Willis Hall,
Edmund Caroll,
Douglas Lawrence,
Barbara Douglas,
Grace Nile

Burdick, 195

�Day

Date

Year

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
by

Fri

Dec 13

1912

The Hussars

YMCA

Dec 18

1912

Oberlin College Glee
Club

Musical
Program
Concert

Wed

Dec 21
(?)
WedDec
Thurs 25-26
Fri-Sat Dec
27-28

1912

1912

10 cents

Tues

1912

10-20-30
cents

Dec 31

Ticket
price

Name of
show/lecture topic

"All the World's a
Stage"

1912

Lyman H. Howe
Gus Sun's Ohio
Vaudeville Circuit
Michigan National
Guard

A Holiday in Dixie

LeVard's Dixie
Minstrels

Director

Performers

J.E.
Wirkler

L.A. Cok, J.G. Gray,
C.W. Johnson, E.U.
McKee, R.S. Sargent,
D. Bradley, R.L.
Curtis, B.R. Gibler,
A.S. Sprunger, R.I.
Watkins, H.D. Haas,
C.T Habegger, R.F.
Kimball, T.O. Wedel,
E.R. Kimball, W.T.
Martin, W.W.
Swisher, J.E. Wirkler

Travelogue/
Travel Festival
Vaudeville
Military
Movies; Lecture
by Major M.M.
Phillips of
Owosso
Minstrel Show:
Comedians,
Creole Dancers,
Vaudeville

Burdick, 196

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                    <text>��ABSTRACT
Built in 1882, the Tibbits Opera House, a Victorian opera house in Coldwater, MI,
still performs live stage-shows via children's theatre, community theatre, and professional
theatre. It also functions as a roadhouse for other entertainers like magicians, tribal
dancers, and musicians. It has gone through several renovations in its time, functioning as
a stage for live performances, to a movie house, and now back to a live-stage venue.
With several other movie theaters in the area as competition, by the late 1950s,
the Tibbits ceased functioning as a movie theater and went into disrepair. At this time,
there was talk that historic building was going to be razed and turned into a parking lot,
and that is when several community groups, led by the Coldwater Players, stepped in
with a “Save the Tibbits” campaign. The Schulte Amusement Company agreed to sell the
building to the Coldwater Players for a minimal sum of $7500. Not a day went by that
there wasn’t an article or photo in the paper about the latest fundraiser, donation request,
or labor request. From January of 1961 to April of 1961, everything from new fire doors
to a new heating system to a fresh coat of paint was installed by various service groups,
with the Tibbits in use from April until December of that year when the fire marshal
ordered the building to be closed until further repairs were made.
Another campaign was launched in January of 1962, and by the end of the year a
non-profit Tibbits foundation was formed. Even without the balance in hand for repairs,
in May of 1963 the board continued plans for repairs of the roof, sprinkler system, and
heating system. In November of 1963, the unheated Tibbits officially opened for a Grand
Ole Opry show, which played to a shivering but packed crowd.

�By December, George Vaughn Lowther was hired as manager and director, and in
1964, the Tibbits was back in use as a professional summer stock venue and roadhouse.
Since 1964, the Tibbits has continued to be a steadily-used landmark of the community
and has gone through several managers and renovations. Currently, the Tibbits still
functions as a non-profit organization and the Foundation still owns the building, which
is under restoration. In the fall of 2012, the outside restoration phase was completed and
plans to restore the inside are currently underway.

�Burdick, ii

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Terry Mulchahey
George Vaughn Lowther
Larry Carrico
Christine Delaney
Billy Lee Harman
Branch District Library Holbrook Heritage Room staff
Dr. Grennen, who spent hours editing and revising
My parents, Dan &amp; Marie Hemker, who have always encouraged me to continue
learning
My husband Clint, who endured months of this project consuming my life

�Burdick, iii

DEDICATION

For my mother, who introduced me to the magic of theatre at this glorious Opera House.

�TABLE OF CONTENTS

Abstract.................................................................................................(page not numbered)
Acknowledgments ………………………………………………………………………ii
Dedication ……………………………………………………………………………...iii
Table of Contents ………………………………………………………………….…….iv
Preface …. ……………………………………………………………………...…………v
Chapter 1: Introduction……………………………………………………………..…..…1
Chapter 2: Literature Review ………….………………………….…...............................5
Chapter 3: From Razing to Renovation..............................................................................9
Chapter 4: The Foundation and Vaughn Lowther ............................................................20
Chapter 5: Larry Carrico Takes Over………………………………………….…….…..35
Chapter 6: Conclusion…………………………………………………………………...50
Works Cited……….………………………..……………………………………………52
Appendix 1: Tibbits Datebook …………..…………………………………………….61
Appendix 2: Tibbits Ads &amp; Photos …………..…………………………………..…….116

�Burdick, v

PREFACE
From my first show as an audience member at the young age of three, to a
member of the Tibbits Summer Theatre company or design crew in my 20s and beyond, I
have always been and continue to be fascinated by the history of the Tibbits Opera
House.
To date, only one book has been published on the Tibbits Opera House by
Carolyn Gillespie, who used the Tibbits as her dissertation subject in the 1970s and
compiled the history of the theater from 1882 to 1904. The only other compiled
information about the Tibbits is an independent project on the year of 1912 and the John
T. Jackson management period that I myself completed several years ago. It currently is
available via hard copy at the Tibbits office or the Branch District Library Holbrook
Heritage Room or online at the Branch District Library website.
While the creation of this thesis would satisfy my own need for answers
surrounding the renovation of the 60s, with the current restoration of the Tibbits and the
questions of all of the history surrounding the building, it is clear that the rest of the
Coldwater community is interested in learning about the different periods of use that the
Tibbits has provided. I have been curious as to how the opera house could have been in
such disrepair that it was going to be razed as well as the overwhelming effort made by
the people of Coldwater to save the Tibbits and ensure that this great structure would
continue to provide live theatre to future generations. From that curiosity, this thesis has
been created.

�Burdick, 1

Chapter 1: Introduction
For more than a century, the stage of the Tibbits Opera House has been a hub of
entertainment and spectacle for audiences both young and old. From its opening in 1882
until the present, such celebrated actors, comedians and musicians as Ethel Barrymore,
Jeff Daniels, Joseph Cotton, and even John Philip Sousa have graced the stage (US 12
Heritage Trail).
When Barton S. Tibbits constructed the opera house in 1882, with its primitive
gas-powered sconces, massive crystal chandelier, and plush red velvet decor, he knew he
had built one of the finest opera houses in the country, and the Coldwater community
enthusiastically supported his project as much as they could. Unfortunately, the financial
burden became too much for him to shoulder, so he ultimately sold the only two years
later to Joseph Henning for a mere $13,000, half of Tibbits’ original cost to build
(Professional Roofing Magazine). Like Tibbits, Henning’s financial struggles caught up
to him, and in 1894 he turned over the management of the theater to his son-in-law, John
T. Jackson, who married Henning’s daughter Huldah. Together, they successfully
managed the theatre for 27 years (History of Executive Directors), hosting a variety of
musicals, plays, lectures, magic shows, and even circuses (Burdick).
The Tibbits adapted to the times, changing from a live performance and
vaudeville house into a movie house in the 1920s, under ownership of Dennis and Estella
Vanes (History of Executive Directors). The building’s appearance changed, too, and the
ornate outside façade was stripped down, bricked over, and appointed with a more
modern look when William Schulte bought the theater in 1934. Schulte continued
managing the Tibbits as a movie theatre until the advent of home televisions in the 1950s,

�Burdick, 2
when people no longer had to leave their homes for entertainment. Interestingly enough,
though, Schulte owned more than one theater in Coldwater at the time, and continued to
show movies in the new Main, which he purchased with Robert H. Moore in 1942
(“Partners Open”).
The Tibbits sat vacant from 1954 until the late 1950s, when Schulte planned to
raze the Tibbits and covert the location into a much-needed parking lot (“Players Have
Less Than One Week to Buy Tibbits”). The outcry from the Coldwater community over
the Tibbits’ impending destruction was great, so Schulte announced in the fall of 1959
that the Coldwater Players, a community theatre group, would be given the deed if they
could raise $7,500 to purchase it (“Fund for Saving the Tibbits Begins to Grow in
Coldwater”).
The Coldwater Players did just that, struggling with fundraisers and donation
requests for almost four years. They not only needed to raise the money for the loan on
the building, but also make numerous repairs to the aging structure. Along with cosmetic
improvements, like new paint, wallpaper, and carpet, more costly repairs, like a new roof,
a new heating and air system, and a sprinkler system were essential to the theater’s
operational success (“Inspection Stalls Tibbits Campaign”).
Reaching an operational state demanded years of donations and arduous labor, but
by the end of 1962, the Tibbits Opera Foundation, a nonprofit theater organization with a
board of directors, was formed to oversee the operations of the theater (Dec 1962 Tax
Record). Though the community supported the renovation of the theater, contributing in
capital and in labor, the Tibbits struggled financially. George Vaughn Lowther was hired
in November, 1963, to manage the Tibbits, and it was during this time that use of the
Tibbits increased substantially both in frequency and variety, which Lowther credits to

�Burdick, 3
Foundation Board President Stilson, who “was the guiding light that made it happen”
(Personal Interview). While Lowther remained at the Tibbits for only one year, he was
the one responsible for first outfitting the Tibbits with theatrical lights, which he
remembers acquiring from a theater in Detroit that was in the process of closing. In the
summer of 1964, he became the production manager for the American Theatre Festival
(ATF), which brought to the Tibbits eleven shows (“Season Tickets Still Available”) that
were zealously supported by the local community (“Productive Initial Season at
Tibbits”).
The Foundation was in the process of determining their course of action and
doing the best they could with the project they had undertook, but dissention and hostility
surrounded the managerial positions. Lowther said that even though he was known as the
theater manager, his job was more like that of a production manager (Personal Interview).
By winter of 1964, Lowther had left the Tibbits and was working in Sarasota, Florida.
According to a letter written by Ken Kohn to the Board, he had been approached by the
Tibbits Foundation President V. M. Stilson to take on another managerial position that
fall. Apparently, things did not proceed as planned, even though Kohn moved his family
up to Coldwater from Indiana for the position. It seemed as though Kohn was strung
along for months by the Foundation Board, and it wasn’t until January of 1965 that Kohn
addressed the board in a letter, stating that he had been working as many as eighty hours
per week without being paid. His most notable complaint, aside from the financial issues,
was that he had gotten word that the Foundation was looking to hire a new manager, yet
he was never told that he had been terminated (Kohn Letter to President Patterson).
The Foundation teamed up with the ATF (sans Kohn) to produce summer stock
in 1965, with Larry Carrico hired as the stage manager, technical director, and scenic

�Burdick, 4
designer (“Detroiter Handling Stage Management”). A month later, he was interviewed
for the theater manager position, and by fall he was hired and began his duties at the
Tibbits part-time alongside his teaching job at Lakeland School (July 1965 Board
Meeting).
ATF did not return for the 1966 summer stock season, with the Board deciding
that summer stock would be a suitable venture for the Tibbits instead. With the blessing
from the Foundation Board, Carrico forged ahead with hiring a professional company and
crew for the summer. A profit was turned, and Carrico was offered the theatre manager
job full-time, starting that September (August 1965 Board Meeting Minutes), where he
remained until December of 1981.
Carrico became known as the man who saved the Tibbits, though the “Save the
Tibbits” drive had begun years before he arrived. To Carrico’s credit, he was the one who
began the Tibbits Summer Theatre program, he continued to press ahead with fundraising
and labor with the renovation, and to date, he has been the longest hired theater
manager/executive director that the Tibbits has ever had, logging sixteen and a half years
of service.
Since the management of the Vaughn Lowther and Carrico years, several other
executive directors have filled the position, serving from as little as one month to as long
as thirteen years. Beginning her tenure in November of 2001, Christine Delaney is the
current executive director (History of Executive Directors). Delaney, along with the
Foundation Board of Directors and long-time Tibbits Artistic Director Charles Burr, can
be credited with spearheading the latest Tibbits restoration project, in which the beautiful
façade, Victorian gingerbreading, cupola, balcony, and even the bust of Shakespeare,
were restored.

�Burdick, 5

Chapter 2: Literature Review
The Tibbits Opera House is important not only because of the cultural awareness
that it brings to the small city of Coldwater and its surrounding areas, but also because it
exemplifies incalculable community support and involvement. At a time when theaters
across the country were being flattened if they had not already been burned down, the
Tibbits was given a new life by being converted into a movie theater in the 30s. It was
revitalized again in the 60s with the “Save the Tibbits” campaign, and it was yet again
reawakened several years ago, when the façade was completely restored to its original
1882 grandeur. It has put Coldwater on the map as a winner of the 2013 Governor’s
Award for Historic Preservation and has managed to rise from the shadow of the
wrecking ball to become one of the “top 10 places to see the lights off Broadway” (USA
Today).
A comprehensive history of the Tibbits has yet to be conceived. Aside from this
documentation, the only other records of the history of Tibbits that have been compiled
are Carolyn Gillespie’s dissertation, which focuses on 1882 to 1904, and my own
research on one year of the Jackson management--1912. This thesis focuses on 1959 to
1966, but there are gaps in the historic compilations of the periods 1904 to 1911, 1913 to
1959, and 1966 to the present. It would be beneficial to have a breakdown of each period
of management in terms of renovation/restoration, as well as the various art forms that
the theater has presented over the years. Further study could be completed on any or all
of these time periods. The rise of the cinema era must have been fascinating, with
technology and renovations infusing the theater’s design and operation. Another

�Burdick, 6
enhancement to the Tibbits archives would be the compilation of all data surrounding the
restoration of the 2000s. I liken the restoration of the 2000s with the renovation of the
1960s: Neither could have been completed without unflagging determination and
community support.
The focus of this study—a historical account of the period between 1959 and
1966—is as complete as possible, and not without certain informational gaps. Those who
were alive and residing in the Coldwater area during the start of the renovation have since
passed on or have only vague memories of the events during that time. The Foundation
wasn’t established until 1962, which was several years into the campaign, so there are no
records or meeting minutes to provide details of events before 1962; there is only hearsay
and local folklore about what actually happened.
The articles from The Daily Reporter, the local newspaper, have not been
organized into any sort of index, so the daunting and time-consuming task of scanning
through almost 2,500 issues of newspapers, turned up roughly 1,120 articles,
advertisements, and corresponding photos of the Tibbits. Luckily, The Daily Reporter
extensively covered the advent of the “Save the Tibbits” campaign in 1959, the
renovation efforts of 1961 and beyond, and the productions that occurred throughout;
however, newspaper coverage on the Tibbits was almost nonexistent in 1960, with only
one article appearing. Beyond 1960, most of the articles that appeared in The Daily
Reporter came straight from the Foundation minutes, but The Daily Reporter writer
Kathy Tarr then began promoting Tibbits events before, during and after they occurred.
Current Tibbits Executive Director Christine Delaney has been excited about this
project since I first approached her, and she has allowed me access to the Tibbits
archives, as well as the information that she has collected over the years. The archives do

�Burdick, 7
shed some light on the internal workings of the Foundation Board, but since the minutes
are mere summaries of meetings, it can presumed that more detailed discussions occurred
in the two-hour long meetings that were not documented in the minutes, which were
sometimes only one page long. The few personal letters that have been donated and
archived have helped in the process of sorting out those dates and events that were
glossed over in the Foundation minutes.
Perhaps the most valuable research tool was discovered after I posted a plea for
help on the “I Grew Up in Coldwater” facebook page, which has served as a meeting
place for those who share a love of history and of Coldwater in particular. I publicized
my upcoming thesis project, and was promptly contacted by Mr. Terry Mulchahey, who
had conducted as much of his own research as possible on the Tibbits via the Internet,
and whose father was a member of the Coldwater Players in the 1960s. Mulchahey
began his research because:
I felt that the Coldwater Players were… being overlooked or that their
story would be forgotten. The preservation of the Tibbits was and is
built one effort at a time. If any of the previous efforts had not
occurred, the Tibbits might have been razed. Without the Players’
purchase, it would have been razed. Without the work of the
Foundation, the theater might very well have fallen back into disuse
and abandonment. I am immensely proud of the role the Players had
and my father's participation. So to state it briefly, I began the
research to ensure that the contribution of the Coldwater Players to the
saving of the Tibbits was documented. (Personal Interview)

�Burdick, 8
Mr. Mulchahey supplied me with not only a collection online archives from Box
Office magazine, but also names of several contacts, including the first manager of
Tibbits, George Vaughn Lowther, who was located in Las Vegas as a retired hypnotist.
Mr. Mulchahey also sent me a flash drive that contained tax record information, aerial
photographs of Coldwater, and a host of other related photos and articles.
Mr. Vaughn Lowther was kind enough to respond to my emails, and began the
process of searching for documents that I might find interesting. He supplied me with
several articles from The Daily Reporter that I also noticed in the archives at the library,
and he also scanned and sent me personal items: a letter written on Tibbits letterhead that
he had sent to his family when he was hired, saying that he wasn’t going to make it home
for Thanksgiving; a full-page newspaper spread from the Fort Wayne paper that detailed,
with photographs, the events at the Tibbits; and even several autographed headshots of
famous performers who had passed through the Tibbits during his term as manager.
This thesis is the culmination of a process of gathering newspaper articles from
the Holbrook Heritage Room archives in the Branch District Library, gathering
information from the other sources listed above via email and phone conversations,
reading and sorting all of the information chronologically, and synthesizing it into the
following chapters. It is my hope that the Coldwater community never ceases to
recognize and appreciate the gem that they have in the Tibbits Opera House, and that it
continues to thrive as a cultural and historical centerpiece of the small town and its
surrounding areas.

�Burdick, 9

Chapter 3: From Razing to Renovation
Information surrounding the Tibbits Opera House during the late 1950s is scant.
Those who were heavily involved in the renovation process have since passed away,
others have only a vague recollection of that time, and others were only slightly involved.
There are several surviving documents of the Coldwater Players minutes that have
become part of the Tibbits Archives, but aside from that and several mentions in the local
paper, The Daily Reporter, much information has been lost.
It is safe to say that if the Coldwater Players had not become involved with the
“Save the Tibbits” campaign, the Tibbits would surely have been razed and turned into a
parking lot, according to owner William Schulte’s plan. The community theatre group
had been granted from Schulte use of the Tibbits as a performance venue, and had
produced several shows there in the late 1950s, including Charlie’s Aunt in 1958
(Anders).
By June of 1958, the Players had already been contemplating the future of Tibbits
and how it could reclaim its former vitality in the community. A group of ten individuals,
consisting of Duane Davidson (chairman), Les Wise, Frankie Gay, Bud Stoughton, Bert
Weasley, Red Baldwin, Robert MacDonald, Charles Fisk, Charles Hill and Charles
Sparkes, became a temporarily appointed Board of Trustees for the Tibbits Community
Theatre Planning Committee, which was formed prior to June 5, 1958 (June 1958
Planning Committee Meeting Minutes). In one of the only surviving meeting minutes, the
group discussed possible uses of the Tibbits, which were determined to be “general
possibilities” (June 1958 Planning Committee Meeting Minutes). The following Monday,
on June 9, 1958, the Committee sent a survey to various community groups and/or

�Burdick, 10
companies, seeking suggestions for how people would use the Tibbits if the Players
purchased it and “rejuvenated it for use as a community building” (Franc Gay Letter to
Gentlemen). Responses to the Players’ inquiry are unknown, as this letter was one of
only two pieces of documentation for 1958.
At that same June meeting, the group discussed a cost estimate for the basic
monthly operation of the building, which estimated heat at $500, lights at $250, fire
insurance at $18.50, taxes at $641, and maintenance at about $400. Renovation needs
were listed and identified as seat overhaul, entry, foyer, ceiling, backstage, marquee,
lighting and wiring; securing specific bids for the project would aid them in deciding how
much needed to be raised (June 1958 Planning Committee Meeting). It appears that this
group met monthly, as the next proposed meeting date at the bottom of the minutes stated
that the group should set its next meeting for no later than July 10, 1958.
In 1959, it appears that only two events occurred at the Tibbits—the annual
Rotary minstrel show in March (“Rotary Minstrel Show Ad”), and a variety show in May
that was sponsored by both the Coldwater Players and the Sturges-Young Players, a
community theatre group from Sturgis, MI, several towns west of Coldwater (“Back to
the 90s”) . Until word came in October that Schulte planned to either sell or demolish the
Tibbits, the Tibbits stage remained unused, and publicity on it was nonexistent.
On October 30, 1959, the town became aware that it might lose the Tibbits, as
headlines of The Daily Reporter read, “Players Have Less Than One Week to Buy
Tibbits.” The article states that The Schulte Amusement Company had plans to “proceed
with demolition of the structure unless the Players exercise a purchase option by the early
part of next week.” From there, the Coldwater Players began their crash campaign to
raise funds to save the theater, with the target goal of $7,500, per Schulte’s request

�Burdick, 11
(“Players Have Less Than One Week to Buy Tibbits”).
From October of 1959 until January of 1960, The Daily Reporter covered the
progress of the Coldwater Players’ campaign. In one month’s time, the Players managed
to collect almost $2,500 in contributions (“Inspection Stalls Tibbits Campaign”), and they
were fortunate to learn that Schulte did not hold firm to his purchase deadline, allowing
the Players more time than he had originally agreed upon. Along with trying to raise the
necessary funds to purchase the Tibbits, there was the matter of bringing the building up
to code, which became an additional burden to the Players. An inspection report at the
end of November showed that the dressing rooms needed to be removed and replaced, an
approved automatic sprinkler system needed to be installed, a new boiler room had to be
constructed, an emergency exit needed to be added to the north side of the building, and
new construction and equipment was needed in the stage area (“Inspection Stalls Tibbits
Campaign”).
By December 1, 1959, the deadline for the payment to Schulte loomed, and the
contributions were at only $3,400 (“Tibbits Campaign Deadline is Near”). Though the
Players didn’t have enough to pay Schulte in full, they gave his company a down
payment of $1,500 the week of December 11, 1959, with the agreement that they would
pay the balance within five years (“Players Make Initial Payment”).
Despite the list of necessary improvements, including the sudden need for a new
heating plant, the Tibbits remained open for business in 1960 to the Coldwater Players,
who produced House on the Cliff and The Girls in 509 (Huet Letter to Patrons). Aside
from that, the theater was dark most of the year, with nothing happening in the way of
publicity after February. The only other information from that year was a tax record,
showing that the tax bill was consigned to the Coldwater Players in July (Branch County

�Burdick, 12
Tax Record).
In 1961, the Coldwater Players made headlines full-force with their “Save the
Tibbits” campaign. Monthly minutes for the newly formed Tibbits Theatre Board of
Trustees, which included Sanford Jolly (chairman), Judy Miller, Howard Thompson, and
Cliff Huet, began being documented. The initial meeting, on January 5, 1961, was held
in order to create a draft of rules for the Tibbits: it would be non-profit and selfmaintaining; booking would be handled by Paula Weller, the Coldwater Players business
manager; and the Players would be given preferential treatment for use of the building.
The group also began planning a drive to raise money for the repairs needed, and bids for
furnace repair were discussed (January 5 1961 Meeting Minutes).
According to an article in The Daily Reporter on January 9, 1961, the Board
launched a $2,000 campaign for improvements to the theater (“Campaign for Tibbits
Theater Opens Today”). The Coldwater Players made the initial push to save the Tibbits,
and that was the beginning of the community rally to save their theatre. The Players
spread the word and enlisted other service groups and local businesses to join in with
their time, talent, and donations for the renovation of the Tibbits. In January, Woodward
Building Materials offered to repair the furnace and donate the labor (“Campaign for
Tibbits Theater Opens Today”); Coldwater Concrete Products Co. donated 300 cement
blocks for the construction of a fire wall, with Russell Belt agreeing to construct it; and
Sweet’s Electric repaired the motor for the furnace and offered to check and replace the
wiring (“Strong Support Shown for Theater Project”). The Coldwater Key Club, which
was the Kiwanis Club’s high school division, carried the cement blocks into the basement
(“Boost for Theater Project”).
Work on the theater continued in February, with local mason and carpenter Karly

�Burdick, 13
Staley creating the concrete block furnace room with help from Belt and Stanley Cuthbert
(“Tibbits Campaign is Nearing its Goal for Rehabilitation”). While work was being done
on the furnace room in the basement, there was a flurry of activity upstairs on the main
level from local service groups. The Daily Reporter ran photos almost daily that showed
the progress on the theater: Coldwater Exchange Club refurbished the main seating area,
the Rotary club worked on the dressing rooms and hallway backstage, and the Lions Club
conducted a general cleanup of the Tibbits (“Lions Clean Up Tibbits”).
The Tibbits Theatre Board of Trustees (often referred to as the Coldwater Players
Board of Trustees) met again in February. At this meeting, the chairmen chose a rose
shade of paint for the walls of the foyer, and a mint color for the ceiling. There was also
mention of obtaining the original chandelier, repairing it, and installing it (February 2
1961 Minutes), but no further mention of locating or repairing the chandelier was made in
1961. In other renovation news, three fire doors were donated by Federal Mogul in
February, which Tibbits trustee chairman Sanford Jolly said was a large item in the repair
budget (“Fire Doors Donated to Theater”).
March brought a final push of work to the theater, with Robert Blosser and
Wayne Harmon painting the proscenium, the Rotary Club painting the dressing rooms,
and Kiwanis members performing another general cleanup of the theater (“Coldwater
Service Clubs Help Out”). The Jaycees also lent a hand with cleaning and with painting
the lobby and stairway to the balcony (“Rehabilitation Continues: Paint Theater Lobby,
Stairway”). Donations from the community poured in, with Douglas Manufacturing Co.
of Bronson and the Sweeny Buick-Pontiac Co. donating cleaning equipment; Legg
Lumber, Ideal Wallpaper, and Montgomery Ward donating paint (“Work on Tibbits is
Reviewed by Trustees”); and Blaski Construction Co. donating scaffolding

�Burdick, 14
(“Rehabilitation Continues: Paint Theater Lobby, Stairway”).
While originally the Tibbits was scheduled to have its grand opening with a
Coldwater Players presentation of Three Men on a Horse on April 8 or 9, 1961, but by
the March board meeting, it was obvious that both the grand opening and the show would
be delayed. Whether or not the Players had actually been rehearsing for the show at the
time is unclear, as no publicity was done for it aside from a quick mention of both the
show and the grand opening in a February article in The Daily Reporter (“Fire Doors
Donated to Theater”). The Players did go onstage that summer to present Bull in a China
Shop, which had a “disappointing” audience turnout of only 150 people for the two-night
run (“China Shop is Presented Here”). The Players’ other show in 1961, Pure as the
Driven Snow, also had a two-night run in December. While there were several articles
and photos advertising the show, no subsequent review was found.
Along with the Players using the Tibbits, the annual Rotary minstrel show was
held at the theater the end of April and played to a packed house. The show received rave
reviews for its “100 minutes of memorable melodies, razor-sharp comedy, snappy
dancing, surprise specialties, colorful costumes and scenery, and effective lighting”
(“Rotary Minstrel Scores Hit”). The Sweet Adelines also performed a western musical
variety show titled Sagebrush Seranade, along with the Banjo-Tainers of Muskegon
joining as part of the evening’s entertainment (“Banjo Trio to Appear Here”). Like the
Coldwater Players’ performance, the Sweet Adelines were given newspaper coverage
before the show, but no review afterwards.
The only other event that was held at the Tibbits that year was a Brothers of the
Brush and Centennial Belles meeting (“Brothers, Belles Meet”), and the Tibbits acted as
housing for the Greater Coldwater Centennial headquarters for less than a month, from

�Burdick, 15
May 16 to June 1 (“Centennial Office at Tibbits Theater” and “Centennial Office
Headquarters Moved”).
By December of 1961, just over two years after the Players launched their
fundraising campaign, they started to acquire bids for estimates of completely renovating
the building. Work on the theater had certainly been completed at the beginning of the
year, but no other renovations had taken place since March. The City requested an
inspection by the state fire marshal, and the news he gave them was grim: the Players
needed to raise an additional $39,000 to make the building safe by adding a sprinkler
system and an asbestos curtain; the roof and chimney needed to be repaired; and other
general repair was needed. The Players had $6,000 remaining mortgage balance. On
December 4, 1961, the fire marshal ordered that the Tibbits be closed until the repairs
could be made (“Stock Offered to Theatre Project”).
Word travels fast in a small town. Even though the Tibbits’ closing wasn’t
publicized until December 15, news of closing proliferated. The same day that the press
release of its closing appeared, the same article noted that an anonymous donor gave 140
shares of General Foods stock (valued at $13,300) to the Tibbits fund, assuming that the
City of Coldwater would accept and operate the building (“Stock Offered to Theatre
Project”). Though the Players had worked tirelessly trying to raise funds for the theater,
it was an insurmountable burden, and there was talk that the Tibbits would be successful
only if the City took over the building. All the work that had been accomplished to save
the theater seemed to have been futile after hearing the fire marshal’s order, but the
tenacity of the Coldwater Players showed in their next move— at the start of the new
year, they organized and launched a drive for the rehabilitation of the Tibbits (“Players
Group Opens Drive for Theater Funds”).

�Burdick, 16
On the backs of the announcement of the fund drive, donations started coming in.
The Sweet Adelines pledged $1,000, Rotary promised their support, the Coldwater
Players donated $100 (“Theater Goal and Deadline Set” and “Tibbits Fund Committee to
Meet Tonight”), and somewhere between December of 1961 and a Coldwater City
Council meeting in January of 1962, the total amount to be raised for the Tibbits grew
from $39,000 to $55,000. At that meeting, City Manager G. W. Collins presented a
revised estimate of costs, which actually totaled $67,300, but taking into account the
donated stock that was valued at $13,300, Collins presented a new figure of $55,000 to be
raised. Council members had serious discussions for two hours about the City of
Coldwater taking over the theatre’s title, and by a seven to two vote, the motion was
made that the City would accept the title if certain conditions were met, like the results of
an engineering study and a deadline to raise funds by April 1(“Theater Goal and Deadline
Set”).
Even though the City agreed to take on this task, the Coldwater Players, now
under the title of the Tibbits Fund Committee, still organized and executed the 60-day
fund campaign (“Tibbits Fund Committee to Meet Tonight”). The actual kickoff date was
not until February 1, 1962, but donations started coming in before that. The Coldwater
Moose Lodge held a benefit dinner for Tibbits (“Moose Plan Opera House Benefit”), an
antiques auction held at Porter Furniture Store netted $240 (“Tibbits Auction Nets $240
Total”), and Coldwater High School students presented Tibbits with a check for $23.25
(“Students Donate to Tibbits Fund”). Some donations were certainly more substantial
than others, but most of the larger gifts were anonymously donated. Aside from the
$13,300 General Foods stock, another anonymous donor gave 100 shares of US Steel
stock, valued at approximately $7,000 (“New Tibbits Donation”).

�Burdick, 17
It seemed as though all of Coldwater pitched in what it could to help save the
theater. The Coldwater Fortnightly Musical Club sponsored a kitchen tour as a benefit
(“Kitchen Tour for Tibbits Benefit Set”), and the American Legion sponsored a benefit
that netted another $160 for the cause (“American Legion Benefit”). A block-by-block
canvass of the city for donations was organized by Fund Drive Committee volunteer
Dorothy Aitchison and co-chairman Margaret Hayes, in which an additional $9,000 was
collected (“Canvass for Tibbits Funds is Planned”). A running list of the names of donors
was updated every week in the paper— presumably to not only thank those who had
donated, but also encourage more people to donate— and by the first part of April,
donations reached $36,000 as the campaign drew to a close (“Tibbits Campaign Is
Nearing Climax”). The $55,000 was not met by the deadline that was given by the City
Council, but it was clear to everyone that the goal could be met with more time. Hence,
the Council granted a 90-day extension for meeting the $55,000 goal (“Council Grants
90-Day Extension to Tibbits Drive”).
Meanwhile, from February until May, things were happening across the street
from the Tibbits. The old garage building that was once used as a scene shop for building
and painting the theater’s sets was being torn down (“Old Landmark Disappearing”). By
May, there was no trace that a building had ever stood there, and a parking lot was
created in its place, complete with curbs and gutters (“New Parking Lot Being
Improved”). This free parking lot was one of the first parking lots in the city, and it just
happened to be located in an area of town that would be the most beneficial for the
Tibbits. Prior to that parking lot’s creation, patrons had been limited to street parking.
Summertime brought about an engineer’s report on the Tibbits, which informed
everyone that the building was structurally sound, with one minor repair outstanding—

�Burdick, 18
strengthening the capacity in the stage area (“Tibbits Structurally Sound, Says Report of
2 Engineers”). Engineers Vance Gray and Daniel Stolarski of Raymond E. Roose
Associates of Toledo, OH examined the Tibbits, along with local architect (and Tibbitslover) Jerry Fair (“Engineers Check Tibbits Today”), with monies for the report provided
by the Sweet Adelines group (“Plans Mapped on Tibbits Campaign”). Summer also
brought another benefit in the form of a “Tibbits Twist Night” dance contest, sponsored
by the Chamber of Commerce (“Coldwater to Twist for Tibbits”). Aside from that,
campaigning for the Tibbits seemed nonexistent that summer, and the City of Coldwater
moved out of the picture as potential owner of the Tibbits.
By September, articles in The Daily Reporter began to appear sporadically, but
the focus shifted from monetary donations and progress at the theater to the historical
documentation on the theater. Part of the original glass chandelier from 1882,
presumably created in Czechoslovakia, turned up in the attic of local couple Mr. &amp; Mrs.
Fred Kaiser. The entire contents of the Tibbits boxes that they found—196 six-inch glass
prisms, 53 three-inch prisms, 25 feet of jewel crystal chains, nine pieces of inch and a
quarter crystal discs in a lace pattern, 75 pieces of ¾ inch crystal circles, one large fourinch crystal drop, and an envelope of handmade wire hooks—were donated back to the
Tibbits (Bovee). Another donation to the Tibbits in September was several souvenir
tickets, one of which was an opening night ticket with B.S Tibbits’ signature on it, the
other an admission ticket for “Forty-five Minutes from Broadway” with George M.
Cohan’s signature on the back, which Miss Maude Ramsdell found among the belongings
of her sister, the late Mrs. Ed Allen (“Tibbits Momentos Found in Home”).
Discussion of forming a non-profit corporation for the Tibbits began in October,
with the new Tibbits committee consisting of representatives from various Coldwater

�Burdick, 19
organizations (“Tibbits Corporation Being Organized”). Supporters who had previously
donated to the $55,000 fund drive were contacted about releasing the money to the
Executive Tibbits Theater Committee so that work could begin, and by December, the
Tibbits Executive Committee had heard back from most donors, agreeing to the release of
funds. Minutes from the December meeting also show that Art Lyon and Richard
Birringer provided legal help to the committee to form the corporation as the Tibbits
Theatre Foundation, and that new officers Les Woodward, president; Robert Yingling,
vice president; Margaret Hayes, treasurer; and Franc Gay, secretary, were elected
(December 6 1962 Meeting Minutes). On December 12, 1962, the Tibbits officially
formed an incorporation, on December 31, 1962, the tax bill was consigned to the Tibbits
Theater Foundation, and with that, the Tibbits Opera Foundation was born.

�Burdick, 20

Chapter 4: The Foundation &amp; Vaughn Lowther
By January of 1963, the Foundation had contacted and received approval for
transfer of funds to the Foundation from nearly 100% of the donors. The press release
mentioned that only one person chose to have a donation returned, and at press time,
there were eleven other donors who had been contacted but had not yet responded
(“Tibbits Repairs to Start”).
The Tibbits effort was quiet again for the next few months, at least publicity-wise.
There must have been more financial planning during this time, but no Foundation
minutes exist until May, when both The Daily Reporter and Foundation minutes show
that the Board had been looking at finances to receive the additional $26,000 that was
needed for re-opening the theater (“Tibbits Repairs to get Underway Here July 10th”).
The Executive Board of the Tibbits Foundation expanded in May to include more
members from various community organizations and businesses, and they discussed
securing a loan for the $26,000 at 6% interest, repayable over three years’ time. In order
to secure that loan, though, they needed to have $40,000 in notes signed by reputable
individuals. Under the canvassing leadership of V. M. Stilson (known around town as
General Stilson, or even just “the General”), the Board began its search for 133 donors
who would pledge $100 per year for four years, which would more than adequately
satisfy the balance of the loan (May 7 1963 Executive Meeting Minutes). The remaining
balance of funds from those donors would be applied to the operating expenses to ensure
operation of the Tibbits for the first six years (“Tibbits Repairs to Get Underway Here
July 10th”).
Up until this point, the focus of the “Save the Tibbits” campaign had landed

�Burdick, 21
squarely on the people of Coldwater. By June, the Foundation Board decided to expand
its campaign and reach out to all of Branch County for donation requests (June 3 1963
Executive Meeting Minutes). Another anonymous donation, in the form of $1,500, came
by the middle of June, and The Daily Reporter reported that a number of people had
already agreed to sign notes for the $400 (“Tibbits Progress Excellent”). At the end of
June, local music shop Music Mart and owner Wayne Feller donated a standard 9-foot
concert grand piano (“Tibbits to Have Concert Grand”). The Board scheduled the fund
drive to end on July 10 and begin repairs at that time, but eight days from their proposed
end date, they found themselves with only 35 willing donors, just one-third of their target
number of donors (“Tibbits Fund Drive One Third to the Top”). Stilson asked to extend
the drive to make it a success, and was granted that extension at the July board meeting
(July 9 1963 Board Meeting Minutes).
The Foundation seemed to have undertaken a project that was larger than
anticipated, and several of the Foundation’s Board members attended the school board
meeting in July, where they proposed that the school board take over the ownership of the
theater (“School Board Ownership of Tibbits Theater Proposed”). There was some
discussion during the school board meeting about the pros and cons of the school board
owning the theater, but by September members of the Foundation Board had changed
their minds again, and they made plans to pay off the land contract and claim the theater
as the sole property of the Foundation (“Tibbits Title to be Cleared” and September 6
1963 Board Meeting Minutes).
Like every volunteer organization, the Foundation Board members had their share
of personality conflicts, and in August, Mr. Yingling resigned. President Woodard also
turned in his letter of resignation, listing his reason as the overwhelming demands of the

�Burdick, 22
office. General V. M. Stilson was voted in as the new president (August 20 1963 Board
Meeting Minutes). Over the course of the summer, the Foundation hired Fair &amp; Robinson
Architectural Firm to make plans for restoring the theater. In a The Daily Reporter article
titled “Tibbits Plans Are Underway,” Stilson emphasized that “Our plans are to restore
the theater—not just renovate it. We are interested in obtaining descriptions of how the
interior and exterior used to look from anyone having such information” (“Tibbits Plans
are Underway”). Even though the money was not totally secured by this time, the Board
pushed ahead with plans to fix the heating and install a new sprinkler system. They then
projected the theater’s opening date to be sometime in October (“Tibbits Plans are
Underway”).
In September, Foundation Secretary Franc Gay sent a letter to the Branch County
Board of Supervisors, the Coldwater City Council, and Mayor Olen Fry, petitioning the
removal of current tax assessments for the Tibbits and removal from the tax roll. In the
letter, Gay asked the leaders to consider removing the theater from the tax roll due to the
fact that “The Tibbits Theatre Foundation is a non-profit organization in the process of
developing the civic project with which you are all familiar. Its purpose is to advance the
welfare and cultural interests of Coldwater and Branch County” (Franc Gay Letter to
Branch County Board of Supervisors). By October 13, the Foundation Board had
received word from the Branch County Board of Supervisors that the tax exemption had
been granted. The minutes from the October meeting noted that the Board expected to
hear from the City of Coldwater on the matter shortly thereafter, which they did (October
13 1963 Board Meeting Minutes).
October brought another flurry of renovation activity at the theater, with Roussey
Construction Company hired for refurbishing the dressing rooms, and repairing the

�Burdick, 23
plaster and roof; Michigan Chandelier Company was contacted about restoring the large
chandelier; and local volunteers continued work on the wallpaper and paint. The
Foundation Board continued to dream big with their new goal of renovation and
restoration, and local architect Jerry Fair started working on plans for remodeling the
dressing rooms and adding a lounge and rehearsal area in the basement. The Historical
Society expressed some interest in establishing a museum in the basement (October 13
1963 Board Meeting Minutes). One of the major projects in the theater was the
installation of the new fire marshal appointed sprinkler system. In order to run water
service and install the sprinkler system, there had to be some damage to the sidewalk and
the street, but the City Council and the Coldwater Board of Public Utilities agreed to
absorb the cost of fixing that anticipated damage (“City, BPU to Lend Hand to the
Tibbits”).
Even though the theater was scheduled to be opened in October, it did not happen.
The Roger Williams concert that the Board scheduled was held at the Coldwater High
School instead, with proceeds from the concert going to the Tibbits fund (“Roger
Williams to Play in Coldwater October 23”). That the concert was not held at the Tibbits
did not stop Roger Williams from visiting the building. He stopped in to view the
restoration work, and after his tour was complete, he commented, “This is simply
wonderful!” (“Artist Visits Theater”).
Other inside projects of that autumn included a gas line being laid to the new
heating equipment in the boiler room (“Tibbits Readied for Show”), an addition to the
back of the main theater building to house the heating plant and air-conditioning
equipment, and the addition of an asbestos fire curtain, which would be lowered to
separate the stage from the audience in the event of an emergency (November 13 1963

�Burdick, 24
Board Meeting Minutes). While the dangers of asbestos are now known, and fire curtains
are currently made of fiberglass or iron, in the 60s most fire curtains were made out of
asbestos (“Safety Curtain”).
Work was being completed not only on the inside of the building. The outside
was due for a facelift, too, and from October 24 to November 5, 1963, the movie theater
marquee was removed, the large electric Tibbits sign was dismantled, and the tile on the
exterior’s front was removed, revealing the beautiful old brick and stone façade (“Face
Changing”). As the front tile came down, many speculated whether or not the statue of
Shakespeare’s bust would be found nestled in the small alcove near the roof of the
theater. Unfortunately, it was never found.
On Wednesday, November 20, 1963, history was made when the Tibbits reopened
with a Grand Ole Opry performance, the first professional production held at the theater
since before its cinema days (“Tibbits Readied for 1st Pro Production”). With a “starstudded” performance by Jimmy Dickens, Shirley Ray, Stonewall Jackson, Jimmy
Newman, and Red Sovine, the pressure was on for the remodeling work to be completed
on time. The day before the two evening performances, crews were scrambling to clean
up the remodeling mess and have the Tibbits looking respectable for the first professional
performance. At this time, the gas line was also being laid to the boiler room (“Tibbits
Readied for Show”). Though the crew’s intention was to have the Tibbits in audienceready condition for the Grand Ole Opry performance, instead the audience endured the
show in a theater with no heat, sitting for two hours in an “‘ice-box’ theater to watch and
listen to the liveliest strumming, humming and shouting you’ve ever heard this side of the
Mason-Dixon line” (Shattuck).
Audience members may have been shivering in the 32-degree theater, but they

�Burdick, 25
took comfort in the fact that they were entertained throughout the evening, and that the
theater was open again. The Daily Reporter writer Kathryn Shattuck noted her feelings in
a review following the performance: “Great progress has been made in bringing Tibbits
back as a working theater but it has been a ‘blood, sweat and tears’ affair. Every nickel
and dime has counted, and there is one thing about it all that matters most— we may all
have colds as a result of last night’s performance, but the theater is safe [and] sound, and
always will be because it is carefully supervised by all those interested in doing things
right and in the best interests of Coldwater” (Shattuck).
The Sweet Adelines were not keen on having their variety show play to a freezing
audience on November 30 and December 1, so they moved their performance from the
Tibbits to the Roosevelt Auditorium. They then moved their performance location back
to the Tibbits three days before the show because the heat was fixed and “because of the
exceptional job done by V. M. Stilson and the workmen connected with the project; the
theatre is now in good enough condition to stage a complete production” (“Adelines’
Show to be at Tibbits”).
Sometime in November or December of 1963, the Foundation Board hired the
first theater manager, George Vaughn Lowther, who does not even recall applying for the
job. Prior to the Tibbits, Lowther was a technical assistant for the Fort Wayne Civic
Theatre, which had a small staff of professional people, Lowther included. The Tibbits
offered him room and board at Stukey’s Inn, as well as a stipend of about $50 per week,
he recollects (Personal Interview). While his official title for the Tibbits was “Director of
the Theater,” and his duties as outlined in the December Foundation minutes were to
assist in helping the Players group get organized, direct them, look after things at the
theater, and do public relations and publicity (December 10 1963 Board Meeting

�Burdick, 26
Minutes), Lowther maintains that this was not his job description at all. Instead, he was
more of a production manager than a business or theater manager and recalls:
The Board handled the business of the theatre—the booking, the
advertising…My real title should have been production manager because
I came in from Fort Wayne Civic as a techie and so I was more like tech
director, production manager, what-have-you. My billing on the ATF
program is stage manager, and on the Tibbits part of it, technical director.
It was up to the production manager to make sure that show gets in,
works, and gets out; that the lighting person does what he needs to do;
making sure that Agnes Moorhead has a rose in her dressing room;
that sort of thing. (Personal Interview)
By December 14, 1963, a production of Jack and the Beanstalk was shown twice,
with Lowther using his contacts from his previous position at the Fort Wayne Civic
Theatre to contract in the group (Tarr, “Manager-Director Engaged to Handle Tibbits
Events”). In a full-page spread in the Fort Wayne newspaper in January, a photo appears
of Lowther working on some dimmers. Lowther recalled that when he was hired in, there
was no theatrical lighting system of any sort in the Tibbits. He vividly remembered
procuring the dimmers. Lowther had become acquainted with the first cousin of the
owner/editor of The Daily Reporter. Somehow, they found out about a theater in Detroit
that was being torn down, so they made the trek to Detroit to retrieve those dimmers,
salvaging between a dozen and eighteen of them: “I was responsible for outfitting the
theater with lights. It was rudimentary and primitive, but it worked. The dimmers are the
heart of the lighting system. I did that early on in the game. This was the techie in me,
making things happen” (Personal Interview). Lowther remembered the dimmers being

�Burdick, 27
the old-fashioned kind, the sort of dimmers that were used in theaters all over the world
in an earlier era, that were “a coil of copper wire, encased in ceramic… 12 to 18 inches in
diameter, and you would slide the contact point around to dim or brighten the lights”
(Personal Interview). After the Fort Wayne Civic’s production of Jack and the Beanstalk,
the only other December offering at the Tibbits was a community Christmas carol sing,
sponsored by the Sweet Adelines and several local church choirs (“Community Caroling
Slated for Tibbits”).
The next year,1964, brought with it various performances from professional,
community, and educational groups. January began with a soprano concert featuring
Doris Yarick (“Renowned Singer to Sing in City Monday”) and the Chad Mitchell Trio
benefit concert, which was held in the high school gymnasium to accommodate a larger
crowd (“Chad Mitchell Trio Coming Here”), but the biggest draw in January was without
a doubt a series of sketches from world famous plays and novels, titled “Come Close! I’ll
Give You an Earful” with Agnes Moorhead. The review of the performance was beyond
glowing with Moorhead’s “popularity proven” with a capacity audience:
Miss Moorehead, who, it was discovered later, had designed the dress she
wore, was still radiant with red hair and sparkling wit. The gown was an
Empire style in pink organdy embroidered in gold. It offset her hair in
such a way as to make her a picture of elegance even before she uttered a
word. When she had begun her performance, however, the audience
forgot all else and for one and one-half hours remained under the influence
of her mesmerizing voice. (Tarr, “Capacity Audience Takes in
Moorehead Appearance”)
Lowther remembers that performance and Miss Moorehead. He reminisced, “I

�Burdick, 28
had a ‘Thank You’ note from Agnes Moorehead. I had put a single rose in her dressing
room before her arrival. She was used to getting whole bouquets, but I could only afford
one [rose]. But she was very gracious and sent me a ‘Thank You’ note.” (Personal
Interview). Following the performance, there was the opportunity for some to meet her at
a reception given by the Stilsons in their home.
In February, the Board issued a public request for donations of tables, lamps,
vanity dressing tables, water pitchers, and mirrors to furnish the backstage area in
preparation for future performances (“Need Items for Pajama Game”). The new red
flocked wallpaper was hung by Lyle Barry, Gerald Clar, and Wayne Harmon the end of
February, with Richard Dirschell painting the proscenium arch. The Tecumseh Players
also brought in a production of The Pajama Game during this time, which had a mediumsized audience the first night and near-capacity audience for the second (“Tecumseh
Troupe Plays to Good ‘Pajama Game’ House”). The cast had presented the standingroom-only show in Tecumseh prior to their Tibbits run, and arrived in Coldwater between
2:30 and 3pm the day of their first Tibbits showing. They needed time to rehearse
(several hours) and adapt their show to the Tibbits stage, as their Tecumseh performances
were theatre-in-the-round productions. The actors loved the acoustics, the dressing
rooms, and the large stage, but they did comment that the stage was “a little splintery”
(“Tecumseh Players Pleased With Theater”).
Though January’s big draw was Agnes Moorehead’s performance, February’s
was Joseph Cotten and Patricia Medina, playing to a full house in The Seven Ways of
Love. That single performance—as The Daily Reporter put it— “scored” with the
audience, and it grossed $3,500 in receipts. After the performance, another reception was
held at the Stilson’s, where Medina raved about the theater, saying, “I love the

�Burdick, 29
theatre…but Joe is insane about it,” to which Mr. Cotten added, “We hope that you’ll
invite us back after it’s finished. We are quite enthusiastic about how it will look when
it’s done” (“Cottens Score With Tibbits Crowd”). Mr. Cotten went on to liken the
Tibbits to a theater in Sarasota, Florida, which was brought from Europe and
reconstructed there (“Cottens Score With Tibbits Crowd”).
The next few weeks brought more donations from both businesses and
individuals, as well as the installation of a new flame-red velour main drape, which was
donated by the local Rotary (“Rotarians Purchase Curtain”). March also brought a
performance by the University of Michigan Glee Club (“Coming to Tibbits”), as well as a
spring fashion show that was sponsored by the Chamber of Commerce (“The Friars”).
The most noteworthy event surrounding the Tibbits in March, however, was the
beginning of the mural installation in the Tibbits’ lobby, by local Disney artist Alfred
Parke. The mural, which is still a focal point in the Tibbits’ lobby, decorates the west and
north walls of the lobby, approximately 500 square feet (“A Mural for the Tibbits”).
Wayne Harmon and some of his men surfaced the walls with canvas, which Parke
painted with oils. Jim Bryan, Bill Bobler, and Walter Johnson were given credit in The
Daily Reporter for assistance providing materials, rigging, and décor details (“Progress
Report on Tibbits Mural”). Though Parke’s creative mural certainly dressed up the lobby
area, Lowther did not approve of its being installed: “I felt it was a little too Disney. I
didn’t think it was in keeping with the history with the Tibbits,” he said (Personal
Interview). Then again, Lowther asserted, “I was a techie; I was not the theater manager,”
so per the Board’s request, the mural went up.
April had a full slate of entertainment scheduled for the Tibbits, including the
highly-anticipated Rotary minstrel show (“That Time of Year”), a free concert sponsored

�Burdick, 30
by Music Mart (“Free Concert Monday”), Bob Newhart and the Outsiders (“Bob
Newhart Ad”), the Tibbits Civic Theatre (formerly the Coldwater Players) production of
Life With Father (“Tibbits Marquee”), a Coldwater High School variety show (“Variety
Show Set April 24”), the comedic styling of pianist Henry L. Scott (“Pianist-Humorist
Coming”), and a drum and bugle festival by the Blue Angels Drum and Bugle Corps.
(“Drum, Bugle Festival to be at Tibbits”). May also had a variety of entertainment,
mainly school concerts, and professional concerts of Wayne King and of the Virginia
Symphony. Reviews of Wayne King and fellow performers Miss Evans and Jim Hayes
were favorable, with reviewer Kathy Tarr noting not only the range and clear execution
of the melody of the performances, but also the sense of nostalgia that the performances
brought to the theater. One critique that Tarr did mention that “put a damper on the
evening’s entertainment” was that “the entertainers felt the need for a microphone, which,
with the acoustics of the Tibbits, is unnecessary. There were a number of times during the
program when the music was far too loud for the audience” (“King Brings Back
Memories”).
The Fort Wayne Children’s Theatre appeared with a production of Reynard the
Fox, and though one press release stated that tickets were selling well, the Foundation
minutes for May tell another story. In Stilson’s report, he stated that the children’s
theatre production was not successful, and though the Board handed out 5,000 circulars
to every child (in the school system?), the response was minimal. Stilson continued to
say that he felt the people in the county were not interested in children’s theatre, and he
recommended not doing another children’s theatre production, but Mrs. Parke disagreed,
stating that they should try one more production and cast local children in some parts to
generate more interest (May 12 1964 Board Meeting Minutes).

�Burdick, 31
Though more dance shows, lectures, and even an appearance by Mrs. America
took place in May and June, the focus quickly shifted to the American Theatre Festival’s
arrival in town. It seemed as though the entire town was excited to have the first
professional summer stock season, as evidenced by an entire 18-page section of the
newspaper devoted to it, and by the number of advertisers who supported that publication
(The Daily Reporter). From the beginning of June until the close of the summer season in
September, over 85 articles, ads, and photos promoting the summer season appeared in
The Daily Reporter. While the Tibbits Foundation Board placed its own advertisements
of upcoming shows, the Tibbits received twice the amount of advertising because
Stukey’s Inn also promoted a dinner and theatre package for every show.
The content in The Daily Reporter focused not only on the performers and the
performances; a good variety of articles about the apprentices and designers also
appeared. As is true today, most audiences have only a vague understanding of what it
takes to mount a full production. Articles like “School Teacher Handles Theatrical
Costume Making” helped to explain what process was used to create the costumes, with
an outline of events: first, the costume designer Sally Dunlap drew a design for each
character; then, costume mistress Tony Showalter fitted the actors; next, she bought the
fabric; and finally, she constructed the costume (“School Teacher Handles Theatrical
Costume Making”).
Before the show Ten Nights in a Barroom opened, The Daily Reporter ran a
feature article about an old-time backdrop that Al Parke created specifically for the show.
All the signs on the backdrop contained real names, slogans, and products that were
advertised by local businesses from 1894 to 1900. The backdrop, full of swirls and ads
by local merchants, featured Van Akens livery, which advertised a taxi surrey to the train;

�Burdick, 32
Battle Ax Plug Tobacco; oysters and clams at the Arlington; and even Bart Tibbits’
(founder of the Tibbits Opera House) old cigar factory (“Old-Time Backdrop Created”).
The summer season would not have been possible were it not for the help of
locals. On several occasions, the producers of the ATF solicited help from the
community. At one point, several items that community members were asked to donate
were office desks, long tables, and even a table saw (“Items Needed for Tibbits
Productions”). At the end of July, the Foundation had secured a residence for some of its
company members at 90 Division Street, and asked for furnishings for the home, which
would be used that summer, the winter season, and the following summers. Items
requested in this press release included lamps, chairs, dressers, rugs, and other living
room furniture (“Festival Asks Help in Establishing Residence”).
That first summer, the ATF produced eleven shows: Solid Gold Cadillac, The
Pursuit of Happiness, The Man Who Came To Dinner, Under the Yum Yum Tree, Ten
Nights in a Barroom, Mister Roberts, Girls in 509, Picnic, The Seven-Year Itch, Little
Mary Sunshine, and Light Up the Sky, with each production running Tuesday through
Sunday for a one-week engagement. Though Foundation minutes report that while
summer stock was supported and well-attended, it did not turn a profit that summer.
However, in exchange for use of the facilities, the ATF paid some $3,500-$4,000 in
utility bills and improvements to the theater, like lighting and equipment, and the
Foundation now also had approximately $5,000 in costumes and another $5,000 in
scenery (September 22 1964 Board Meeting Minutes).
The ATF producers stayed for a winter season and formed the Tibbits Repertoire
Company with another professional company of actors, producing World of Carl
Sandburg in October (“World of Carl Sandburg Opens Season at Tibbits”), Candida in

�Burdick, 33
November (“Candida Opens Wednesday”), and Dial M for Murder along with Rapunzel
&amp; the Witch in December (“Dial ‘M’ for Murder Coming to Tibbits”). In August,
Lowther sent out inquiries for other jobs, and by the fall, he was on his way to start his
new job in Sarasota, Florida. Former theater rat and friend Billy Lee Harman remembers
driving to Sarasota with Lowther through Hurricane Dora in his Corvair station wagon
that September (Personal Interview). Why did Lowther leave, right when things seemed
to be coming together for the Tibbits? Lowther’s memory of leaving was somewhat
vague, clouded by 50 years of other memories. He admitted, “I must have seen the winds
of change…I don’t remember any conversations about those changes, but I would say it
was the change in the weather that I moved on” (Personal Interview).
Along with the Tibbits Repertoire Company’s performances, that fall and winter
brought a smattering of events—everything from the Sweet Adelines’ variety show, a
satirical dance and pantomime show, concerts, plays, and travelogues. The main fall
attraction was Guy Lombardo and his Royal Canadians (dance team Bud and Cece
Robinson and singer Anita Bryant), who performed twice on November 9 to two
standing-room-only audiences (“Lombardo, Miss Bryant Score With Audience Here”).
The Board also made the decision in October to hire Burrill, Inc., a fundraising
organization. They had considered the possibility of hiring a fundraising organization
since January of 1964. Ralph Little, from Burrill, Inc., attended two October Board
Meetings to discuss the plan for fundraising. The program was set to begin on October
12, at the cost of $9,000 in fees for Burrill’s services (financed by borrowing from the
Branch Co. Savings Bank, as well as the Southern Michigan National Bank), with the
amount to be raised at $200,000 (October 06 1964 Board Meeting Minutes).
Lowther credits much of the Tibbits’ success to Stilson, who resigned from the

�Burdick, 34
Foundation Board in December, shortly after Lowther’s departure from Coldwater.
Lowther remembered:
The early Board, starting before I got there, was in transition for several
years….it was probably a matter of being a newly formed board of
directors figuring out how to make this monster that they’re creating
work. [Regarding] Stilson’s job—one of the ladies on the Board was
commenting to me—and I’m paraphrasing here— that he was bringing in
too many things...that this town wasn’t big enough for all of these events
that he wanted to present… He may have been a bit of a bull in the china
shop, but it wouldn’t have happened without him. He was the guiding
force. He may have alienated people in the process, but he was the spark
that created [the Tibbits’ success]. (Personal Interview)
At the December Board meeting, Jerri Parke and Winifred Morency also tendered
their letters of resignation, but Mrs. Morency’s was denied, so she agreed to remain on
the Board. Roy Patterson was named the new president of the Foundation Board with
Duane E. Davidson as vice president. With that, the year was over, and the search for a
new theater manager was underway.

�Burdick, 35

Chapter 5: Larry Carrico Takes Over
New Year’s is a time for new beginnings, a time for a fresh start. The Board had
just replaced half of its officers and needed to find someone to take over Lowther’s
managerial position. Apparently, Lowther was not the only person managing the Tibbits’
affairs during 1964, since according to a letter written by Ken Kohn to President
Patterson, Kohn had also been serving as manager for the Tibbits (Lowther speculates
that Kohn was serving as more of a business manager than a theater or production
manager, but it is quite possible that Kohn took over Lowther’s position after he left for
Sarasota). In the letter, Kohn expresses disappointment with his last three months of
“employment” at the Tibbits— he was never told he was being dismissed as manager,
had not been paid what had been promised, had moved his family to Coldwater (and as
such his wife had given up her job and they had lost money because of it), and he had
recently heard that the Board was looking for a qualified and experienced theater
manager (and he seemed offended that his extensive qualifications were being
overlooked). Furthermore, he was upset by the rumors around town of his “inefficiency
as a manager,” which was making it difficult for him to secure another job in the area
(Ken Kohn Letter to President Patterson). Kohn’s complaint wasn’t addressed by the
Board until the first June Board meeting, at which point President Patterson wrote him a
letter, offering him the option to settle the dispute at $500 (June 8 1965 Board Meeting
Minutes). By the second June Board Meeting, Kohn had accepted the Board’s offer (June
24 1965 Board Meeting Minutes).
January had a slow start for offerings at the Tibbits. The high cost of bringing in
performances with little foreseeable return (January 12 1965 Board Meeting Minutes)

�Burdick, 36
resulted in the cancellation of Hal Holbrook performing his famous Mark Twain
impersonation, Basil Rathbone with a dramatic presentation, and performances of
Entrances &amp; Exits, Caldonia, and another scheduled production by the ATF/Tibbits
Repertoire Company. Rubinoff and his Violins appeared in January, with an audience of
over 500, who excitedly endured a long wait in the lobby prior to the house being opened
(“Rubinoff Wows Coldwaterites”). The buzz circulating Rubinoff and his Stradivarius
violin was evident several days prior to his performance at the Tibbits, with an article in
The Daily Reporter informing the public of the rarity of actually owning a Stradivarius
violin, and information on how many fakes and copies had been produced. Only 540
authentic “Strads” were in existence, of which 163 were in the United States. Rubinoff
happened to own one of those authentic Strads, which he had insured for $100,000
(“Many Believe They Possess Real Strad, Says Rubinoff”). According to that same
article, those lucky enough to hear him at the Tibbits would “hear the lustrous tones of
his world famous violin” (“Many Believe They Possess Real Strad, Says Rubinoff”).
Following the performance, it was said that this, the first program held at the Tibbits for
1965, would “…be difficult to follow, and it was also the type of show of which there
should be many more” (“Rubinoff Wows Coldwaterites”).
The most expensive performers hired in January were Woody Herman and Roger
Williams, at $1,500 and $2,000, respectively. The Board voted to take out a loan, with
five members signing said loan and liable for $700 each in order to secure those
performances (January 19 1965 Board Meeting Minutes). The proceeds of those concerts
were to be used to repay the loan, but at the February Foundation Board Meeting, a loss
of $500 for the Woody Herman concert was reported (February 28 1965 Community
Meeting Minutes). Other January, February, and March offerings included The Taming

�Burdick, 37
of the Shrew, performed by the Michigan State University Players, several travelogues
sponsored by Kiwanis, the high school’s Fine Arts Festival, as well as their junior play,
Pioneer Go Home, a Branch County Community Concert Association concert, and a
Cancer Crusade kickoff meeting.
The renovation effort continued in February with replastering and painting of the
theater’s ceiling, the labor for which was donated by local building company Legg
Lumber. While the original estimated cost by contractors was $20,000, actual costs were
between $5,000 and $6,000 (February 09 1965 Board Meeting Minutes). The roof over
the stage had begun to leak, so that problem had to be addressed. At an informational
community meeting in March, approximately 75 citizens came to hear a report on the
five-year financial plan for the Tibbits. Foundation Chairman Sanford Jolley reported
that two intercom systems had been installed, with plans for three more in the future. The
Board remained hopeful with the theater’s progress, especially because I-69, a new
highway, was being constructed east of the City, which the Board identified as a
convenient and time-saving route for incoming Coldwater traffic, hopefully bringing
more patrons to the theater (February 28 1965 Community Meeting Minutes).
Also in March, President Patterson sent a letter to the president of Burrill, Inc., the
fundraising organization that the Board hired in October of 1964. In the letter, Patterson
requested that some of the service fee be returned to the Foundation, since the fundraiser
was “...almost a complete failure.” Instead of the estimated $200,000, only $20,000 was
received in donations, $11,000 of which was paid to Mr. Burrill’s company. Patterson
asserts that the Board “…selected your company on the basis of your reputation and
record of success in other areas…We feel that as professional fund raisers, you certainly
expected a greater degree of success. The Board of Directors of the Tibbits Opera

�Burdick, 38
Foundation by the same reasoning feel that the drive was a failure and the Foundation
should be entitled to a rebate” (Patterson Letter to Burrill).
April and May events were sporadic, and included the Rotary’s annual minstrel
show, Holy Week services, a Kiwanis travelogue, several concerts, and an all-county
production of Bye, Bye Birdie, the proceeds of which ($1,000) were used to repair the
roof. The Board addressed another grievance, that of Barbara Bernahl, who claimed that
the Foundation owed her money for services rendered in the box office. It was the
Board’s understanding that she was to be reimbursed only the cost for her babysitter, so
her complaint was sent to Mr. Lyon, the Board’s legal counsel. By June, Bernahl was
sent a letter, in which the Board offered to pay her a settlement of $500—half to be paid
that year, and half the following (June 8 1965 Board Meeting Minutes). In September, the
Board minutes reflect that Bernahl had denied the Board’s offer to settle and had
threatened to sue (September 21 1965 Board Meeting Minutes). The Board decided to
wait for further correspondence from her, which either apparently didn’t come or wasn’t
logged until December of 1966, when the Board minutes showed that the Department of
Labor sent a letter to the Board on Bernahl’s behalf for a claim of $737.50 (December 13
1966 Board Meeting Minutes). The result of this dispute is unknown.
New office secretary Mrs. Hillyar was introduced at the June 8 Board Meeting,
but by the next bi-weekly meeting, she had already resigned. June was also the month in
which the company for the summer stock started arriving. The Foundation teamed up
with the ATF again (sans Kohn) to produce summer stock in 1965, with Larry Carrico
hired as the stage manager, technical director, and scenic designer (“Detroiter Handling
Stage Management”). Carrico recalls his introduction to the Tibbits. At the time, he was
working in Detroit, and became acquainted with Walter Stump and Glen Crane through

�Burdick, 39
one of his theatre students. Carrico set up auditions for ATF in Detroit, got to know
Stump and Crane, and was asked if he would be interested in coming for the summer. He
accepted: “I was supposed to be there just for the summer, and then go back to teach high
school in Detroit” (Personal Interview).
That summer, Carrico and the rest of the ATF staff produced nine shows: The
Fantasticks, Come Blow Your Horn, Abie’s Irish Rose, The Music Man, The Drunkard,
The Happy Time, My Fair Lady, Mary Mary, and Oklahoma. Originally, eleven shows
were on the schedule, but because of the audiences’ popular reception of My Fair Lady
and Oklahoma, those shows were each held over an additional week. Every opening was
met with a favorable review. Of the Fantastics, the critic wrote, “For an opening night,
few things went wrong and the show came off smoothly. For an opening show, nothing
could have topped it” (“Fantasticks Opens Here”). The opening of Come Blow Your
Horn was met with, “With this company of players, the same outstanding production
staff as last summer, and the talented young group of technical people, this season
promises to be one of the finest to be seen anywhere. Coldwater may consider itself very
fortunate” (“Tibbits Festival Players Open Come Blow Your Horn”). Abie’s Irish Rose
was described as a show that “…added another feather to an increasingly colorful
cap…with a thoroughly delightful production” (“Abie’s Irish Rose Scores Here”). The
popularity of The Music Man and Oklahoma was without question, as they were both
held over, and Happy Time was said to be “one of the most beautiful shows ever
presented at the Tibbits Opera House…[It] should prove, if last evening’s performance
was any criteria, to be one of the top productions of the American Theatre Festival”
(“Happy Time Is Happy Choice”). Finally, Mary, Mary’s critique started with, “Bouquets
of roses to the American Theatre Festival…from the moment the curtain opened, the

�Burdick, 40
largest opening night audience for a non-musical play in the history of ATF was
entertained and showed its appreciation by being the most enthusiastic audience…”
(“Mary Scores Triumph”).
Time and again, the technical aspects of the summer shows were praised, too,
with Larry Carrico’s name mentioned many times for “[coming] through again with a
beautifully designed stage” (“Abie’s Irish Rose Scores Here”). The Board must have
perceived that Carrico would be able to make a noticeable impact at the theater because a
month after he was hired for summer stock, the Board interviewed him for the theatre
manager position. Carrico didn’t return to Detroit that autumn, choosing instead to take
the position at the theater, and by September, he began his duties at the Tibbits part-time,
alongside his teaching job at Lakeland School (July 13 1965 Board Meeting). Carrico
said that he was approached by Harold Stukey for the theater manager position:
[The Board] asked, ‘Can you produce the summer theater?’ I said, ‘Sure.’
I had introduced the summer theater in Manistee two years before that and
managed the Opera House. ATF expected to come back the next season.
They were very upset with me; thought that I had instigated [their
dismissal]. They were excited that I was going to be there all winter, so
that the theater would be in better shape. But the Board wasn’t too happy
[with ATF]—they had lost a lot of money [those] two seasons. (Personal
Interview)
Another probable reason why the ATF producers were upset to hear this decision was
that Tibbits Opera Foundation had reneged on a contract. In April, the Foundation
members had signed a five-year lease agreement with the ATF to continue summer stock,
which would have brought them all the way to the 1969 summer stock season (“Summer

�Burdick, 41
Stock to Open Here On June 15”). The Board minutes do not accurately reflect this
matter surrounding ATF’s dismissal, as the January 1966 minutes report that the ATF
wasn’t interested in returning to the Tibbits: “…the Theatre Festival people were asked to
come to the Board with some proposal for the coming summer. However, they have
decided not to operate the summer theatre project this summer. Therefore, the Executive
Board discussed the matter and recommended that the Tibbits Theatre Foundation run it
this summer, [with] Larry Carrico engaged to operate the theater…” (January 11 1966
Board Meeting Minutes).
Carrico moved his family, at that time consisting of wife Sally and six-month-old
son Sean, to Coldwater in the fall of 1965. Running the theater was a family affair.
Carrico worked long hours on lighting, cleaning the theater, and bringing in acts; Sally
volunteered in the box office; Sean played in the playpen that the Carricos set up in the
box office for him until he was old enough to help out around the theater. Carrico
remembers Sean helping at a young age, running the spotlight. Because he was so small,
he “…had to stand in a chair to work the followspot” (Personal Interview). Neither Sally
nor Sean was paid to work at the Tibbits; everything they did was volunteer.
On September 21, Board Members Davidson, Heikkinen, and President Patterson
reported that they attended a meeting in Ann Arbor regarding financial federal aid for the
theater, and it was suggested that the Tibbits Opera Foundation become the Tibbits Opera
Foundation and Arts Council instead, thereby becoming eligible for grants from the
Michigan Council of the Arts, which was formed that year. The Board appointed an Arts
Council, consisting of Margaret Hayes, Phyllis Coscarelly, Florence Kiess, Joan Collins,
and Sally Whitten (September 21 1965 Board Meeting Minutes). It took the Council
several months of meetings to plan how this new group would be organized in order to

�Burdick, 42
avoid overlapping of events and dates, coordinate use of the Opera House, and attract
new members from local arts groups.
October brought to the Tibbits stage the Wayne King orchestra concert, which
was fervently promoted. One article from The Daily Reporter reminded locals of the
following: “King, one of last season’s most popular attractions, merits the place of honor
on this year’s program” (“Waltz King to Return”). The world-famous performer and his
orchestra were not reviewed after the fact, but their popularity was evident in the fact that
the concert brought the Tibbits a profit of almost $968 (December 12 1965 Board
Meeting Minutes).
Much like the previous year, that fall and winter brought a varied collection of
almost weekly events: the Sweet Adelines’ variety show, Sing Americana; a ballet, Two
Go Dancing; The Coldwater High School senior class play, Noah; Quincy High School’s
musical, Mr. Crane; several Kiwanis travelogues; and even an art lecture by a professor
at the University of Michigan’s College of Architecture and Design Department. The
Board, under new leadership since the last time it had presented a children’s theatre
production, decided to continue providing the community with children’s shows. In
November, Pinocchio, a Reed Marionettes puppet show, came to the stage. It was so
popular that to accommodate the large audience, another performance had to be added.
The three performances turned a profit of just under $435 (February 09 1965 Board
Meeting Minutes). Hansel &amp; Gretel was presented by the Piccolo Opera Company of
Detroit in December, and though praise was given for the voices, set, lighting, scenery,
and makeup, reviewer Kathleen Tarr said that the “…musical fairy tale lacked zip and
tended to drag in spots.” For each compliment that Tarr gave the actors, she referred
back to the weaknesses of the script itself: “…the play itself had little to appeal to

�Burdick, 43
youngsters who grow fidgety quite easily” (“Hansel and Gretel Presented”).
While the Tibbits’ most consistent usage was during the summer stock season, it
still played host to a variety of events throughout the first part of the year: Kiwanis
travelogues were routinely held, several concerts were sponsored by the Branch County
Community Concert Association, Hamlet was presented by Michigan State University’s
Performing Arts Co., the Rotary minstrel show appeared, Coldwater High School
produced Our Town, as well as a children’s theatre production of Sleeping Beauty, the
annual fashion show to benefit the Hospital Auxiliary was hosted, and various other
concerts were performed. Even St. Charles, the local Catholic school, began using the
Tibbits and staged a performance of It’s a Great Life. The schools were using the Tibbits
so frequently that in May, Board minutes show the suggestion to publicize what school
activities have been held at the Tibbits in order to make the community aware of how
frequently the school was actually relying on the theater (May 10 1966 Board Meeting
Minutes).
One anticipated event that the Branch County Community Concert Association
brought to the stage, one that it began promoting in May of 1965, was Ruth Page’s
Chicago Opera Ballet, which appeared on the stage in March of 1966: “Without question,
guest ballerina Josette Amiel, performing through the courtesy of the Paris Opera, was
the highlight of the evening. She is not only an outstanding dancer, but a beautiful and
fine actress to boot. She made Camille come alive for even those in the audience
unfamiliar with the intricacies of the ballet,” gushed reviewer Kathleen Tarr (“Stage
Graced by Ballet”). Apparently, the other offerings that the Branch County Community
Concert Association provided for the people of Coldwater that season were not as
appreciated. As Tarr continued, “The Chicago Opera Ballet company succeeded, where

�Burdick, 44
the other two concerts failed, to make it a truly memorable one” (“Stage Graced by
Ballet”).
The other anticipated event of the spring season was the arrival of the Dukes of
Dixieland, whose group was publicized from February to April of 1966, when they
appeared. At the time they played at the Tibbits, this well-known jazz band had made
eleven albums for Audio-Fidelity, which sold more than 2 million copies, representing
$12 million in retail sales. In addition, they had a best-selling album with Louis
Armstrong (“Dukes of Dixieland at Tibbits Sunday”). Without a doubt, audiences were
excited to witness Dukes of Dixieland’s performance, and the subsequent review was
favorable: “There was never any question [that] the show went over well with the large
audience…. This was evident from the number of feet one could hear tapping around the
Opera House. Even on slow blues numbers in Dixie land, there’s plenty of beat to tap a
foot to (“Dukes of Dixieland Play to Capacity Audience”).
In May of 1966, the Board made plans to install a refreshment stand in the alley
south of the Tibbits, with an estimated cost of $250 to lay 50 feet of concrete (May 10
1966 Board Meeting Minutes). In June, the Board minutes reflect that members Teeter
and Meier were arranging to have the alley paved for that refreshment area (June 14 1966
Board Meeting Minutes), and July minutes show that the Board had decided that lighting
would also be needed in the alley (July 12 1966 Board Meeting Minutes). Though it
seemed that the Board was progressing well with its plans, Carrico said that this
refreshment stand did not appear until seven or eight years later, when his son Sean, who
was then seven or eight years old, managed it, selling lemonade and soft drinks: “I’m the
one who paved [the alley]. I remember one night, I was working by the headlights of my
car, finishing the concrete,” he said. Carrico is also the one who built the refreshment

�Burdick, 45
stand itself out of bricks. Once the basement kitchen was finished, Sean worked the
refreshment stand from there (Personal Interview).
The summer season quickly approached, and though season tickets didn’t go on
sale until May, preparations for the summer season began much earlier, with Carrico
hiring the summer stock crew by March 8 (March 08 1966 Board Meeting Minutes). Of
the hiring process, Carrico said, “I never did cattle calls. I would put one ad in trade
papers in New York and would have 2,000 applications. I would whittle that down to
200, [the people] I wanted to see” (Personal Interview). From there, Carrico and his staff
from New York would schedule appointments to hold auditions in New York. Auditions
were each ten minutes long and were held from 9am to 6pm four days straight. Carrico
said that he would then “…go back to my suite and would go through all the applications
and discuss each one and discuss who we wanted for callbacks” (Personal Interview).
Summer stock for the 1966 season included South Pacific, Show Boat, The Sound
of Music, The Student Prince, and Camelot. Changes were made to the manner in which
summer stock was presented that summer, with shows running two weeks. Reviews were
more than positive in The Daily Reporter, with headlines for each show touting,
“Excellent Acting, Singing, Mark the Tibbits Opening,” “Show Boat Entrances First
Night Audience,” “The Sound of Music is Best Opening to Date,” “Student Prince
Opening is an Enjoyable Experience,” and “Camelot Opening is Finest of the Season.”
It was a season of firsts, too. Along with advertisements by Tibbits and Stukey’s,
the season was also advertised by local restaurant Gracie O’Shanahan’s for the first time.
Finally, the Tibbits stage was graced with a Baldwin Style D Concert Grand Piano, which
was donated by Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Feller of Music Mart (Declaration of Gift by Wayne
Feller). The sets for the season were designed long-distance, which was something that

�Burdick, 46
had not previously been done. Apparently, Carrico had been asked to do too much, and
“…because of his already full schedule felt unable to do this for the rest of the season”
(Sound of Music Sets Have their Own Interesting Story”). Instead, Carrico contacted Tom
A. Aston, an old theatre friend in Detroit. Aston said that he would be willing to do the
designing but was unable to come to Coldwater for the summer. To make it work, Aston
designed in Detroit, and then sent one of his carpenters to Coldwater to construct the set,
according to his drawings (Sound of Music Sets Have their Own Interesting Story”). The
other “first” for the season was that Monk Watson, world- renown magician from Colon,
played the role of Merlyn in the production of Camelot. Officials at the theatre said, “…
this is probably the first time the role of Merlyn has been played by a real magician
(“Camelot Production May Well Have a First”).
Though the initial publicity shows that four children’s shows were going to be
produced at the Tibbits that summer, the only children’s show that was staged was a
Stevens Puppets production of Rumplestiltskin (“Rumplestiltskin To Be Presented
Wednesday”). Carrico doesn’t recall that production, but does remember bringing in
several children’s theatre shows after that during the winter season. During Carrico’s
sixteen years of summer theatre, the Tibbits never produced children’s theatre because of
the hectic schedule of the mainstage shows, but the Michigan Council for the Arts began
funding a touring program that traveled statewide. That program lasted all season long,
and Carrico said that he always got a grant to bring in a tour. Then, he would bring in
children from all the schools in Branch County, some from Steuben County, and even
some from Calhoun County. Carrico recalls the process: “The whole street would be
lined up with buses. We would do three shows a day. We sold [the performances] only to
schools—I had a meeting in the bar with the superintendents. We sat down around a table

�Burdick, 47
at the bar, and I explained what my season was, gave them all the information, and told
them to go back to the school and let me know what shows they wanted and when they
wanted to [schedule them]. We didn’t have to advertise, and we sold out every one”
(Personal Interview). Carrico said that the Tibbits provided the schools with study guides
about the performances and about the theater beforehand, and noted that by having the
schoolchildren attend, the Tibbits staff never had to sell individual tickets for the
performances.
Carrico was offered and had accepted a full-time position at the Tibbits by August
of 1966, to begin in September at $650/month plus bonuses for nine months, with three
months of summer stock pay to be handled separately (August 09 1966 Board Meeting
Minutes). At the Board meeting in September, he reported that the total number in
attendance for the summer was 15,842, with a net profit of $700, along with a good
inventory of scenery, costumes and tools (September 10 1966 Board Meeting Minutes).
After a busy summer season, the fall and winter were more relaxed in the way of
programming, with several Kiwanis travelogues, a cooking school demonstration,
sponsored by The Daily Reporter, a Coldwater High School play, The Tavern (which
Carrico directed), and a few concerts. With its considerably higher ticket prices ($4.50 to
$5.50 per ticket, as opposed to summer stock’s prices of $2.25 to $3.25), the Goldovsky
Grand Opera Theater’s performance of Rigoletto at the end of November had “a
discouragingly small audience” in attendance (“Small Audience Views Rigoletto”).
Reviews of the performance were satisfactory, aside from the lengthy intermission to
accommodate scenery changes, and the voice of actress Teresa Orantes, who played the
role of Gilda, was “…lovely, lilting…but one which lacks color. Only she of the large
cast involved in the production was not understood, and this was sad. Gilda has some

�Burdick, 48
very important lines in the opera and they were missed more often than not” (“Small
Audience Views Rigoletto”). Unfortunately, even with the high ticket prices, the number
of tickets sold didn’t overcome the expense of the show, and the Foundation lost money.
Improvements were constantly happening at the Tibbits. In November, Carrico
reported that work was being done in the dressing rooms. Paint, lights, mirrors, and
flooring were all donated (November 08 1966 Board Meeting Minutes). Carrico recalls
that “I did a lot of work on the lighting and the sound, as much as I could with no money.
[I] did what I could with the dressing rooms— put mirrors in them, and lights…worked
on the stage itself, the rigging… also put in the counterweight system for the main
curtain...I put that in the very first year” (Personal Interview).
The Wizard of Oz was the last notable production in December, performed by the
Reed Marionettes, who had performed the popular Pinocchio the year prior. The
popularity of the Reed Marionettes was once again proven, with a third showing of
Wizard added to accommodate the large audience. Judy Quimby’s favorable review
noted how the performance was beautifully portrayed with the near life-size marionettes
and the way scenes were changed quickly by a drop of a curtain. She said, “The adults in
the audience, this writer among them, found the performance just as enthralling as did the
children for whom it was intended (“Three Audiences See Wizard Saturday”). The
puppet show revealed a profit of $328, ending 1966 (Carrico’s first full year managing
the theater) on a positive note.
From there, Carrico’s additional years of service gifted him with the title of “the
man who saved Tibbits.” Over the course of his sixteen-year career there, Carrico lists
his greatest accomplishment as completing the lower level gallery. He recalls the
basement being dirt, and he remembers having to level it off. He remembers youngsters

�Burdick, 49
from the state home helping him wheel the concrete for the floor. He remembers building
the bathrooms and hiring a company to lay the brick. He remembers putting up the
ceiling and having the floor carpeted. All of this work “made [the Tibbits] a true arts
center. At the same time, I built an art teaching studio under the stage and bought a
kiln…we had art classes after school and adult classes at night. We had art exhibits from
all over the world that only big museums get. That really made it a complete arts center—
visual arts as well as the performing arts” (Personal Interview). Carrico credited the
Board, which allowed him to manage the theater in his own way: “The Board was really
good and let me do whatever I wanted. They didn’t know much about theatre…they just
cared about the Opera House. They were really good people and listened to what I had to
say” (Personal Interview).
All good things must come to an end, and by December of 1981, Carrico planned
a move back to Detroit to take a different position, but of his time managing the Tibbits,
he said, “I loved every minute of it. It was very, very difficult, [but] it was fun. I had a lot
of good times” (Personal Interview).

�Burdick, 50

Chapter 6: Conclusion
Success of the Tibbits Opera House is the culmination of a long and arduous
process spanning more than a century. In order to survive, the Tibbits underwent vast
changes in both appearance and function, adapting to new technologies and trends that
defined various eras in American culture. The Tibbits is noted for its omnibus of
celebrated actors, comedians, and musicians who have graced its stage, and it continues
to boast success as a professional summer stock venue, a community theater, and a
roadhouse for touring artists.
Were it not for the steadfast dedication of the Coldwater Players in the 1960s and
the outpouring of community support, the Tibbits would have been razed, its space
reduced to a city-owned parking lot. Instead, the Players organized one fundraiser after
another to pay the costs of countless repairs and improvements, including wallpaper,
paint, plaster, roof, heating and air systems, a sprinkler system, and more. The renovation
process seemed always to be one step forward, two steps back, but the Players persisted.
The tenacious community rallied together to donate labor and materials, bringing the
theater back to a functional state. By 1964, a Foundation Board had been formed,
management was hired, and the Tibbits was once again a place for performers to take the
stage.
The Tibbits’ first manager, George Vaughn Lowther, installed the first stage
lighting and brought to town the American Theater Festival to present summer stock
theatre. Larry Carrico, Lowther’s successor, is to date the longest manager in the
theater’s history, logging sixteen years of service. Because of his unyielding dedication
to the Tibbits and to the art of theatre, Carrico has become known in Coldwater and

�Burdick, 51
surrounding areas as “The man who saved Tibbits.” He is responsible for creating the
basement gallery area, making the Tibbits a true visual and performing arts center.
The restoration of the Tibbits didn’t happen in the 60s, or even the 70s or 80s. It
wasn’t until the 2000s when most of the restoration progress was made. The restoration
was broken into phases, and from 2000 to 2008, over $2 million was raised for that
particular restoration campaign. By March 2008 of that campaign, Phases I and II had
been completed, which included the architectural design documents, the installation of an
elevator and a handicapped accessible restroom, boiler repairs, and demolition of the
adjacent annex building. Phase III, the cupola reconstruction and façade restoration, was
completed in the spring of 2013, with the Tibbits being presented with the 2013
Governor’s Award for Historic Preservation. Such an illustrious history has earned the
Tibbits Opera House a place in the registry of America’s most cherished small-town
theaters.

�Burdick, 52

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�Burdick, 54
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�Burdick, 55
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�Burdick, 56
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�Burdick, 57
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�Burdick, 58
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�Burdick, 59
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Tibbits Theatre Foundation. November 08 1966 Board Meeting Minutes. 08 Nov 1966.
Tibbits Theatre Foundation. November 13 1963 Board Meeting Minutes. 13 Nov 1963.
Tibbits Theatre Foundation. October 10 1963 Board Meeting Minutes. 10 Oct 1963.
Tibbits Theatre Foundation. September 6 1963 Board Meeting Minutes. 06 Sept 1963.
Tibbits Theatre Foundation. September 22 1964 Board Meeting Minutes. 22 Sept 1964.
“Tibbits to Have Concert Grand.” The Daily Reporter. 28 June 1963.

�Burdick, 60
“Tibbits Title to be Cleared.” The Daily Reporter. 06 Sept 1963.
Tibbits Theatre Board of Trustees. January 5 1961 Meeting Minutes. 05 Jan 1961.
“Variety Show Set April 24.” The Daily Reporter. 18 April 1964.
“Waltz King to Return.” The Daily Reporter. 21 Sept 1965.
“Work on Tibbits is Reviewed by Trustees.” The Daily Reporter. 3 March 1961.
“World of Carl Sandburg Opens Season at Tibbits.” The Daily Reporter. 06 October
1964.

�Burdick, 61

Tibbits Datebook 1958-1966

The following sources (and codes TA, DR, and BO) have been used to compile this datebook.
(TA) Tibbits Archives, located with the Tibbits Opera House Administrative Offices
(DR) The Coldwater Daily Reporter, newspaper located on microfilm archives within the
Holbrook Heritage Room of the Branch District Library
(BO) Box Office Magazine, located in online archives at
http://www.boxoffice.com/the_vault
(FWS)The Fort Wayne Sentinal, newspaper
Branch County Tax Records
Michigan Dept. of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs
This datebook is the most comprehensive list of information surrounding the Tibbits during the
period of 1958 to 1966 from sources available, but it does have some incomplete information.

�Day

Date

Year

1933-1954
1954-1958
1958
Thurs

June 5

1958

Mon

June 9

1958

Thurs
-Sat

March
12-14

1959

Thurs

May 15

1959

Fri

Oct 30

1959

Nov

1959

Thurs

Nov 12

1959

Wed
Mon

Nov 18
Nov 23

1959
1959

Thurs

Nov 26

1959

Tues

Dec 1

1959

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

The Tibbits functions as a cinema/movie house.
The Tibbits is vacant
Charley’s Aunt

Type of event

Performers

Source

11-14-59 DR

Play

Coldwater
Players
Tibbits Community Theatre Planning Committee Meeting: Duane Davidson, temporary chairman. Committee
discusses possible uses of Tibbits, does a cost estimate of basic operations, and includes list of renovation needs
and a note about bids for the project.
Tibbits Theatre Committee sends out a survey to get community feedback on what people would like to have
Tibbits used as if they purchase it and rejuvenate it for use as a community building.
Gay Nineties Revue
Minstrel Show
Rotary

Variety Show

Coldwater
Players and
SturgesYoung Players
Coldwater Players launch a “crash campaign” to save the Tibbits. Schulte Amusement company announces plans
to demo Tibbits unless the Players exercise a purchase option by the following week.
Schulte Company agrees to sell the theater to the Coldwater Players for $7500. Money is due November 21.
Contributions of $775 to the “Save the Tibbits” fund; 2 week payment extension is given due to deer hunting
season.
Contributions reach $1,610.
Contributions near $2500. Inspection report shows that dressing rooms need to be removed and replaced with
fireproof construction. The building also needs approved automatic sprinkler system, new boiler room
construction, emergency exit on the north side of the building, and new construction and equipment in the stage
area to bring it up to code. Report filed by City Building Commissioner Harold Russell.
Theater is approved by licensed consultant engineer, inspected and declared structurally sound by local building
contractor, and inspected by state fire marshal and local Fire Prevention Bureau. Minor improvements still
needed.
Deadline for payment to Schulte looms; contributions at $3400.

11-14-59 DR
06-05-58 TA

06-09-59 TA
03-07-59 DR
03-12-59 DR
03-13-59 DR
03-14-59 DR
11-27-59 DR
05-15-59 DR
11-27-59 DR

10-30-59 DR
11-12-59 DR
11-14-59 DR
11-12-59 DR
11-14-59 DR
11-18-59 DR
11-24-59 DR

11-27-59 DR

12-1-59 DR

Burdick, 62

�Day

Date

Year

Week
of
Mon
Sat

Dec 11

1959

Jan 4
Jan 9 &amp;
Jan 16

1960
1960

Mon

Feb 29

1960

Tues

July 26

1960

Players give Schulte Amusement Company of Detroit a down payment of $1,500. The balance is to be paid within
five years.
Drive to save Tibbits continues. One-third of the $7,500 needed to purchase the theatre has been raised.
House on the Cliff
Mystery/comedy
The
Coldwater
Players
Costly improvements needed to reopen, namely replacing the heating plant. Some minor repairs and manual
labor remaining as well.
Tax bill consigned to Coldwater Players, Inc.

1960

The Girls in 509

Tues

Nov 8

1960

Thurs

Jan 5

1961

Mon

Jan 9

1961

Thurs

Jan 19

1961

Sat

Jan 21

1961

Sat

Jan 21

1961

Wed
Wed

Feb 01
Feb 01

1961
1961

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Play

Performers

The
Coldwater
Players
Coldwater Civic Players president E.C. Huet sends out a letter to patrons asking for yearly donation/patronage and
thanks for attending the two shows (House on the Cliff &amp; The Girls in 509) that year.
Initial meeting of Tibbits Theatre Board of Trustees held at the Coldwater Daily Reporter office. Sanford Jolly
nominated as chairman; Judy Miller, secretary; Howard Thompson, treasurer; Cliff Huet, director of PR. Draft of
rules is created (ie: theatre is non-profit and self-maintaining, bookings for Tibbits will be handled by the
Coldwater Players business manager Paula Weller, Players will be given preferential treatment for use of the
building, etc.), drive planned to raise money for repairs of the theatre, and bids for furnace repair discussed.
Board of Trustees launches campaign to raise $2,000 for improvements to the theater. Woodward Building
Materials offered to repair the furnace and donate the labor.
Tibbits Theatre Board of Trustees (also referred to as Coldwater Players Board of Trustees) Meeting. In two weeks,
$134 in donations is given as well as building items and donated labor by service groups. Board wants to have
grand opening in April. Discussion of hiring a booking agent, but Board decides to wait and let Paula Weller handle
it for now.
Coldwater Concrete Products Co. donates 300 cement blocks for the construction of a fire wall. Russell Belt has
agreed to construct the wall. Sweet’s Electric has repaired the motor for the furnace and has offered to check and
replace the wiring.
Coldwater Key Club (Kiwanis High School Organization) carries cement blocks into the theater basement where
they will be used to construct a fire wall around the furnace.
Three fire doors are donated by Federal Mogul. Stoker has been repaired.
Coldwater Players Board of Trustees meeting: Report of progress on repairs, chairmen chose rose shade for the

Source

12-11-59 DR
01-04-60 BO
12-11-59 DR
11-08-60 TA
02-29-60 DR
Branch Co.
Tax Record
11-08-60 TA

11-08-60 TA
01-05-61 TA

01-09-61 DR
01-19-61 TA

01-21-61 DR

01-23-61 DR
02-01-61 DR
02-02-61 TA

Burdick, 63

�Day

Date

Year

Thurs

Feb 02

1961

Sat

Feb 11

1961

Thurs

Feb 16

1961

Tues

Feb 21

1961

Wed

March
1
March
2

1961

Sat

March
4

1961

Sun

March
12
March
16

1961

April 8
or 9

1961

Thurs

Thurs

Sat or
Sun

1961

1961

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

walls of the foyer and mint color for the ceiling. Mention of getting (finding?) the chandelier, repairing it and
putting it up as well. Rental fee considered.
Fire Department, Board of Public Utilities, Yearling Repair Service and Woodward Building Materials, heat finally
gets turned on.
Karl Staley, local mason and carpenter, works on the concrete block furnace room. Russell Belt and Stanley
Cuthbert also donate time and skill.
Coldwater Exchange Club (Bill Wilson, Austin Barnes, Lawrence Lucas, Pat Kelly, Dick Conrad, Bill Hodgeman,
Russell Severn, Albert High) scrubs the main floor. Plans to paint the back of the seats in 2 weeks. Exchange Club
begins refurbishing the main seating area downstairs. Rotary club plans to work on dressing rooms and hallway.
Lions Club (Stan Borden, Robert Nichols, Lloyd Hills, Kenneth Troutman and Tom White mentioned) does general
clean-up of Tibbits. Plans to paint the theatre’s marquee. Equipment for the cleaning donated by Douglas
Manufacturing Co. of Bronson and the Sweeny Buick-Pontiac Co. Paint has been donated by Legg Lumber and
Ideal Wallpaper and Paint.
Rotary club members paint the backstage dressing rooms and Kiwanis (Robert Rhoades) vacuums and clean the
balcony area.
Tibbits Opera House Board of Trustees bi-monthly meeting. Officially decide to call the building the Tibbits Opera
House. Approve the use of the Tibbits for a headquarters for the Greater Coldwater Centennial Committee from
May 15 through July 8. Sanford Jolley is made the sole booking agent for the theatre to eliminate booking
mistakes. Coldwater Players representative E.C. Huet resigns due to moving.
Robert Blosser paints the proscenium. Easterday &amp; Musser provide scaffolding for it. (03-13-61 article mentions
that Wayne Harmon &amp; Bob Blosser painted it and that scaffolding was donated by the Blaski Construction Co
instead)
Jaycees clean and completely paint the lobby (paint donated by Montgomery Ward) and stairway area. Kiwanis
club cleans the balcony.
Tibbits Opera House Board of Trustees meeting: Roof repair estimates are heard, Fire Department gives the board
a list of 22 necessary items to be corrected, Grand Opening is postponed, and Mrs. Edward Allen has an original
Opening Night (1882) ticket and a ticket from the Cohan production that she wants to leave to the Players.
Suggestion made to display these and other historical Tibbits items at the Grand Opening.
Opening date set for
theatre, Three Men
on a Horse to be
presented.
*postponed at 3-16-

Source

02-03-61 DR
02-11-61 DR
02-11-61 DR
02-17-61 DR
2-16-61 DR
03-03-61 DR

03-02-61 DR
03-02-61 TA
03-03-61 DR

03-03-61 DR
03-13-61 DR
03-03-61 DR
03-13-61 DR
03-16-61 TA

02-01-61 DR
01-19-61 TA
02-02-61 TA
03-16-61 TA

Burdick, 64

�Day

Date

Year

April

1961

Thurs
-Sat

April
27, 28,
29

1961

Tues
Wed

May 16
May 24

1961
1961

Thurs

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

Source

61 meeting
Grade School
program
Minstrel Show

02-02-61 TA

Rotary Club

02-01-61 DR
02-02-61 TA
03-26-61 DR
04-26-61 DR
04-27-61 DR
04-28-61 DR

Directed
by Edward
Holtz,
assisted by
Doug
Miller,
accompani
st Mrs.
Roy
Patterson

05-17-61 DR
05-25-61 DR

June 01 1961

Greater Coldwater Centennial headquarters moves into the Tibbits
Brothers of the
Meeting
Brush and
Centennial Belles
Centennial Office Headquarters moves out of Tibbits, relocates to W. Chicago St, formerly the Merit Shoe Store.

Sat
SatSun

June 3
June
17-18

1961
1961

Circus comes to town, sponsored by American Legion. All proceeds go to benefit the Tibbits.
Bull In a China Shop
3 act mystery
Coldwater
Jean Rude
comedy
Players

Thurs

Aug 17

1961

SatSun

Nov 45

1961

Stanford Jolly receives letter from Schulte Theatre’s attorney Jos Uvick acknowledging receipt of $142.50 paid for
interest for six months (incorrect payment, as it should have been $172.50). Notes that the contract balance of
$5,750 has not changed on the principal.
Sagebrush Serenade
Western Musical
Sweet
Doug
Variety Show
Adelines
Miller
(Banjo-Tainers of
Muskegon also part
of the show)

03-16-61 TA
06-12-61 DR
06-14-61DR
06-16-61 DR
06-19-61 DR
08-17-61 TA

06-01-61 DR

08-31-61 DR
10-21-61 DR
10-30-61 DR
11-01-61 DR
11-03-61 DR
11-04-61 DR

Burdick, 65

�Day

Date

Year

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

SatSun

Dec 2-3

1961

Pure as the Driven
Snow

Week
of

Dec 4

1961

Mon

Dec 11

1961

Thurs
Fri

Dec 14
Jan 05

1961
1962

Mon

Jan 08

1962

Mon
Wed
Thurs

Jan 22
Jan 24
Thurs
Jan
25

1962
1962
1962

Sat

Jan 27

1962

Thurs

Feb 1

1962

Bids are taken for estimate of completely renovating the building. City requests inspection by the state fire
marshal. Complete sprinkling system must be installed (estimate of $20,000). Estimate of making building safe:
$39,000. ($20K for sprinkling system, $3K for asbestos curtain, $7K general repair, $1800 roof and chimney repair,
$1200 removal of marquee and misc. repair, $6000 mortgage balance).
Fire department orders the building closed until repairs can be made.
City Council meeting report: 140 shares of General Foods stock (valued at $13,300) anonymously donated to the
renovation of the Tibbits if the City of Coldwater will accept/operate the building.
Coldwater Centennial Committee donates 60% of the cash balance ($480) from their celebration to Tibbits.
Civic Players launch drive to raise funds for the rehabilitation of the Tibbits. Sweet Adelines pledge $1K, Rotary
promises to support as well.
City Council meeting report: City votes to accept title to the Tibbits if certain conditions are met; namely, if
$55,000 is raised for the restoration. Deadline is set for April 1.
Leslie Woodward and Miss Margaret Hayes volunteer to act as co-chairmen of the Tibbits Fund Drive.
Coldwater Players pledge $100 to campaign.
Tibbits Fund Committee meeting meets at the civic room of the Branch County bank to map out 60-day fund
campaign. Large “thermometer sign” to be placed downtown park area for pledges and contributions.
C.J. (Casey) Medendorp, district executive of General Telephone Co. and Pat Kelly, manager of the Coldwater J.C.
Penney Co. are named co-chairmen of the Foreign $55K Campaign for Tibbits.
Official kickoff of fund drive; Fund Drive meeting at Branch Co. Bank civic room.

Wed
Wed

Feb 7
Feb 7

1962
1962

Thurs
-Sat

Feb 15,
16, 17

1962

Play

Coldwater
Civic Players

Performers

Ray
Mulchahey

Demolition of the old South Hanchett St garage building now makes way for parking across from the Tibbits.
Co-chairwoman Margaret Hayes appears on WKZO TV “Feminine Fancies” program in Kalamazoo to explain
various facets of the drive.
Minstrel Show
Rotary Club
**originally
scheduled for the
Tibbits, but
moved to

Source

10-19-61 DR
10-27-61 DR
11-14-61 DR
11-30-61 DR
12-2-61 DR
12-15-61 DR

12-15-61 DR
12-15-61 DR
01-05-62 DR
01-05-62 DR
01-22-62 DR
01-25-62 DR
01-25-62 DR
01-27-62 DR
01-25-62 DR
02-01-62 DR
02-07-62 DR
02-06-62 DR
12-12-61 DR
01-31-62 DR

Burdick, 66

�Day

Thurs
Sat
Fri
Week
of
Wed
Wed
Wed
Sun
Tues
Fri
Fri
Fri
Sat

Date

Feb 15
March
10
March
16
March
20
March
21
March
21
March
21-28
April
01
April
03
April
06
April
13
May 18
May 26

Year

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

Source

1962
1962

Roosevelt
Auditorium once
Tibbits is ordered
closed by the fire
marshal.
However, Thurs
night benefit
performance for
the Tibbits
House-to-house solicitation for the fund scheduled (postponed until March though).
Coldwater Moose Lodge dinner held as a benefit for Tibbits.

01-26-62 DR
03-09-62 DR

1962

Tibbits Theatre benefit antiques auction held at Porter furniture store nets $240.

03-19-62 DR

1962

Coldwater High School students present Tibbits with a donation of $23.25.

03-20-62 DR

1962

03-21-62 DR

1962

Donation of 100 shares of US Steel stock (valued at approximately $7,000) is given to Tibbits by an anonymous
donor.
Coldwater Fortnightly Musical Club sponsors a kitchen tour to benefit Tibbits. Homemade bread will be sold from
each of seven homes included in the tour.
Block by block canvass of the city for donations; campaign led by Mrs. Dorothy Aitchison and Miss Margaret
Hayes.
Over the past week another 59 donors have contributed. To date $27,588.47 total has been collected; still need
approximately $27, 411.53 to succeed.
American Legion sponsors benefit for Tibbits, which nets $160 toward the theatre fund.

1962

Donations reach $36,000; campaign nears close.

04-07-62 DR

1962

City Council grants another 90–day extension to meet the $55,000 goal.

04-14-62 DR

1962
1962

The parking lot across from Tibbits has curbs and gutters laid and is now offered as a free parking lot for patrons.
Executive committee formed; engineering survey to be conducted using funds donated by the Sweet Adelines

05-18-62 DR
05-26-62 DR

1962
1962
1962

03-06-62 DR
03-07-62 DR
04-01-62 DR
04-03-62 DR

Burdick, 67

�Day

Date

Year

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

Thurs

June 07 1962

Fri

June 15 1962

Week
of
Sat

June 28 1962
Sept 01

1962

Week
of

Oct 29

1962

Thurs

Dec 6

1962

Wed

Dec 12

1962

group.
Engineers Vance Gray and Daniel Stolarski of Raymond E. Reese Associates of Toledo, OH examine Tibbits along
with local architect Jerry Fair.
“Tibbits Twist Night” benefit contest: Judged street dance sponsored by the Retail Division of the Chamber of
Commerce.
Engineers’ report comes back as structurally sound, with one minor exception—strengthening the live load
capacity in the stage area.
(Part of the) original hand-cut glass chandelier (presumably from Czechoslovakia) is found in Mr. &amp; Mrs. Fred
(Andy) Kaiser’s attic. They donate what they have back to the Tibbits—196 six-inch glass prisms, 53 three-inch
prisms, 25 feet of jewel crystal chains, nine pieces of inch and a quarter crystal discs in a lace pattern, 75 pieces of
¾ inch crystal circles, one large four inch crystal drop and an envelope of handmade wire hooks. Other chandelier
pieces are found stored in various attics all over the city.
A non-profit corporation for the Tibbits, consisting of reps of Coldwater organizations, is in process of being
formed. All donors are being asked to release the money to the Executive Tibbits Theatre committee so that work
can proceed.
Coldwater Committee for the Preservation of the Tibbits Opera House/ Tibbits Theatre Foundation Meeting: Most
donors agree to release money to the committee. Art Lyon &amp; Richard Birringer give legal help to form the
corporation as “Tibbits Theatre Foundation”. New officers Les Woodward, president; Robert Yingling, VP;
Margaret Hayes, treasurer; Franc Gay, secretary are elected.
Tibbits Opera Foundation is formed as an incorporation.

Mon

Dec 31

1962

Tax bill consigned to Tibbits Theater Foundation.

Tues

Jan 1

1963

Tibbits is sold to Tibbits Theater Foundation.

Fri

Jan 18

1963

Tues

May 07

1963

Nearly 100% of donors agree to release their money to the foundation. Only one person asks to have their money
returned, and 11 other donors have been contacted but haven’t responded yet.
Executive Board of the Tibbits Foundation meeting: Foundation board has been expanded to include more
members. Repairs are scheduled for July 10. Proposed fall opening. Problem: Additional $26,000 still needed.
Board can secure a loan for that at 6% interest, repayable over 3 years, but needs $40,000 in notes signed by

Source

06-07-62 DR
06-09-62 DR
06-16-62
06-28-62 DR
09-01-62 DR
04-12-64 DR

10-29-62 DR

12-06-62 TA

Michigan
Dept. of
Licensing
and
Regulatory
Affairs
Branch Co.
Tax Record
Branch Co.
Tax Record
01-18-63 DR
05-07-63 TA
05-17-63 DR

Burdick, 68

�Day

Date

Year

Tues

May 14

1963

Mon

June 3

1963

Wed
Tues
Fri
Tues
Tues

June 12
June 25
June 28
July 02
July 9

1963
1963
1963
1963
1963

Mon

July 15

1963

Tues

Aug 20

1963

Mon

Aug 26

1963

Tues
Fri

Aug 27
Sept 06

1963
1963

Sun

Sept 22

1963

Mon
Tues
Sun

Sept 23
Sept 24
Oct 13

1963
1963
1963

Mon

Oct 14

1963

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

reputable individuals…board is looking for 133 donors to sign notes payable $100/year for 4 years.
Executive Board of the Tibbits Foundation meeting: Mr. Yingling appointed as chairman to contract individual
contractors, Harris appointed as chairman of the Publicity committee, Mr. Stilson appointed as chairman of the
canvassing committee.
Executive Board of the Tibbits Foundation meeting: Update on pledges and names in the drive for funds. Board
shifts focus on all of Branch County for donation requests instead of just Coldwater.
Anonymous donation of $1,500. A number of people have agreed to sign notes for $400.
Executive Committee and Board of Directors meeting: Update on Fund Drive. Drive scheduled to close July 10.
Standard 9 foot concert grand piano is donated by Music Mart and Wayne Feller.
Fund drive is 1/3 toward goal: 35 persons have signed notes.
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board meeting: Stilson recommends extension for the drive to make it a success.
Update is given on electrical work, plumbing, roof, etc.
Proposal to have the Coldwater Board of Education accept ownership of the Tibbits in order to assure continuity
of operation.
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Meeting: President Woodward resigns due to demands of office; Mr. Yingling resigns
due to conflicting opinions. Stilson is nominated as president.
Fair &amp; Robinson Architectural Firm hired to make plans for the restoration of Tibbits. Plan is to RESTORE the
theater—not just renovate it.
Heating and sprinkler system engineers begin their work
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board meeting: Land contract will be paid off and the theater will be cleared as the
sole property of the Foundation. Applications from two people interested in directing summer stock are being
reviewed. McFarlane nominated as the new vice president.
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Secretary Franc Gay sends letter to the Branch County Board of Supervisors, the
Coldwater City Council, and Mayor Olen Fry petitioning the removal of current tax assessments and the tax roll.
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board meeting.
Roussey Construction Company refurbishes the dressing rooms.
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board meeting: Tax exemption notice has been received, sprinkler system has been
approved by the State Fire Marshal (and work should be completed in 4-5 weeks), and Michigan Chandelier Co.
would be glad to renovate the large ceiling chandelier. Publicity has begun for upcoming Roger Williams concert.
Work continues on wallpaper and paint, and Jerry Fair is working on plans for remodeling dressing rooms and
lounge/rehearsal areas in the basement. The Historical Society may be interested in establishing a museum in the
basement.
Coldwater Board of Public Utilities/ City of Coldwater agrees to absorb part of the cost involved in installing a

Source

05-14-63 TA

05-03-63 TA
06-12-63 DR
06-25-63 TA
06-28-63 DR
07-02-63 DR
07-09-63 TA
07-16-63 DR
08-20-63 TA
08-26-63 DR
08-26-63 DR
09-06-63 DR
09-06-63 TA
09-22-63 TA
09-23-63 TA
09-23-63 TA
10-13-63 TA

10-15-63 DR

Burdick, 69

�Day

Mid
Mon
Wed
Thurs
Fri
Week
of

Date

Year

Oct
Oct 21
Oct 23
Oct 24
Oct 25
Nov 05

1963
1963
1963
1963
1963
1963

Tues

Nov
Nov 12

1963
1963

Wed

Nov 13

1963

Tues
Wed

Nov 19
Nov 20

1963
1963

Wed

Nov 20

1963

SatSun

Nov
30- Dec

1963

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

sprinkler system. They will pay for the repair to sidewalks and streets made necessary by the installation. Tibbits
becomes a tax exempt center.
Reopening planned. (Doesn’t quite happen as planned? No further articles about it).
Roger Williams visits Tibbits to view the restoration work (He will present benefit concert in several days).
Roger Williams, famed pianist, to play benefit for Tibbits—at Coldwater High School gym.
Marquee on the front of Tibbits comes down.
Workmen dismantle the large electric Tibbits sign.
Tile on the exterior of Tibbits is removed, revealing the old brick and stone façade.

$3.50

Plastering, sprinkler installation, and boiler room added to the rear of the building.
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board meeting: The Trans-America Leasing Corp, who are financing the installation of
the heating, air-conditioning, and sprinkler system, request mortgage on the building as security. As such, special
meeting was needed to take a vote on releasing that information.
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board meeting: Discussion about leasing the equipment from the Trans-American
Leasing Corp. Another name change suggested, from “Tibbits Theatre Foundation” to “Tibbits Opera Foundation.”
Asbestos curtain should be in by Nov 20 in time for the Grand Old Opry. Addition has been built on the back of the
main building to house the heating plant and air-conditioning equipment.
Gas line is laid to the new heating equipment in the boiler room.
Grand Ole Opry show
Tibbits
Jimmy
**FIRST
Theater
Dickens,
PROFESSIONAL
Foundation
Shirley Ray,
PRODUCTION** No
Stonewall
heat! Temps at 32
Jackson,
degrees.
Jimmy
Newman,
Red Sovine,
and others
Mrs. Gertrude Harding donates $1,000 during opening night performance to go toward work on the theater
(especially the dressing room which will bear her name and that of Ross and Bess Milnes who directed many
shows there). A plaque is later hung on the door of the first dressing room since she was one of the “kickoff”
donations for the renovation.
Show Stoppers
musical variety
Sweet
*(show was moved to
show
Adelines

Source

08-26-63 DR
10-21-63 DR
10-01-63 DR
10-25-63 DR
10-25-63 DR
10-25-63 DR
11-05-63 DR
11-19-63 DR
11-12-63 TA

11-13-63 TA

11-19-63 DR
11-13-63 DR
11-14-63 DR
11-21-63 DR

11-21-63 DR
03-09-64 DR

11-11-63 DR
11-26-63 DR

Burdick, 70

�Day

Date

Year

Ticket
price

1

First
week
of
Tues

Dec

1963

Dec 10

1963

Sat

Dec 14

1963

Tues
Fri

Dec 17
Dec 20

1963
1963

Mon

Jan 6

1964

Tues

Jan 7

1964

Tues

Jan 14

1964

Adults
$1.50,
kids $1

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

Source

Roosevelt Auditorium
but since heat has
been fixed, it’s back
on at the Tibbits)
George Vaughn Lowther hired as manager and technical director for the Tibbits

11-27-63 DR

Tibbits Theatre Foundation Meeting: Vaughn Lowther’s duties explained( official title: Director of the Theatre,
assisting in helping the Players group get organized, directing them, look after things at the theatre and do public
relations and publicity). Tom MacFarlane resigns as vice president due to a new job in St. Joseph, Pat Patterson
fills that position. Phil &amp; Sallie Whitten donate insulation for the attic. Talk to rearrange seating to bring it up to
1,000 capacity, red velvet to drape the boxes, quote for wallpaper in progress, painting of ceiling to commence,
suggestion of adding some larger seats to accommodate larger people is given.
Jack and the
Fort Wayne Civic
Beanstalk
Theatre

12-10-63 TA

Rotary club voted to raise money to purchase a new stage curtain, estimated cost of it is $1600.
Community
Sweet
Christmas carol
Adelines and
sing
several local
church choirs
Soprano concert

12-06-63 DR

Doris Yarick

Foundation Board of Directors Meeting: Planning future presentations to be scheduled, wallpaper delivered soon
and installed. Work on the basement area which includes space for rehearsal, storage, and cultural center is
underway and will hopefully be completed by spring. Mention to book Chad Mitchell Trio but have it at the high
school because it’s a larger performance venue. Update on summer stock and the 70/30% split with the directors
for the operating expenses for the season.
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Report on talent booked, motion to certify Stilson as president for 5
years, with insurance to cover payment in case of death (per the request of the Leasing people).

12-06-63 DR
12-10-63 DR
12-12-63 DR
12-13-63 DR
12-16-63 DR
01-11-64
FWS
12-18-63 DR
12-16-63
DRs
12-21-63 DR
12-20-63 DR
01-03-64 DR
01-07-64 DR
01-07-64 TA

01-14-63 TA

Burdick, 71

�Day

Date

Year

Sat
Sat

Jan 18
Jan 25

1964
1964

Jan or
Feb

1964

WedThurs
Mon

Feb 5-6

1964

Feb 10

1964

Portions of the
Festival of Arts
numbers

Cardinal Choir, thespian
club, etc.

Tues

Feb 11

1964

Festival of Arts

Western Michigan
University choir

Wed

Feb 12

1964

Wed

Feb 19
Feb

1964
1964

Thurs
SatMon

1964
1964

FriSat

Feb 20
Feb 2224
Feb 2122

Coldwater Art Club Meeting: Members decided to sponsor project/donate paintings to be awarded during
Michigan Week, with funds benefiting Tibbits.
Call out/donation request for tables, lamps, vanity dressing tables, water pitchers, mirrors, etc. for backstage.
Notation that heating system, air condition system and sprinkler system were leased. Restoration is planned…to
date $91,000 has been raised with another $75,000 needed.
Tibbits Civic Theatre elects new officers (formerly Coldwater Players). Mention of the show Life With Father.
New red flocked wall covering/wallpaper is hung by Lyle Barry, Gerald Clark, and Wayne Harmon. The proscenium
arch is painted by Richard Dirschell.
The Pajama Game
Musical
Tecumseh
Players

Mon

Feb 24

1964

1964

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

*Benefit for Tibbits* Chad Mitchell Trio held at the high school gymnasium
“Come Close I’ll Give
Series of
American
you an Earful”
sketches from
Association of
* Benefit for Tibbits*
world famous
University
plays and novels Women
A Far Country or
Lansing Civic Players
Mary Mary planned
(neither ended up in
production)
Auditions for Life With Father, a Tibbits Civic Theatre show

Performers

Agnes
Moorehead

01-10-64 DR
01-22-64 DR
01-23-64 DR
01-24-64 DR
01-27-64 DR
12-06-63 DR

01-31-64 DR
01-29-64 DR
02-07-64 DR

Coldwater
Community
Schools arts
festival

The Lewis Art Collection, worth several hundred thousand dollars, is given to Tibbits. Plans to improve the

Source

02-09-64 DR
02-11-64 DR
02-15-64 DR
02-19-64 DR
02-20-64 DR
02-21-64 DR
02-22-64 DR
02-22-64 DR
02-24-64 DR
01-29-64 DR
02-10-64 DR
02-14-64 DR
02-19-64 DR
02-21-64 DR
02-22-64 DR
02-24-64 DR
02-24-64 DR

Burdick, 72

�Day

Date

Year

Mon
Tues
Tues

Feb 24
Feb 25
Feb 25

1964
1964
1964

Thurs

Feb 27

1964

Fri

Feb 28

1964

Early

March

1964

Fri

March
6
March
9

1964

Thurs

March
12

1964

Fri

March
13
March
14
March
18
March

1964

Mon

Sat
Wed
Thurs

1964

Ticket
price

students
$1, $4
reserved

1964
1964
1964

$2

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

basement and turn it into a museum/art gallery are announced.
Southern Michigan National Bank and Harold F. Stukey give “sizeable contributions.”
Coldwater Art Club donates seven original paintings to benefit Tibbits for the Michigan Week/Cultural Day event.
The Seven Ways of
Joseph
Love
Cotton,
Patricia
(Performance plays
Medina
to a full house,
grosses $3500 in
receipts.)
Substantial contributions made by Mr. &amp; Mrs. Earl C. Corwin &amp; Mr. and Mrs. William A Milnes, owners of the
Southern Michigan Grocer Co.
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: H.F. Stukey appointed as a new board member. Reports given on
upcoming events and financial stability.
two plays
Coldwater
Civic
Clebanoff Strings, 20
Concert
musician ensemble
Kai Winding
Jazz Septet
Concert

Source

02-24-64 DR
02-25-64 DR
01-29-64 DR
02-17-64 DR
02-19-64 DR
02-20-64 DR
02-21-64 DR
02-26-64 DR
02-28-64 DR
02-28-64 TA
01-09-64 DR
12-20-63 DR
02-28-64 DR
03-04-64 DR
03-04-64 DR
03-10-64 DR

TV producer Paul Henning (Beverly Hillbillies and Petticoat Junction) gives sizeable contribution because of letter
written by Mrs. Josephine Henning Beyer of Coldwater (daughter of Joseph Henning, second owner of Tibbits and
sister of Huldah (wife of John Jackson, the third owner of the Tibbits)) concerning the possibility they may be
related. She encloses information on the Tibbits restoration and he decides to donate.
Major contribution given by the Branch County Federal Savings and Loan Association.

03-12-64 DR

Spring Fashion
Chamber of
Show
Commerce
Sizeable contribution given by Rex T. Kiess, Coldwater jeweler, &amp; Mrs. Kiess.

02-17-64 DR
03-16-64 DR

University of Michigan
Glee Club

Concert

03-13-64 DR

03-18-64 DR
02-17-64 DR
03-12-64 DR

Burdick, 73

�Day

Date

Year

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

19

Fri-

March
27March

1964

1964

Thurs
-Sat

March
30
April 24

1964

$1 Thurs,
$1.50
Fri/Sat

Mon

April 6

1964

Free

Fri

April
10
April
12

1964

Mon

Sun

Tues

April

1964

1964

1964

Life With Father
Play
Tibbits Civic
(postponed)
Theatre
Al Parke provides mural decoration on the west and north walls of the lobby, about 500 square feet. Wayne
Harmon and his men surface the walls with canvas to take the oil painting. Jim Bryan, Bill Bobler and Walter
Johnson provide assistance in materials, rigging and décor details.
New curtain is installed. Flame-red velour, perfected matches the lighter red in the velour wallpaper. Curtain is
donated by the Rotary.
Naughty Nineties
Minstrel Show
Rotary

Concert

Music Mart of
Coldwater

Dave Nault,
organist

Source

03-16-64 DR
03-17-64 DR
03-18-64 DR
03-20-64 DR
03-19-64 DR
03-19-64 DR
03-28-64 DR
04-01-64 DR
02-28-64 DR
03-21-64 DR
03-23-64 DR
03-25-64 DR
03-26-64 DR
03-27-64 DR
03-30-64 DR
04-02-64 DR
04-03-64 DR
04-04-64 DR
04-04-64 DR

Sizeable donation by Mr. &amp; Mrs. G. Otis Pierce

Students
$1, GA
$2.50
and $5,
sponsors
$7.50
and $10

03-20-64 DR
03-23-64 DR
03-24-64 DR
04-07-64 DR
04-12-64 DR
04-14-64 TA

Bob Newhart and
The Outsiders
(does not break even
but comes close)

Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Suggestion for more publicity in nearby towns, giving editors of the

04-14-64 TA

Burdick, 74

�Day

Date

Year

Ticket
price

April
16-18
April
24
April
24

1964

Sat

April
25

1964

Mon
Sun

April 1? 1964
April
1964
26

Wed

1964

Fri

April
29
May 1

Sun

May 3

1964

Fri

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

papers complimentary tickets, and discounting student tickets. Notice that Chamber of Commerce and Service
Clubs in the area are having new signs erected at the entrance of Coldwater which will say “Home of the World
Famous Tibbits Theatre.”
Life With Father
play
Tibbits Civic
Theatre
Mrs. Alfred Parke (wife of mural painter) is guest speaker for the Coldwater Newcomers Club; tells them the
history of the Opera House.
variety show
Coldwater
High School

14

Thurs
-Sat
Week
of

Name of show/
lecture topic

1964
1964

$1
students,
$2.50-$4
tickets
$1.25
donation

Henry L. Scott Show

Comedy/Piano
Show

Vocal concert

Wayne King &amp; his
orchestra

Concert

Coldwater
Community
High School

04-09-64 DR
04-24-64 DR
03-20-64 DR
04-18-64 DR
04-20-64 DR
04-27-64 DR
04-09-64 DR
04-16-64 DR
04-17-64 DR
04-21-64 DR
04-24-64 DR
04-14-64 DR
04-25-64 DR
04-28-64 DR

Vaughn Lowther is guest speaker at the American Association of University Women April meeting.
Blue Angels Drum and
Drum &amp; Bugle
Bugle Corp
Festival / judged
concert
Michigan Gas Utilities Co. makes sizable contribution to restoration.

1964

$1
student,
$3 and
$5

Henry L.
Scott,
comicpianist

Source

04-16-64 DR
04-30-64 DR
05-02-64 DR

Douglas
Hoopingar
ner, Guy
Frizzell and
Waive
Wardwell
Wayne King
&amp; his
orchestra;
Jim Hayes &amp;
Nancy
Evans,

04-16-64 DR
04-22-64 DR
04-28-64 DR
04-30-64 DR
05-04-64 DR

Burdick, 75

�Day

Date

Year

Mon
Wed

May 4
May 6

1964
1964

Sat Sun

May 9
&amp; 10

1964

Tues

May 12

1964

Wed

May 13

1964

Thurs
Fri
Tues
Wed

May 14
May 15
May 19
May 20

1964
1964
1964
1964

Tues
Thurs

May 26
May 28

1964
1964

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

Source

vocalists

free

$1
students,
$1.50,
$2.50, $3

$1
students,
$2,
$2.50,
$3.50
$1, $2,
$2.50,
$3.50

Tibbits Foundation appoints Kenneth W. Kohn as associate producer of the ATF summer company
Band Concert
Coldwater
John
Community
Visosky
Schools
and Guy
Frizzell
Reynard the Fox
Ft. Wayne Children’s
Play
David
Theatre
Fisher

Coldwater
junior and
senior high
bands

Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Now have signed lease agreements with all summer stock people.
Walter Stump is announced as associate producer and production director for ATF. Concerns that the people
aren’t interested in children’s theatre (minimal attendance, low response to over 5,000 circulars that were given
to each child).
The Virginia Symphony
conductor
William
Penny
Hacker
Glenn Crane is announced as ATF’s producer.
Tibbits announces hiring of leading ingénue Kathy Zeller.
Coldwater Art Club draws winners of paintings donated as Tibbits benefit.
“Black Like Me”
Lecture

Summer stock box office opens- 20% discount for season ticket holders
Dance Show

John
Howard
Griffin,
author

Jose
Molina,
Spanish
Dance
Troupe

05-04-64 DR
05-05-64 DR

04-30-64 DR
05-05-64 DR
05-08-64 DR
05-11-64 DR
05-12-64 TA

04-30-64 DR
05-06-64 DR
05-11-64 DR
05-13-64 DR
05-14-64 DR
05-14-64 DR
05-15-64 DR
05-14-64 DR
04-30-64 DR
05-15-64 DR
05-21-64 DR

05-26-64 DR
04-30-64 DR
05-20-64 DR
05-22-64 DR
05-25-64 DR
05-27-64 DR

Burdick, 76

�Day

Date

Year

Thurs
Tues
Thurs

May 28
June 2
June 4

1964
1964
1964

Thurs
Sat
Sun
Mon

June 4
June 6
June 7
June 8

1964
1964
1964
1964

Tues

June 9

1964

Thurs
Mon
Tues

June 18
June 22
June 23
JuneSept

1964
1964
1964
1964

TuesSun

June
23-28

1964

Ticket
price

$1
donation

TuesThurs:
$2,
$2.50,
$3; FriSun:
$2.50,
$3, $3.50

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

Tom King announced as leading man for summer stock.
Board of Directors of Branch County Savings Bank gives large donation to Tibbits.
Directors of the American Theatre Festival ask for a host of items to be donated—cutting tables, chairs, filing
cabinets, Singer sewing machines, and desks.
Quincy Bank donates a sizeable check to Tibbits.
H.F. Stukey of Stukey Inn holds private reception for members for the ATF company and Tibbits board members.
Rest of the company arrives; rehearsals for ATF begin.
Variety Show /
Sweet
Mrs. America
Adelines
and the original
Mrs. America at
Tibbits
*Tibbits benefit *
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Jerry Fair shows sketches of the front of the building, shows plans to
restore the dome, windows, doors, balcony and reface the building at a cost of $15,000. The material for the
chandelier has been assembled and Rotary Club has agreed to pay $400 for material for the drapes.
Crystal chandelier has been rebuilt and will be returned to the Opera House within the next week to ten days.
Tibbits and local merchants give away tickets to summer shows as a promo.
Alfred Parke and Bill Petch construct a marquee on the façade of the theatre.
***American Theatre Festival (ATF) is the first-ever summer stock season at Tibbits. Directors changed with each
show; constants included Miss Tony Showalter as costume mistress, Sally Dunlap as costume designer, Jack
Shouse as set designer, and Walter Stump as lighting designer. Season Ticket Prices: Tues, Wed, Thur: $12.50,
$17.50, $21, $25; Fri, Sat, Sun: $17.50, $22.50, $27.50, $32.50.
Solid Gold Cadillac
American Theatre
Glenn
Irene
Festival
Crane
Belcher,
William
Walsh, Joel
Marsh,
Crane,
Kenneth
Kohn,
Charles

Source

05-28-64 DR
05-28-64 DR
06-02-64 DR
06-04-64 DR
06-05-64 DR
06-07-64 DR
06-07-64 DR
06-05-64 DR
06-08-64 DR

06-09-64 TA

06-18-64 DR
06-22-64 DR
06-23-64 DR
06-22-64 DR
07-17-64 DR
07-10-64 DR
05-26-64 DR
05-27-64 DR
06-16-64 DR
06-18-64 DR
06-22-64 DR
06-24-64 DR
06-26-64 DR

Burdick, 77

�Day

Date

Year

Tues Sun

June
30- July
5

1964

Thurs
TuesSun

July 2
July 712

1964
1964

Ticket
price

TuesThurs:
$2,
$2.50,
$3; FriSun:
$2.50,
$3, $3.50

TuesThurs:
$2,
$2.50,

Name of show/
lecture topic

The Pursuit of
Happiness

Company name

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

American Theatre
Festival

Type of event

Comedy/ Play

Walter
Stump

Performers

Hutchins,
Ruth
Chambers,
Tom King,
Kathy
Zeller,
Virginia
Marsh,
George
Vaughn
Lowther,
David
Higgins
Robert
Miller, Ruth
Chambers,
Glenn
Crane,
Kathy
Zeller, Tom
King,
William
Walsh,
David
Higgins,
Joel &amp;
Virginia
Marsh

Source

06-18-64 DR
06-23-64 DR
06-29-64 DR
06-30-64 DR
07-01-64 DR

07-02-64 DR
Substantial donation by the Board of Directors of the Branch County Savings Bank is made to Tibbits.
06-18-64 DR
The Man Who Came
American Theatre
Comedy / Play
Glenn
William
07-06-64 DR
to Dinner
Festival
Crane
Walsh,
07-07-64 DR
Walter
07-08-64 DR
Stump,
Irene
Burdick, 78

�Day

Date

Year

Ticket
price

$3; FriSun:
$2.50,
$3, $3.50

Wed
Tues

July 8
July 14

TuesSun

July 14- 1964
19

TuesSun

July 21- 1964
26

1964
1964

TuesThurs:
$2,
$2.50,
$3; FriSun:
$2.50,
$3, $3.50
TuesThurs:
$2,
$2.50,
$3; FriSun:
$2.50,
$3, $3.50

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

Belcher,
Sally
Dunlap,
Robert
Miller, Joel
&amp; Virginia
Marsh,
Ruth
Chambers,
George
Vaughn
Lowther
Producers of ATF request donation of two office desks, two long tables and a table saw for the productions.
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: President Stilson is authorized to contact Mr. Parke regarding
preparing a “graphic display to illustrate the point at which we have arrived in the restoration of the theatre, and
to illustrate or dramatize the projects that are to be done in the future.”
Under the Yum Yum
American Theatre
American Farce/
Robert
Virginia
Tree
Festival
Play
Miller
Marsh,
Kathy
Zeller, Tom
King, Glenn
Crane

Ten Nights in a Bar
room

American Theatre
Festival

Adapted as a
musical comedy
melodrama by
Walter Stump

Director,
Walter
Stump;
Choreogra
phy, Bob
Miller;
Pianists
Mrs. Roy
C.

Virginia
Marsh, Bob
Miller,
Irene
Belcher,
Kathy
Zeller, Ruth
Chambers,
William

Source

07-08-64 DR
07-14-64 TA

06-18-64 DR
07-11-64 DR
07-13-64 DR
07-14-64 DR
07-15-64 DR
07-16-64 DR

06-18-64 DR
07-11-64 DR
07-16-64 DR
07-18-64 DR
07-20-64 DR
07-22-64 DR
07-23-64 DR
07-24-64 DR

Burdick, 79

�Day

Date

Year

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Patterson
&amp; Doug
Hoopingar
ner;
Backdrop
design,
Alfred
Parke
Sat
TuesSun

July 25 1964
July 28- 1964
Aug 2

Fri

July 31

1964

Sat

Aug 1

1964

TuesSun

Aug 4-

1964

TuesThurs:
$2,
$2.50,
$3;
FridaySun:
$2.50,
$3, $3.50

Tues-

Quality Spring Products, Inc. gives major contribution to Tibbits.
Mister Roberts
American Theatre
Comedy-Drama/
Festival
Play

Irene
Belcher

Performers

Source

Walsh,
Glenn
Crane,
David
Higgins,
Joel Marsh,
Jeff Miller,
Tom King

Joel Marsh,
Robert
Miller, Sally
Dunlap,
William
Walsh, Tom
King, Glenn
Crane, Mick
Cochrane,
Ken Kohn,
David
Higgins,
Douglas
Hoopengar
ner, Jeffrey
Miller,
George
Spelvin
American Theatre Festival officials ask for help furnishing the company housing (located at 90 Division St) with
lamps, chairs, dressers, rugs, and other furniture.
A chauffeured Rolls Royce for an evening and tickets to one of the
Chamber of
ATF plays given away. Won by Clifford Foster; Rolls Royce belongs to Commerce
Mrs. &amp; Mrs. Richard Patterson.
Girls in 509
American Theatre
Comedy /
Kenneth
Robert

06-18-64 DR
07-27-64 DR
07-28-64 DR
07-29-64 DR
07-31-64 DR

07-31-64 DR
08-03-64 DR

06-18-64 DR
07-30-64 DR

Burdick, 80

�Day

Date

Year

9

Tues
TuesSun

Aug 11
Aug
11-16

Ticket
price

Thurs:
$2, 2.50,
3; FridaySun:
$2.50,
$3, $3.50

1964
1964

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

Source

Festival

Miller,
Irene
Belcher,
Ruth
Chambers,
George
Vaughn
Lowther,
Virginia
Marsh, Tom
King, David
Higgins,
Allison
Crockett,
Joel Marsh,
Jeffrey
Miller

08-03-64 DR

Tibbits Foundation Board Meeting
Picnic
American Theatre
Festival

Type of event

Political Farce/
Play

Drama / Play

Kohn

Walter
Stump

08-11-64 TA
06-18-64 DR
07-13-64 DR
07-16-64 DR
08-08-64 DR
08-11-64 DR
08-12-64 DR
08-14-64 DR

David
Higgins,
Kathy
Zeller,
Allison
Crockett,
Tom King,
Virginia
Marsh,
Ruth
Chambers,
William
Walsh,
Sharon
Doyle, Jerri
Parke,
Burdick, 81

�Day

Date

Year

Thurs

Aug 20

1964

TuesSun

Aug 18
– Aug
23

1964

Aug

1964

Mon

Aug 24

1964

TuesSun

Aug
25-30

1964

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

Jeffery
Miller
“Business Men’s Night.” Local business and professional men are planning to attend the show and an After-Glow
at Stukey’s Inn following the show.
The Seven Year Itch
American Theatre
Play
Glenn
Kathy
Festival
Crane;
Zeller, Bob
musical
Miller,
direction
Virginia
by Donna
Marsh,
Douglass
Timothy
Crane,
Mary Circle,
Allison
Crockett,
Sally
Dunlap,
Rosemary
King,
William
Walsh, Joel
Marsh
Kohn is approached by President Stilson about becoming a “Business Manager” for the Tibbits (with duties
outlined similar to Vaughn Lowther’s, who previously held the position of Theatre Manager). The compensation
from the Foundation will be $3-4000 per year, with supplementation from a part-time college teaching job at a
nearby college, totaling income to approx. $10,000/year. Kohn begins making arrangements to move to
Coldwater, and “mistakenly assumes that arrangements have been made for him to begin teaching in Sept at the
college.”
President Stilson sends a letter to Mr. Stukey (and cc’s the Board and various others) addressing personality
conflicts and perceived malicious attacks on Stilson by Stukey, concerns with finances and Stukey’s apparent
attitude of closing down the theatre if he is not paid for ATF meals/housing (even though Stilson was out of town
during that time).
Little Mary Sunshine
American Theatre
Musical comedy
Walter
Kathy Zeller
Festival
Stump
(with Lois

Source

08-11-64 TA
06-18-64 DR
08-14-64 DR
08-15-64 DR
08-17-64 DR
08-18-64 DR
08-19-64 DR
08-20-64 DR

01-06-65 TA

08-24-64 TA

06-18-64 DR
08-17-64 DR
08-22-64 DR

Burdick, 82

�Day

Date

Year

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

**Also added
matinee
performances Wed &amp;
Sat at reduced rates

TuesSun

Sept 16

1964

Wed

Sept 16

1964

(costumes
created by
David
Higgins,
who
worked
with a
prof.
Indian
dance
troupe for
3 years);
musical
direction
by
Thurman
&amp; Donna
Douglass;
Choreogra
phy by
Miller;
Sets by
Douglas
Saito
Walter
Stump

Performers

Source

Taylor for
matinees),
Don Circle,
David
Higgins,
Jack
Shouse,
Irene
Belcher,
William
Walsh,
Virginia
Marsh,
Glenn
Crane

08-24-64 DR
08-26-64 DR
08-27-64 DR
08-28-64 DR

06-18-64 DR
William
Walsh, Ruth 08-29-64 DR
08-31-64 DR
Chambers,
09-01-64 DR
Irene
09-03-64 DR
Belcher,
09-05-64 DR
Tom King
Stukey sends a letter to Stilson, replying to what was sent on 08-24-64. His points: Stilson shouldn’t have sent the 09-16-64 TA
letter to the entire board, the community should be given complete and accurate information, the money matter
of $3,000 that is owed to Stukey should be repaid by Crane, Kohn and Stump, and that he too has supported and
will continue to support the summer theatre group. He mentions that financial responsibility is needed.
Burdick, 83

Light Up the Sky

American Theatre
Festival

Comedy / Play

�Day

Date

Year

Tues

Sept 22

1964

Thurs
-Sat

Oct 1Oct 3

1964

Tues

Oct 6

1964

Wed

Oct 7

1964

Thurs
-Sat

Oct 810
*Oct
23

1964

Ticket
price

$8.50 for
four
concerts/
$2.12
each

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

Source

09-22-64 TA
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Kiwanis is granted permission to have travelogues at the Tibbits and
the board considers three professional fund-raising organizations to help complete the restoration project. The
ATF/summer stock did not turn a profit this summer (however, in exchange for the use of the facilities, they did
pay some $3500-4000 in utility bills and improvements like lighting and equipment, approximately $5,000 in
costumes and another $5000 in scenery which now belongs to the Foundation). The principals of ATF will be
staying the winter in Coldwater and plan to put on a series of plays in Tibbits this winter. A Tibbits Woman’s
Auxiliary has recently been formed, and they have addressed brochures to be mailed to the entire mailing list.
09-16-64 DR
Glass Menagerie
Tibbits Repertoire
(never showed?
Company, now formed
Mentions opening of by American Theatre
season as World of
Festival producers
Carl Sandburg in 1006-64 article)
10-6-64 TA
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting (special meeting): Ralph Little Of Burrill, Inc., a fundraising
organization, is hired to start a fundraising program on Monday Oct 12 at the cost of $9,000, with the amount to
be raised at $200,000. The Stan Getz Band scheduled for Oct 18 was cancelled since the ticket sales did not
warrant the cost of the show.
05-02-64 DR
La Boheme
Goldovsky Grand Opera Opera
Branch
Jerold
06-11-64 DR
Company
County
Siena,
10-08-64 DR
Community
Ronald
Concert
Holgate,
Association
Eugene
Green,
Shapleigh
Howell,
Carol
Courtman,
Linda
Newman.
10-06-14 DR
World of Carl
Tibbits Repertoire
Play
Walter
Stockton
Sandburg
Company
Stump;
Burns, Ruth 10-07-64 DR
10-08-64 DR
produced
Chambers,
10-09-64 DR
by Glenn
William
Crane
Walsh
Burdick, 84

�Day

Date

Year

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

Source

special
perform
ance
Tues

Oct 13

1964

Sat
Sat

Oct
Oct 17
Oct 17

1964
1964
1964

Sun

Oct 18

1964

Mon

Oct 19

1964

Fri

Oct 23

1964

Sat

Oct 24

1964

Wed

Oct 28

1964

Season
tickets
$5/ 6
shows

Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Woman’s Auxiliary is having a bake sale with funds raised to be used
to purchase a mimeograph machine for the theatre.
Delta Iota chapter of Beta Sigma Phi sorority has meeting; principal annual projects is ushering at the Tibbits.
Auditions for local children to appear in Tom Sawyer production.
Holiday in Quebec
Travelogue
Kiwanis

10-13-64 TA

Stan Getz &amp; his Jazz
Concert
Stan Getz
Quartet
(cancelled at 10-6-64
board meeting)
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Mr. Robb from Burrill, Inc (fundraising firm) is introduced and explains
how the fundraising drive will work. $66 was raised at the Auxiliary’s bake sale.
World of Carl
Tibbits Repertoire
Play
Walter
Stockton
Sandburg
Company
Stump;
Burns, Ruth
*Special
produced
Chambers,
performance for
by Glenn
William
presidents of local
Crane
Walsh
colleges and
universities
The Adventures of
Whithey Playmaker
3 Act Play
Tom Sawyer
Productions from Ft.
Wayne
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Mr. Robb explains the campaign chart, and the following
appointments were made: Roy Patterson, campaign director; A. G. Lyon (chairman), Ernest Luse, Russell Waldron,
Howard Snyder, listing committee; Fred Anderson Duane Davidson, Howard Teeter, Gerald Hensley, V. M Stilson,
leadership committee; Mrs. Alfred Morency, general gifts-women’s division; Duane Davidson, publicity chairman;
Jerri Parke, speaker’s bureau; Margaret Hayes, campaign treasurer. Margaret Hayes tenders her resignation as
treasurer of the Foundation as of 11-1-64. The TransAmerican Leasing Co. is owed $67,929.48. If payment is made

09-25-64 DR

10-07-64 DR
10-17-64 DR
10-15-64 DR
10-17-64 DR

10-19-64 TA
10-22-64 DR

10-14-64 DR
10-15-64 DR

Burdick, 85

�Day

Date

Year

Thurs
Tues

Oct 29
Nov 3

1964
1964

Tues

Nov 3

1964

WedFri

Nov 46

1964

Sat

Nov 7

1964

Mon

Nov 9

1964

Tues

Nov 10

1964

Ticket
price

Students
half price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

now, a savings of over $14,000 would occur (interest?). The Board votes to borrow $5000 from the Branch Co.
Savings Bank &amp; the Southern MI National Bank of Coldwater to finance the fundraising fee for Burrill, Inc.
Herb Shriner, nationally known stage, TV and radio star, visits Tibbits.
Tibbits Opera Foundation announces a $200,000 campaign with R.P. Pat Patterson as the general chairman of the
drive. Foundation wants to complete the remodeling and restoration of the theatre and museum and art center.
Monies will go toward debt retirement/loan on heating/air systems, restoration of the front of the building, new
electrical system, carpeting, seating, lower level lounges, rest rooms, museum, and misc. V. M. Stilson, president
of Tibbits Foundation announces Charles T. Marsh as publicity and PR man for Tibbits.
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Mr. Robb compares Tibbits to Stratford /Ontario Shakespearian
Festival, which has achieved international fame. Says the film The Stratford Story will be shown to the Foundation
and other service organizations in the future.
Candida
American Theatre
Play
Kathy
Festival/ Tibbits Rep Co.
Zeller,
Stockton
Burns,
William
Walsh, Ruth
Chambers,
Glenn
Crane
Hummon Sisters
Concert-ranging
Coldwater
Accompani Janet and
from religious
Ministerial
ment Guy
Mary
melodies to
Association &amp; Frizell
Hummon
show tunes
Tibbits Opera
Foundation
The Lombardo Years
Guy Lombardo &amp; his
Lombardo
Royal Canadians
Brothers
Carmen,
Lebert, &amp;
Victor; gust
singer Anita
Bryant
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: The film The Stratford Story is shown.

Source

10-31-64 DR
11-03-64 DR

11-03-64 TA

10-15-64 DR
10-29-64DR
10-31-64 DR
11-03-64 DR
11-04-64 DR
11-05-64 DR
11-06-64 DR

10-15-64 DR
10-17-64 DR
10-29-64 DR
11-06-64 DR
09-11-64 DR
09-17-64 DR
10-15-64 DR
11-07-64 DR
11-10-64 DR

11-10-64 TA

Burdick, 86

�Day

Date

Year

Thurs
Sat

Nov 12
Nov 14

1964
1964

Mon

Nov 16

1964

Thurs
- Fri

Nov
19-20

1964

Sat

Nov 21

1964

Tues

Nov 24

1964

Sat

Nov 28

1964

Ticket
price

Season
tickets
$5/ 6
shows

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

Source

Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting (special meeting): Reports on fundraising campaign given.
Hunza Land
Travelogue
Kiwanis

11-10-64 TA
10-15-64 DR
10-17-64 DR

Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting (special meeting): Reports on fundraising campaign given. Tibbits Fund
Drive is established with R.C. Patterson as general chairman and Mrs. Alfred G. Morency &amp; Wayne Feller as cochairmen of the gifts division.
Ondine
French drama/
Coldwater
Phyllis
Play: Senior Class High School
Coscarelly
and
Elwood
McClellan

11-10-64 TA
11-16-64 DR

Man &amp; Superman

Association of Producing
Artists, U of M.
professional theatre
group

Play

Set design
Kim Sados,
costm
design
Nancy
Potts

Richard
Woods, Ellis
Rabb,
Nancy
Marchand,
Paul
Spareer,
Donald
Mofat,
Rosemary
Harris
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Mr. Robb reports on the progress of the fundraising campaign,
Charles Bristol is voted is as new Treasurer of the Foundation with Margaret Hayes remaining as a board member.
The Sorcerer
U of M Gilbert &amp; Sullivan Opera/ ComedyDirector
Society
Melody
Allan
Schreiber,
Musical

10-15-64 DR
11-12-64 DR
11-14-64 DR
11-16-64 DR
11-17-64 DR
11-18-64 DR
11-19-64 DR
11-20-64 DR
09-25-64 DR
10-15-64 DR
11-17-64 DR
11-19-64 DR
11-30-64 DR

11-24-64 TA
09-25-64 DR
10-15-64 DR
11-25-64 DR
11-28-64 DR
11-30-64 DR

Burdick, 87

�Day

Date

Year

Sat

Nov 28

Fri
Mon

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

Source

1964

Trial by Jury

U of M Gilbert &amp; Sullivan
Society

John L.
Henkel

09-25-64 DR
10-15-64 DR
11-25-64 DR
11-28-64 DR
11-30-64 DR

Nov 27
Nov 30

1964
1964

Tues
Tues

Dec 1
Dec 1

1964
1964

Fri

Dec 4

1964

Tibbits Fund Drive workers have a second report meeting.
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting (special meeting): Fundraising report. Mr. Robb stresses the need for
more workers.
Tibbits Fund Drive Workers have meeting at Stukey’s Inn.
Duo-Pianists, The
Concert (second Branch
Teltschik
Teltschick Brothers
in series?)
County
brothers,
Community
Alfred &amp;
Concert
Herbert
Association
Mata and Hari
Satirical Dance &amp;
Pantomime

SatSun

Dec 5-6

1964

Happy Holidays Show

Tues

Dec 8

1964

Thurs

Dec 10

1964

Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Vote to extend the drive for capital funds for Tibbits indefinitely.
Theatre rental cost is discussed: $75 performance fee and $25 rehearsal fee charged for all local organizations, 6040 fee for outside organizations, free to/donation accepted from educational institutions unless they charge an
admission fee.
Glenn Miller
Ray
Orchestra
McKinley

One Act Opera/
Satirical Comedy

Variety Show

director
Prof.
Harold
Haugh,
Choreogra
pher Mrs.
Riecker

Sweet
Adelines

11-30-64 DR
11-30-64 TA
11-30-64 DR
11-11-64 DR
12-02-64 DR

09-11-64 DR
09-25-64 DR
11-11-64 DR
11-25-64 DR
12-05-64 DR
11-11-64 DR
12-01-64 DR
12-02-64 DR
12-03-64 DR
12-04-64 DR
12-07-64 DR
12-05-64 DR
12-08-64 TA

09-11-64 DR
09-25-64 DR

Burdick, 88

�Day

Fri

Date

Year

Ticket
price

Dec 11
Winter

1964
1964

FriSun

Dec 1113

1964

$3.50$2;
students
half price

Sun

Dec 13

1964

$1
adults;
under 16
75 cents
main
floor, 50
cents
balcony

Wed

Dec 23

1964

Fri
Wed

Dec 26
Dec 30

1964
1964

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Tibbits Fund Drive Meeting; Reports Requested.
A Hasty Heart
(replaced with Love
Out of Town, but
neither ever showed)
Dial M for Murder
American Theatre
Festival/ Tibbits Rep Co.

Rapunzel &amp; the Witch

American Theatre
Festival/ Tibbits Rep Co.

Type of event

Comedy / Play

Murder Mystery/
Play

Walter
Stump,
producer
Glenn
Crane

Children’s
Theatre/Play

Director
and
lighting
designer
Walter
Stump

Performers

Roger
Smith, Ed
(Kookie
Byrnes
Stockton
Burns,
Kathy
Zeller,
Walter
Stump,
Glenn
Crane
Stockton
Burns, Ruth
Chambers,
Kathy
Zeller, Bill
Walsh

V.M. Stilson sends letter to Board of Directors and resigns from the presidency and the Board of Directors of
Tibbits.
Mrs. Alfred G. Parke (Jenie Parke) sends her letter of resignation to Vice President Patterson.
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Resignations from V. M. Stilson, Jerri Parke and Winifred Morency.
Margaret Hayes made a motion to deny Mrs. Morency’s resignation, and she agreed to remain a member of the
board. Roy Patterson is named new president of the Tibbits Opera Foundation; Duane E. Davidson named vicepresident. Mr. Stukey donates the loan of $1,750 to the Foundation. Finances and financial program is discussed
(bank loans, local bills, Transamerica Corp. bill). Suggestion to put new locks on all the Theatre building doors with
the keys marked “do not duplicate”. Keys will only be given to qualified persons. Discussion on lease with the ATF,
but no action taken.

Source

11-25-64 DR
12-08-64 DR
12-03-66 DR
09-11-64 DR
09-25-64 DR

11-11-64 DR
11-24-64 DR
11-30-64 DR
12-03-64 DR
12-04-64 DR
12-07-64 DR
12-10-64 DR
12-11-64 DR
11-24-64 DR
11-30-64 DR
12-01-64 DR
12-07-64 DR
12-09-64 DR

12-24-64 DR
12-23-64 TA
12-26-64 TA
12-30-64 DR
12-30-64 TA

Burdick, 89

�Day

Date

Year

Thurs

Dec 31

1964

Tues

Jan 5

1965

Wed

Jan 6

1965

Thurs
-Sat

Jan 7-9

1965

Mon

Jan 11

1965

Tues

Jan 12

1965

Sat

Jan 16

1965

Tues

Jan 19

1965

Ticket
price

Adults
$2.50;
students
$1

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

Executive Board Meeting: Discussion of problems from 12-30 meeting, including: payment of $500 balance due to
Glenn Miller Band, change to three signatures on checks (president, VP and treasurer), and formation of new
committees (Finance- Dr. Harold J. Meier, chairman; House &amp; Properties- Sanford Jolley, chairman; Public
Relations- Peter Schwartz, chairman; Restoration- Jerry Fair, chairman). ATF contract discussed at a 5-year
contract with proper cancellation clause if it jeopardizes the theatre, plus inventory taken before and after the
season.
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting at Stuckey’s Inn: Vote for Mr. Roussey to fill the hole in the alley for
$125, and that the lease/contract for the ATF be prepared by an attorney.
Mrs. Morency sends another letter of resignation to the board. Kenneth Kohn sends a letter to President
Patterson regarding his employment as the theatre manager: He was never told he was being dismissed as the
manager, hasn’t been paid what had been promised, has moved his family to Coldwater and as such his wife has
given up her job and they have lost money because of it, and he has just heard that the board is looking for a
qualified and experienced theatre manager (and he seems offended that his extensive qualifications are being
overlooked by the board). Expresses disappointment with his last 3 months of “employment”, at which he has
worked sometimes over 80 hours a week, and has at most received $125 total. Furthermore, he is upset by the
rumors around town of his “inefficiency as a manager”, which is making it hard for him to secure another job.
*On the Marquee
American Theatre
Play
schedule but never
Festival/ Tibbits Rep Co.
played
Rubinoff &amp; his Violins
Concert
Rubinoff

Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Mrs. Winifred Morency resigns. Some bookings need to be negotiated
on price or will have to be cancelled. Those already cancelled include Entrances &amp; Exits, Hal Holbrook, Basil
Rathbone, and Caldonia. Executive Committee to now meet every Wed and the Foundation board to meet every
Tuesday until further notice.
Exits &amp; Entrances
(cancelled by 01-1265 meeting)
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Vote to take out a loan for $3500 to pay $1500 to Woody Herman and

Source

12-30-64 TA
12-31-64 TA
01-05-65 DR

12-30-64 DR
01-05-65 TA
01-06-65 TA

12-12-64 DR

12-12-64 DR
12-31-64 DR
01-06-65 DR
01-07-65 DR
01-08-65 DR
01-11-65 DR
01-12-65 DR
01-12-65 TA

12-12-64 DR
01-12-65 TA
01-19-65 TA

Burdick, 90

�Day

Date

Year

Sat

Jan 23

1965

Tues

Jan 26

1965

Sat

Jan 30

1965

Tues
TuesWed

Feb 2
Feb 2-3

1965
1965

Tues

Feb 9

1965

Wed

Feb 10

1965

Ticket
price

$1.50

Season
tickets
$5/ 6
shows

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

$4,

Performers

$2000 to pay Roger Williams. The loan will be signed by 5 board members, each liable for $700 of the loan. The
proceeds of these concerts will be used to repay the loan. Seaman Office Supply will take back the purchased
mimeograph machine ($459), apply the price on the current account, and rent the machine for $25. Discussion
about the possibility of Olivet College providing funds for a theatre manager in exchange for use of the Tibbits for
rehearsals in connection with an adult education program.
Taming of the Shrew MSU Players
Coldwater
Frank
Frederick
High School
Rutledge
De Santis,
chapter of the
Chilton
Thespian
Cunningha
Society
m, Terry
Williams,
Catherine
Mann
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Olivet College agrees to pay half of the salary for a theatre manager,
which would be $50 per week toward the director’s salary, provided another $50 per week can be secured from
some other source. The agreement would take place in February and involve the Players Group, Adult Education,
and Teenage Activities. U of M requests payment of $700 for the Gilbert and Sullivan performance. 900 brochures
advertising coming attractions are ready to mail out. Mr. Lyon is preparing the lease agreement with ATF.
Pan-Am Highway
Travelogue
Kiwanis

Sweet Adelines donate $250 to the Tibbits.

free

Type of event

Source

12-12-64 DR
01-04-65 DR
01-05-65 DR
01-14-65 DR
01-15-65 DR
01-19-65 DR
01-20-65 DR
01-21-65 DR
01-23-65 DR
01-25-65 DR
01-26-65 TA

10-17-64 DR
01-29-65 DR

02-02-65 DR
01-30-65 DR
02-01-65 DR
02-04-65 DR
02-09-65 DR
02-09-65 TA

Susan Lowe
Coldwater
Cooking School &amp; Daily
Fashion Show
Reporter
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Cancelled The Littlest Circus but the company wants $100 to cover
expenses. Motion to only charge 50 cents to students for the Woody Herman concert. Replastering and painting
of the ceiling has been completed; work has been donated by Legg Lumber. The rear portion of the ceiling plaster
has been removed, replastered and painted at $2300. Estimated cost of finishing the repair work is between $56,000, as opposed to the estimated $20,000 by contractors.
01-29-65 DR
Woody Herman
Concert
Woody
Burdick, 91

�Day

Date

Year

Ticket
price

$2.50;
students
$1
WedThurs

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

“Herd”

Performers

Source

Herman

02-02-65 DR
02-04-65 DR
02-09-65 DR
02-10-65 DR
02-11-65 DR
02-10-65 DR

1965

Community theatre for Branch Co., named the Branch County Players, is being organized.

Mon

Feb 10
-11
Feb 15

1965

09-25-64 DR
01-12-65 TA

Tues

Feb 16

1965

Sat

Feb 27

1965

Mark Twain Tonight
Lincoln Center
Hal
(cancelled by 01-12Repertory Co.
Holbrook
65 meeting)
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Reports a loss of $500 on the Woody Herman concert even though
1078 tickets are sold.
The New Holland
Travelogue
Kiwanis

SunMon

Feb 28,
March
1

1965

Fine Arts Festival

02-04-65 DR
02-24-65 DR
02-25-65 DR
02-27-65 DR
03-02-65 DR

Sun

Feb 28

1965

Tues

March
2
March
7

1965

Sun

1965

Season
tickets
$5/ 6
shows
free

Variety show,
Coldwater
Gretchen
including One
High School
Gottschalk,
Act Drama The
Thespians,
Linda
Wall, choir,
Symphony
Hammard
band
band, choir
Informational community meeting held; 75 citizens come to hear a report on the 5-year financial program for the
Tibbits. Report on upcoming programing. Sanford Jolly, chairman of House and Staging, reports that two intercom
systems have been installed with the hopes that three more can be installed. Roof repair is needed as it is leaking
above the stage. The ceiling over the balcony has been completed and was donated by Louie Legg. Last year’s
summer musicals and “sexy” plays were the best in attendance, so the Board is looking for similar shows to do this
summer. New highway is being constructed east of the city which will allow for more traffic in less time.
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Meetings will now be held monthly in the future, with the Executive
Board meeting each Wednesday.
Roger Williams &amp; his
Concert – world
Roger
orchestra
renowned pianist
Williams,
the Dutton
ensemble

02-16-65 TA
10-17-64 DR

03-02-65 DR
02-28-65 TA

03-02-65 TA
09-25-64 DR
02-18-65 DR
02-22-65 DR
02-25-65 DR

Burdick, 92

�Day

Date

Year

Thurs
- Fri

March
18 -19

TuesWed

March
16-17

Thurs

March
18

1965

Sat

March
20
March
20

1965

Sat

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Pioneer, Go Home

1965

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Play / Comedy

Coldwater
Junior class

Auditions for county high schools’ production of Bye Bye Birdie
(auditions at Roosevelt Auditorium, show at Tibbits)

1965

Phyllis
Coscarelly

Performers

Jack Wolf,
Terry Tarr,
Stephanie
Shank,
Carolyn
Gillespie,
Becky Pratt,

Educators
throughou
t the
county
and from
Olivet
College,
plus Glenn
Crane,
Walter
Stump
President Patterson sends a letter to Mr. Burrill requesting that some of the service fee be returned to the
Foundation since the fundraiser was a total flop. Instead of the estimated $200,000 expected, only $20,000 is
received in donations, $11,000 of which is paid to Mr. Burrill’s company.
Auditions at Tibbits for the adult roles of Bye Bye Birdie.

Season
tickets
$5/ 6

The World of
California

Travelogue

Kiwanis

Source

02-26-65 DR
03-01-65 DR
03-02-65 DR
03-03-65 DR
03-04-65 DR
03-05-65 DR
03-08-65 DR
02-18-65 DR
03-11-65 DR
03-13-65 DR
03-15-65 DR
03-16-65 DR
03-17-65 DR
03-18-65 DR
03-19-65 DR
03-12-65 DR
03-16-65 DR

03-18-65 TA

03-20-65 DR
10-17-64 DR

Burdick, 93

�Day

Date

Year

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Sun

March
21
March
21

1965

Tibbits Foundation Fund Drive coffee meeting.

1965

Littlest Circus
(cancelled as of 2-965 meeting)

March
26
March
26
March
28

1965

`Tibbits Board Meeting

1965

Calendonia

1965

Lucille Kailer, lyric
coloratura soprano

Concert

Mon

March
29

1965

Cancer Crusade
kickoff meeting

Meeting

Sat

April 3

1965

Tues

April 6

1965

Performers

Source

shows

Sun

Fri
Fri
Sun

03-19-65 DR
09-25-64 DR
02-09-65 TA

Miniature,
magical carnival
in music; dance
&amp; pantomime

03-26-65 DR
09-25-64 DR

Singers &amp; dancers of
Scotland

**to benefit Hospital
Auxiliary**

Spring Style /
Fashion Show

Branch
County
Community
Concert
Association
Branch Co.
Cancer
Society
Coldwater
Daily
Reporter and
the Coldwater
Chamber of
Commerce

03-24-65 DR

03-30-65 DR

Kenneth
Miller and
Arlene
Weston,
chairmen

Tibbits Foundation ANNUAL MEETING: Officers for the following year will be Roy Patterson, president; Duane
Davidson, Vice President; Rae Kleindinst, Recording Secretary; Chas Bristol, Treasurer; Dorothy Aitchison,
Corresponding Secretary. Dr. Meier reports on finances and membership, stating 150 members needed and

03-06-65 DR
03-23-65 DR
03-24-65 DR
03-25-65 DR
03-26-65 DR
03-27-65 DR
03-29-65 DR
03-30-65 DR
03-31-65 DR
04-01-65 DR
04-02-65 DR
04-03-65 DR
04-06-65 TA

Burdick, 94

�Day

Date

Year

Thurs
Thurs
-Sat

April 8
April 810

1965
1965

MonThurs
Thurs
-Fri
Sat

April
12-15
April
22-23
April
24

Tues

1965

Sat

April
27
April
30
May 1

Sun

May 2

1965

Fri

Ticket
price

$1 Thurs,
$1.50 FriSat

Name of show/
lecture topic

1965

Minstrel Show

HOLY WEEK services

Church service

Season
tickets
$5/ 6
shows

1965

Tues

May 4

1965

Rotary

Performers

Source

04-07-65 DR
02-18-65 DR
03-19-65 DR
04-06-65 DR
04-07-65 DR
04-09-65 DR
04-09-65 DR

Duane
Davidson

02-18-65 DR

Coldwater
High School

Basil Rathbone
Dramatic
(cancelled as of 01presentation
12-65 meeting)
Tibbits Sustaining Membership drive nears top; within 23 members of reaching the goal of 150 memberships
(members pledge $200 payable per year for 5 years).
American Theatre Festival signs 5-year lease agreement with Tibbits Opera Foundation to continue summer stock
through 1969.
African Wildlife in
Travelogue
Kiwanis
Action

09-25-64 DR
01-12-65 TA

Young American
Artists in Concert

04-21-65 DR
04-23-65 DR
04-27-65 DR
05-01-65 DR
05-03-65 DR

*benefit for Tibbits*

May 3

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Variety Show

1965

Mon

Type of event

currently at 99.
Tibbits Finance Board Meeting
Roaring 20s

1965

1965

Company name

Concert

Artists from
Michigan
colleges
with
featured
artist Dzidra
Bonfiglio

An Evening with
Victor Herbert &amp;
Harold Arlen
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Bye Bye Birdie proceeds will be used to repair the roof. The Finance

04-27-65 DR
04-30-65 DR
10-17-64 DR

09-25-64 DR

05-04-65 DR

Burdick, 95

�Day

Date

Year

Ticket
price

Sun

May 9

1965

$1

TuesSat

May
18-22

1965

Adults
$1.50,
students
$1

Sun

May 23

1965

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

Source

05-04-65 TA
Committee wants immediate action toward hiring a Theatre Manager, with a proposed salary of $300 a month.
Barbara Bernahl claims $66 per week for services in the box office, which the board thought was too much. It was
their understanding that she was to only be reimbursed the cost of her babysitter. The bill is sent to Mr.
Lyon/legal counsel for discussion. Elsie Elliott no longer wants to work box office, and Barbara Worden is
suggested to take over. Tibbits Sustaining Membership drive nears top; within 15 members of reaching the goal
of 150 memberships (members pledge $200 payable per year for 5 years). Cardinal Choir and Fine Arts
Department presents Tibbits with a $50 donation in appreciate for free use of the Tibbits for school-directed
functions.
05-05-65 DR
Jazz Concert (17
Wayne
Brenda
piece stage
Feller
Davis, Tom 05-06-65 DR
05-07-65 DR
band)
Reaume,
05-10-65 DR
Chuck
Stokes,
John
Clayton,
The Malibus
04-01-65 DR
Bye Bye Birdie
Musical
Olivet College Walter
05-12-65 DR
&amp; Branch
Stump,
05-13-65 DR
County Area
director;
05-14-65 DR
Schools
Glenn
05-15-65 DR
Crane,
05-17-65 DR
producer;
05-18-65 DR
Mrs.
05-19-65 DR
William
Corey,
Choreogra
phy; Mrs.
Dan
Shelles,
Costumes
04-19-65 DR
Jerry Gerard
Concert; organist Branch
Jerry
05-20-65 DR
(originally
County
Gerard
scheduled),
Community
(cancelled?) 05-24-65 DR
Bene W. Hammel
Concert
, Bene
Burdick, 96

�Day

Date

Year

Sat
Thurs
Sat
Tues

May 29
June 3
June 5
June 8

1965
1965
1965
1965

Thurs
Thurs

June 10 1965
June 10 1965

TuesSat

June
15-19

Wed
Thurs

June 16 1965
June 24 1965

1965

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

Association
Hammel
Bye Bye Birdie gives $1,000 donation to Tibbits.
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting
Summer cast starts arriving; company housing is at 90 Division St.
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: New office secretary Mrs. Hillyar is introduced. President Patterson
reports that he has written letters to both Barbara Bernahl and Ken Kohn regarding their claims of services,
offering to settle at $500 each ($250 paid this year and $250 next year) in addition to the $125 which they have
already been paid. Present membership is 145. Executive and Finance committee reported that a secretary and
custodian is all the Theatre needs for personnel at this point. Rotary gifts $400 to Tibbits.
Tibbits Executive Board Meeting
Larry Life named season choreographer; Larry Carrico Jr named season stage manager, technical director, scene
designer, and rigger.
The Fantasticks
American Theatre
Musical
Walter
Ann
Festival
Romance
Stump,
Breniser,
director;
Milt Bailey,
Carrico,
James
scenic
(Mike)
design; Bill Bloom, Bob
Kreutzberg Sphatt,
,
William
costumes; Walsh,
Skip
Larry Life,
Frizzell,
Phil Goble,
musical
Larry
director
Carrico,
Marge
Foley
Local merchants give away tickets for summer theatre.
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: New office secretary Mrs. Hillyer has resigned. Materials for the roof
repair have been delivered, work to begin soon. Mr. Kohn has sent back a letter accepting the settlement offer
for back salary. Payments to Trans-America Leasing Co. haven’t been made since last fall and are in arrears in the
amount of $12,000. Loan refinancing and payment schedule of $1045 a month is recommended, to which TransAmerica would excuse the penalty. Membership is at 157.

Source

05-29-65 DR
05-28-65 DR
06-05-65 DR
06-08-65 DR

06-09-65 DR
06-10-65 DR
04-08-65 DR
06-08-65 DR
06-09-65 DR
06-10-65 DR
06-14-65 DR
06-15-65 DR
06-16-65 DR
06-17-65 DR
06-19-65 DR

06-16-65 DR
06-24-65 TA

Burdick, 97

�Day

Date

Year

TuesSat

June
22-26

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

Source

1965

Come Blow Your
Horn

American Theatre
Festival

Robert
Sphatt,
William
Walsh, Phil
Goble,
Laura
Seager,
Lynda
Arnberg,
Fay
Command

04-08-65 DR
06-10-65 DR
06-18-65 DR
06-21-65 DR
06-22-65 DR
06-23-65 DR
06-24-65 DR

Sat

June 26 1965

Monk Watson’s
Magic Show

TuesSat

June
29- July
3

1965

Abie’s Irish Rose

American Theatre
Festival

Sat

July 3

1965

The Wizard of Oz

Olivet College Children’s
Theatre

Adults
$1,
children
.75

Type of event

Play –
Contemporary
Sex Comedy

Children’s
Matinee- live
magic
Play- Comedy

Children’s
Matinee -

Glenn
Crane

06-25-65 DR

Walter
Stump

Miss Bobbi
Waite &amp;
Mrs. Paul
Bisling,
directors;
Kathryn
Haefild,

Robert
Sphatt,
Laura
Seager,
William
Walsh, Phil
Goble, Fay
Command,
Larry Life,
Marc
Baskind,
Glenn
Crane

04-08-65 DR
06-10-65 DR
06-25-65 DR
06-26-65 DR
06-28-65 DR
06-29-65 DR
06-30-65 DR
07-01-65 DR

06-25-65 DR
06-30-65 DR
07-01-65 DR

Burdick, 98

�Day

Date

Year

TuesSat

July 610

1965

Tues

July 13

1965

TuesSat

July 13- 1965
17

TuesSat

July 20- 1965
24

Ticket
price

Matinees
Wed &amp;
Sat;
adults
$1.65
and up,
children
.80 Wed,
$1.30 Sat

Name of show/
lecture topic

The Music Man

Company name

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

American Theatre
Festival

Musical

Performers

musical
director
Walter
Stump

Glenn
Crane, Ann
Breniser,
Fay
Command,
locals Mitch
McCullough
&amp; Cindy
Weidner,
Sweet
Adelines
chorus as
townspeopl
e
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Larry Carrico is interviewed for the Theatre Manager position. Further
discussion to occur with him to come to agreement of salary. Women’s Chamber of Commerce offers to usher the
winter season. Mr. Bryan reports that roof is nearly complete and new system of locks has been installed.
**Music Man is held over another week **

The Drunkard

American Theatre
Festival

Type of event

Melodrama,
adapted
musically by
Walter Stump

Walter
Stump,
director;
Thurman
Douglass &amp;
Guy
Frizzell,
musical
directors;

Philip
Goble,
William
Walsh,
Robert
Sphatt,
William
Dowton,
Milton

Source

04-08-65 DR
06-10-65 DR
07-02-65 DR
07-03-65 DR
07-06-65 DR
07-07-65 DR

07-13-65 TA

07-08-65 DR
07-09-65 DR
07-10-65 DR
07-11-65 DR
07-13-65 DR
07-14-65 DR
04-08-65 DR
06-10-65 DR
07-09-65 DR
07-16-65 DR
07-19-65 DR
07-20-65 DR
07-21-65 DR
07-22-65 DR

Burdick, 99

�Day

Date

Year

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

William
Kreutzberg
, costumes

TuesSat

July 27- 1965
30

The Happy Time

American Theatre
Festival

TuesSat

Aug 37

My Fair Lady

American Theatre
Festival

1965

Play: Comedy

Glenn
Crane

Walter
Stump

Performers

Source

Bailey, Larry
Life, Glenn
Crane,
Charles
Hutchins,
Guy Frizzell,
Ann
Breniser,
Fay
Command,
Laura
Seager,
Charlotte
Button,
Brenda
Davis,
Margaret
Foley,
Thurman
Douglass
04-08-65 DR
Craig
06-10-65 DR
Davidson
07-23-65 DR
(local),
07-24-65 DR
Larry Life,
07-26-65 DR
Kenneth
07-27-65 DR
Kohn,
07-28-65 DR
Robert
07-29-65 DR
Sphatt,
William
Walsh, Fay
Command
04-08-65 DR
Ann
06-10-65 DR
Breniser,
07-30-65 DR
Glenn
Burdick, 100

�Day

Date

Year

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

Source

Crane,
William
Walsh,
Phillip
Goble

07-31-65 DR
08-02-65 DR
08-03-65 DR
08-04-65 DR
08-05-65 DR

Thurs
MonSat

Aug 5
Aug 914

1965
1965

Tibbits Board Meeting (?)
**My Fair Lady is held over another week **

Tues

Aug 10

1965

TuesSat

Aug
10-14

1965

Thurs
TuesSat

Aug 12
Aug
17-21

1965
1965

TuesSat

Aug
17-21

1965

Tibbits Foundation Board Meeting: Patterson, Davidson and Heikkinen visited U of M to conference regarding
financial aid from the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. They were advised to expand the Tibbits
programming into all types of art and once that is in effect, they would work with Tibbits in creating a proposal.
Congress is also presently reviewing a bill which might offer additional financial help. Larry Carrico has officially
been hired as Theatre Manager, to start Sept 1 at a salary of $300 per month for 10 months. He has also signed a
contract to teach at Lakeland School, so will divide his time between the two. Negotiation with Transamerica
Leasing Corp. has led to a modified agreement (at which point delinquent back balance is $16,000). The
Foundation can pay $8,000 to become current, and then no additional interest will accrue as long as TLC is paid
$1089 per month.
Sunday in New York
American Theatre
(originally scheduled, Festival
cancelled since My
Fair Lady is held
over)
Tibbits Executive Board Meeting
On Borrowed Time
American Theatre
(originally scheduled, Festival
but changed to Mary,
Mary?)
Mary, Mary
American Theatre
Adult comedy
William
Joel and
Festival
Walsh
Virginia
Marsh,
Larry Life,
Phillip

08-03-65 DR
08-09-65 DR
08-10-65 DR
08-13-65 DR
08-06-65 DR
08-10-65 TA

04-08-65 DR
06-10-65 DR

08-06-65 DR
04-08-65 DR
06-10-65 DR

07-09-65 DR
08-10-65 DR
08-11-65 DR
08-12-65 DR
08-13-65 DR
08-16-65 DR

Burdick, 101

�Day

Date

Year

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

Source

08-17-65 DR
08-18-65 DR
08-19-65 DR
08-20-65 DR
04-08-65 DR
Oklahoma
American Theatre
Musical
Walter
Ann
08-17-65 DR
Festival
Stump,
Breniser,
08-21-65 DR
musical
Milton
director
Bailey, Larry 08-23-65 DR
08-24-65 DR
Thurman
Life,
08-25-65 DR
Douglas,
Charlotte
08-26-65 DR
choreogra Button,
08-27-65 DR
pher Larry William
Life
Walsh, Phil
Goble, Lee
Treat,
Glenn
Crane, Sally
Carrico.
08-24-65 DR
Tibbits Executive Board Meeting
American Theatre Festival presents awards to two young Coldwater people for helping the company the past two 08-30-65 DR
summers. Brad Green receives the Outstanding Apprentice of the Year award; Charlotte Button, actress, received
the other award.
04-08-65 DR
The Moon is Blue
American Theatre
06-10-65 DR
(originally scheduled, Festival
cancelled since
Oklahoma is held
over)
08-31-65 DR
*Oklahoma is held over for a second week*
09-01-65 DR
09-04-65 DR
09-07-65 DR
09-10-65 DR
Larry Carrico is hired to teach English at Lakeland School.
09-10-65 DR
Music! Magic! And
Magic &amp; Comedy
Monk
09-11-65 DR
Mirth!
show
Watson

Goble,
Laura
Seager

TuesSat

Aug
24-28

1965

Thurs
Mon

Aug 26
Aug 30

1965
1965

TuesSat

Aug
31Sept 4

1965

TuesSat

Aug
31Sept 4

1965

Fri
Sun

Sept 10
Sept 12

1965
1965

free

Burdick, 102

�Day

Date

Year

Tues

Sept 21

1965

Sat
Thurs
Tues

Sept 23
Sept 30
Oct 5

1965
1965
1965

Ticket
price

Reserved
$3.75,

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Total attendance of summer stock was 14,137 with gross box office
sales at $30,865. Mrs. Bernahl has denied the Foundation’s offer to settle and has threatened to sue. The board
decides to hold the matter of Bernahl’s claim in abeyance. New rental fees are created based on revenue of the
program.
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting
Wayne King &amp; his
Concert
Wayne King
Orchestra

General
admission

$2.50

Sat

Oct 9

1965

Tues

Oct 12

1965

Thurs
Wed
Sat

Oct 21
Oct 27
Oct 30

1965
1965

Sat

Nov 6

1965

$5
adults,
$3
students

Adults
$1, kids
75 cents

Byways of Britain

Travelogue

Kiwanis

Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Profit from the Wayne King performance is $967.78. Sales tax
exemption is sought. Community Concert Board feels that the new rental fees are too high, but taking into
account the cost of operation, the facilities, etc., it is an appropriate fee.
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting
Tibbits Executive Committee Meeting
Two Go Dancing
Ballet/ Classical
Branch
dance concert
County
Community
Concert
Association
Pinocchio
Reed Marionettes
Puppet show
Edith and
Robin Reed

Source

09-13-65 DR
09-17-65 DR
09-21-65 TA

09-17-65 DR
09-29-65 DR
09-16-65 DR
09-21-65 DR
09-22-65 DR
09-24-65 DR
09-27-65 DR
09-28-65 DR
10-01-65 DR
10-06-65 DR
10-06-65 DR
10-08-65 DR

10-07-65 DR
10-12-65 TA
10-18-65 DR
10-27-65 DR
10-04-65 DR

10-22-65 DR
10-28-65 DR
10-29-65 DR
11-01-65 DR
11-02-65 DR

Burdick, 103

�Day

Date

Year

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

Source

11-04-65 DR
11-06-65 DR
11-08-65 DR
Mon

Nov 8

1965

Tues

Nov 9

1965

Thurs
Fri
Thurs
Thurs
- Fri

Nov 11
Nov 12
Nov 18
Nov
18-19

1965
1965
1965
1965

Sat

Nov 20

1965

Sun

Nov 28

1965

Reserved
$3.75,
General
Admission

$2.50

Sat-

Dec 4-5

1965

Adults

Michael Church,
Lecture-Art
University of Michigan
College of Architecture
&amp; Design
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Michael Church of the University Extension Service of Fine Arts of the
State of MI is interested and willing to help the newly appointed Arts Council. Carrico reports that it was necessary
to have three performances for Pinocchio, and that profit for the show was $434.84.
Tibbits Executive Committee Meeting
Tibbits Meeting
Tibbits Executive Meeting
Noah
Play
Coldwater
Phyllis
High School
Coscarelly,
senior class
student
director
Carolyn
Gillespie
Concert - Piano
Branch
Richard
County
Cass
Community
Concert
Association
Womenfolk
Folk singers/
Tibbits Opera
Jean Amos,
recording artists Foundation
Leni
and Arts
Ashmore,
Council
Barbara
Cooper,
Judy Fine,
Joyce James
Sing Americana

Musical Review

Sweet

11-05-65 DR
11-09-65 TA
11-10-65 DR
11-10-65 DR
11-16-65 DR
11-12-65 DR
11-15-65 DR
11-18-65 DR
11-19-65 DR

10-29-65 DR
11-15-65 DR
11-22-65 DR

10-28-65 DR
11-10-65 DR
11-17-65 DR
11-20-65 DR
11-23-65 DR
11-24-65 DR
11-26-65 DR
11-27-65 DR
11-29-65 DR
10-13-65 DR

Burdick, 104

�Day

Date

Year

Sun

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Adelines

$1.50,
children
75 cents

Wed
Thurs

Dec 15
Dec 16

1965
1965

Sat

Dec 18

1965

Sat

Dec 18

1965

Thurs

Dec 30
Jan 11

1965
1966

Sat

Jan 15

1966

Sat

Jan 22

1966

Tibbits Fine Arts Committee Meeting
Mr. Crane

Adults
$1.25,
kids 74
cents

$5
adults,
$3
students

Performers

Hansel &amp; Gretel

Piccolo Opera Company
of Detroit

Musical comedy
Children’s
Theatre /
Musical fairy tale

Quincy High
School

Brent
Veysey
Evelyn
Orbach

Tibbits Opera Foundation Patrons Cocktail Party: Financial status reviewed; board is looking into possibility of
getting federal monies.
Tibbits Executive Committee Meeting
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Review of previous year’s bookings. Most bookings made money, but
Womenfolk lost money. Carrico reports a proposal is being prepared to submit for federal assistance to get a new
front of the building, finish the basement according to plans, lounge, new seats and carpeting, work backstage for
electrical systems, etc. ATF decides not to operate summer stock, so the board appoints Carrico to operate the
theatre for the summer instead. He has chosen several large musicals since they have proven to be most popular.
Proposed salary for Carrico is $150/week with a percentage of profits at the end of the season.
Pop Organ
Eddie
Concert
Osborn
Inner Space
Travelogue
Kiwanis

Source

11-12-65 DR
11-19-65 DR
11-29-65 DR
11-30-65 DR
12-01-65 DR
12-02-65 DR
12-03-65 DR
12-04-65 DR
12-06-65 DR
12-14-65 DR
12-13-65 DR
12-16-65 DR
12-07-65 DR
12-08-65 DR
12-10-65 DR
12-13-65 DR
12-14-65 DR
12-17-65 DR
12-20-65 DR
12-17-65 DR
12-20-65 DR
12-29-65 DR
01-11-66 TA

12-20-65 DR
10-06-65 DR
01-15-66 DR
01-20-66 DR

Burdick, 105

�Day

Date

Year

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Wed

Jan 26

1966

Wed

Jan 26

1966

Sat

Feb 5

1966

Wed

Feb 9

1966

Sat

Feb 19

1966

Mon

Feb 28

1966

Thurs

March
3
March

1966

Vocalinstrumental
program
Tibbits asks for donations of clothing and accessories to build the costume shop.

1966

Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Officers for the year are Roy Patterson, president; Duane Davidson,

$5
adults,
$3
students

Source

Joseph
Wolman,
piano; John
Wummer,
flute; David
Sackson,
violin-viola
Meeting is held to discuss Tibbits to be organized as an Arts Council as well in order to avoid overlapping of events
and dates, to coordinate use of the opera house, and to publish a brochure on the local arts groups in the
community.
Hamlet
Michigan State
Play
Frank
Roger Long,
University’s Performing
Rutledge
Roger
Arts Co.
Cornish,
Ann
Matesich,
Terry S.
Williams,
Bill Stock
Norman Luboff Choir
Concert
Branch
County
Community
Concert
Association
America
Travelogue
Kiwanis

01-15-66 DR
01-21-66 DR
01-27-66 DR

Varsity Vagabonds

02-16-66 DR
02-17-66 DR
02-25-66 DR
03-03-66 DR

Concert - Musical
Arts Trio

Adult
$1.50,
student
$1

Performers

Western Michigan
University

Branch
County
Community
Concert
Association

Dr. Elwyn
Carter

01-26-66 DR

01-15-66 DR
01-17-66 DR
01-26-66 DR
01-31-66 DR
02-02-66 DR
02-07-66 DR

10-04-65 DR

10-06-65 DR
02-17-66 DR

03-08-66 TA

Burdick, 106

�Day

Date

Year

Ticket
price

March
9

1966

Thurs

March
10

1966

Thurs
-Fri

March
17-18

1966

Sat

March
26

1966

Sun

April 3

1966

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

VP; Rae Kleindist, recording secretary; Dorothy Aitchison, corresponding secretary; Charles Bristol, treasurer. Arts
Council has had a number of meetings and has elected officers. Carrico reports that summer people have been
hired, budget is similar to last year, and that program ads have been sold with 95% participation. Rotary club
donates an arc spotlight valued at $1200 in exchange for theatre rental.
Camille and The
Ruth Page’s Chicago
Ballet
Branch
Josette
Merry Widow
Opera Ballet
County
Amiel, Orrin
Community
Kayan,
Concert
Patricia
Association
Kiekovic,
Kenneth
Johnson
Piano Concert
Branch
Jean Paul
County
Seville
Community
Concert
Association
Our Town
Play
Coldwater
Larry
High School
Carrico,
junior class
Linda
Bennett

8

Wed

Name of show/
lecture topic

$3.50- $2

Spring Fashionata
*to benefit the
Hospital Auxiliary

Fashion Show

Dukes of Dixieland

Dixieland jazz
band

(originally scheduled
for March 20, moved

Frank
Assunto,
Fred
Assunto,

Source

05-11-65 DR
05-21-65 DR
03-07-66 DR
03-08-66 DR
03-10-66 DR

10-04-65 DR

03-03-66 DR
03-14-66 DR
03-16-66 DR
03-17-66 DR
03-18-66 DR
03-17-66 DR
03-18-66 DR
03-19-66 DR
03-21-66 DR
03-22-66 DR
03-23-66 DR
03-24-66 DR
03-25-66 DR
03-28-66 DR
02-17-66 DR
02-19-66 DR
03-08-66 DR
03-10-66 DR

Burdick, 107

�Day

Date

Year

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

to April 3)

Papa Jac
Assunto,
Jerry Fuller,
Gene
Schroeder,
Red Brown,
Barrett
Deems
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Arts Council organization is planning to have an exhibit at the fair this
year. Carrico says summer shows will start June 29, tickets will go on sale soon, and that season tickets will be
$13.75 and $15.
Fabulous Forties
Variety Show
Rotary

Tues

April
12

1966

Thurs
-Sat

April
14-16

1966

FriSat

April
22-23

1966

It’s A Great Life

Sun

April
24
April
28-29

1966

Auditions for Miss Branch County Pageant

Sat

April
30

1966

Tues

May 3

1966

Thurs
-Fri

Thurs $1,
Fri &amp; Sat
$1.50

1966

$5
adults,
$3
students

Performers

Yucatan Trails

Play

St. Charles
School senior
class

Variety Show

Coldwater
High School

Travelogue

Kiwanis

Choir concert

Coldwater
High School

Paula
Weller

Source

03-25-66 DR
03-26-66 DR
03-28-66 DR
03-30-66 DR
03-31-66 DR
04-01-66 DR
04-02-66 DR
04-04-66 DR
04-12-66 TA

03-30-66 DR
04-11-66 DR
04-12-66 DR
04-13-66 DR
04-14-66 DR
04-15-65 DR
04-18-66 DR
04-19-66 DR
04-20-66 DR
04-21-66 DR
04-25-66 DR
04-19-66 DR
04-26-66 DR
04-27-66 DR
04-28-66 DR
04-29-66 DR
10-06-65 DR
04-26-66 DR

Arvid Berg

04-26-66 DR
05-02-66 DR

Burdick, 108

�Day

Date

Year

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

Source

Dzidra
Bonfiglio

05-03-66 DR
05-04-66 DR
05-04-66 DR
04-26-66 DR
05-03-66 DR
05-05-66 DR
05-06-66 DR
05-09-66 DR
05-10-66 TA

Thurs
Sat

May 5
May 7

1966
1966

Tibbits Executive Board Meeting

Tues

May 10

1966

Fri

May 13

1966

Adults
$1.50,
students
75 cents

Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Carrico changes season ticket prices to $13 and $15 instead of
previous cost. Suggestion to publicize what school activities have been held in the theatre to show how much it’s
being used by schools. Royalties for all summer shows have been reduced. A refreshment stand in the alley south
of the theatre is being planned. Estimate for 50 feet of concrete in the alley is $250.
Virginia Symphony
Concert
William
Orchestra
Penny
Hacker

Sat

May 21

1966

Adults 50
cents,
children
25 cents

Mon
Sat

May 23
June 4

1966
1966

Mon
Tues

June 13 1966
June 14 1966

Piano Concert

Sleeping Beauty

Children’s Play

Coldwater
High School

Phyllis
Coscarelly

Season tickets go on sale for the Tibbits Summer Theatre (TST) season.
General Cable of Quincy donates $1500 worth of cable and wire for house and stage wiring. $700 is still needed
to complete the project. Deadline of June 18 is set.
TST requests single rooms and apartments to house company members. Also searching for a sewing machine.
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Carrico reports that all members of summer stock have been arrived
and are hiring. Howard Teeter negotiates with John DeNoyer for use of the garage building on South Monroe St.
as a workshop, Meier and Teeter are arranging to have the alley paved for the refreshment area, Wolf’s Floor
Covering of Coldwater donates new beige carpeting to the Tibbits as well as the labor to install it, Kiwanis Club has
repaired seats in the theatre, and General Cable Co. of Quincy is donating wiring, which Bob Sweet and his crew
are installing (cost to the Foundation will probably be less than $800). Bryan reports work on the gutters along the
side of the building because there has been a problem with rain running down the side of the building. President

04-26-66 DR
05-09-66 DR
05-10-66 DR
05-11-66 DR
05-12-66 DR
05-13-66 DR
05-16-66 DR
05-06-66 DR
05-17-66 DR
05-18-66 DR
05-20-66 DR
05-23-66 DR
06-04-66 DR
06-13-66 DR
06-14-66 DR

Burdick, 109

�Day

Date

Year

Sat
Thurs
Wed

June 18 1966
June 23 1966
June 29 1966
JuneSept

1966

WedSat

June
29-30,
July 12, July
6-9

1966

Wed

July 6

1966

Thurs

July 7

1966

Tues

July 12

1966

WedSat

July 13- 1966

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

Patterson reports that the Executive Committee will no longer meet weekly; instead, they will meet monthly.
Carrico hosts a reception at his home for Board Members and the cast for the summer shows.
TST Musical director Harold Themmen puts out a call for local musicians.
Local merchants give away tickets for Tibbits to 180 people (originally reported that it was season tickets, but it
was just for individual performances).
Summer Stock- Larry Carrico will be general manager (production, hiring, box office, publicity/PR) as well as
lighting. Jeffery K. Neill will choreograph, H. Kelly English will be the set designer. Mathew John Hoffman III,
costume designer. Mitch Kessler, stage manager. Harold Themmen, musical director. Prices for the season are
reduced because the Foundation is behind the season/ no ATF costs present this year. Ticket prices: Parquet
$3.25, parquet circle $2.75, balcony $2.25. Season Tickets $13-$15.

$2.25,
$2.75,
$3.25

$2.25,

South Pacific

Musical

Tibbits
Summer
Theatre

Jay
Warren
Byer

Al Zolton,
Lucille Frisa,
John
Whiting,
Barbara
Link, Robert
McClaren,
Marcie
Guthrie,
Larry
Carrico

Source

06-14-66 TA
06-23-66 DR
06-29-66 DR
06-30-66 DR
02-09-66 DR
02-16-66 DR
05-06-66 DR
05-23-66 DR
06-14-66 DR
06-23-66 DR
05-06-66 DR
06-23-66 DR
06-24-66 DR
06-27-66 DR
06-28-66 DR
06-29-66 DR
06-30-66 DR
07-02-66 DR
07-06-66 DR
07-09-66 DR

05-06-66 DR
Rumplestiltskin
Stevens Puppets
Children’s/
Tibbits
06-23-66 DR
(4 children’s shows
Puppet Show
Summer
07-05-66 DR
originally planned for
Theatre
the summer-this is
the only one actually
produced)
07-07-66 DR
TST asks for local women to assist with the sewing of costumes for Show Boat since it requires construction of
over 100.
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Lights are now needed in the alley where the concession stand is to be 07-12-66 TA
placed. Discussion on employing someone for concessions.
Show Boat
Musical
Tibbits
Jay
John Dietz, 05-06-66 DR
06-23-66 DR
Summer
Warren
Charlotte
Burdick, 110

�Day

Date

Year

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Theatre

Byer

Performers

Source

Button,
Jefery Neill,
Al Zolton,
Robert
McClaren,
Barbara
Link,
Beryldene
Powell

07-07-66 DR
07-11-66 DR
07-12-66 DR
07-13-66 DR
07-14-66 DR
07-20-66 DR

16, 2023

$2.75,
$3.25

Fri
WedSat

July 22 1966
July 27- 1966
30, Aug
3-6

$2.25,
$2.75,
$3.25

Wayne Feller of Coldwater’s Music Mart donates Baldwin Style D Concert Grand Piano.
The Sound of Music
Musical
Tibbits
Albert
Summer
Zolton
Theatre

Mon

Aug 1

1966

Sat

Aug 6

1966

Tues

Aug 9

1966

WedSat

Aug
10-13,

1966

$2.25,
$2.75,

Costume designer Mathew Hoffman III asks Coldwater women for help sewing the Student Prince costumes. The
plan is to build/create all of them from scratch in order to build up the costume collection at Tibbits.
President Patterson sends letter to Wayne Feller/ Music Mart of Coldwater thanking him for the donation of a
Baldwin Style D Concert Grand Piano, with an understanding that if the Foundation goes defunct, the piano will
revert to ownership by Mr. Feller or his heirs. TST looking for large hairy dog to use in Camelot
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Dental Association donates $126.45. Foundation now has the legal
title to the Baldwin piano from Mr. &amp; Mrs. Feller. Carrico reports summer stock is going well as far as attendance
and actors’ happiness is concerned. Treasurer Bristol reports that they are slightly over budget in some areas but
sets and costumes have been very good and will be property of Tibbits. Royalties have all been paid. The Board
offers Larry Carrico a full-time job starting Sept 1966 at $650/month plus bonuses for 9 months, and 3 months of
summer stock pay to be handled separately. Executive Committee to meet every two weeks now.
The Student Prince
Musical
Tibbits
Albert
Ed Kingins,
Summer
Zolton
Beryldene

Barbara
Link, John
Whiting,
Robert
McClaren,
Beryldene
Powell,
many locals

07-22-66 TA
05-06-66 DR
06-23-66 DR
07-21-66 DR
07-22-66 DR
07-25-66 DR
07-26-66 DR
07-27-66 DR
07-28-66 DR
07-29-66 DR
08-03-66 DR
08-04-66 DR
08-01-66 DR
08-06-66 DR

08-09-66 TA

05-06-66 DR
06-23-66 DR

Burdick, 111

�Day

Date

Year

17-20

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Theatre

$3.25

Performers

Source

Powell,
John
Whiting,
Mike Kinter,
Milt Bailey,
Robert
McClaren,
Brad Gren,
Larry
Carrico,
Marcia
Guthrie,
Raymond
Sharp
Edward
Kingins, Al
Zolton,
Jeffery
Neill,
Beryldene
Powell,
Robert
McClaren

08-05-66 DR
08-08-66 DR
08-09-66 DR
08-10-66 DR
08-11-66 DR
08-12-66 DR
08-13-66 DR
08-17-66 DR
08-18-66 DR

WedSat

Aug
24-27,
31,
Sept 13

1966

Sun

Aug 28

1966

Farewell party given for TST’s company by the Tibbits Foundation Board of Directors.

Tues

Sept 13

1966

Tues

Oct 11

1966

Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Jerry Fair reports that the estimate of a new front to the theatre is
close to $25,000. Carrico reports that the total summer attendance was 15,842 with a net profit of $700, along
with a good inventory of scenery, costumes and tools. Carrico is officially hired on a full-time basis.
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Financial review, need for new memberships, Community Concert
Association discussion. Proposal of grant coming along.

$2.25,
$2.75,
$3.25

Camelot

Musical

Tibbits
Summer
Theatre

Jay
Warren
Byer

05-06-66 DR
06-23-66 DR
08-18-66 DR
08-19-66 DR
08-22-66 DR
08-23-66 DR
08-24-66 DR
08-25-66 DR
08-26-66 DR
08-31-66 DR
09-01-66 DR
09-02-66 DR
09-07-66 DR
08-29-66 DR
08-09-66 TA
09-13-66 TA

10-11-66 TA

Burdick, 112

�Day

Date

Year

Sat

Oct 22

1966

Wed

Nov 2

1966

Tues

Nov 8

1966

Thurs
-Fri

Nov
10-11

1966

Fri

Nov 18

1966

Tues

Nov 22

1966

Sat

Nov 26

1966

Sat

Dec 3

1966

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Windjammer to
Australia

Type of event

Travelogue

Performers

Kiwanis

Cooking School

Coldwater
Daily
Reporter
Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Carrico and Fair (originally reported as Heikkinen) report back on
Washington DC trip, at which time they presented a proposal for a financial grant. Board decides to offer summer
theatre again next year. Carrico reports work being done in the dressing rooms such as mirrors, painting, lights
and new flooring, which has been donated. Contract is now in progress for Ray Ford/Country and Western music,
who wants to use the theatre Sat nights when available. Rental is $50 minimum per night.
The Tavern
Play
Coldwater
Larry
High School
Carrico
senior class
The Don Shirley Trio

$5.50,
$4.50

Rigoletto

Goldovsky Grand Opera
Theater

The Pacific Northwest

Adults

Concert

Travelogue
Ray Ford Country &amp;

Concert

Branch
County
Community
Concert
Association
Tibbits Opera
Foundation

Don Shirley,
pianist

Director
Boris
Goldovsk
y,
conducto
r Edward
Alley

Alexander
Gray, Enzo
Citarelli, J. B.
Davis, Teresa
Orantes,
Rosemary
Rosales,
Franco
Iglesias,
Robert Hale

Kiwanis
Ray Ford,

Source

10-11-66 DR
10-21-66 DR
10-21-66 DR
11-03-66 DR
11-08-66 TA
12-13-66 TA

10-21-66 DR
11-07-66 DR
11-08-66 DR
11-10-66 DR
11-11-66 DR
10-21-66 DR
11-10-66 DR

10-21-66 DR
10-26-66 DR
11-08-66 DR
11-10-66 DR
11-12-66 DR
11-15-66 DR
11-16-66 DR
11-17-66 DR
11-18-66 DR
11-21-66 DR
11-23-66 DR
10-21-66 DR
11-25-66 DR
12-01-66 DR

Burdick, 113

�Day

Date

Year

Ticket
price

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Western Music Show

$1.50,
children
50 cents

Performers

Law
Brothers,
Wayne
Roberts,
Jerry
Howard and
Big Tiny Tim

Thurs

Dec 8

1966

Sat

Dec 10

1966

Sat

Dec 10

1966

The Wizard of Oz

Tues

Dec 13

1966

Tibbits Theatre Foundation Board Meeting: Heikkinen reports that proposal for funds is being prepared for
submission on Jan 15, 1967. Carrico reports a profit of $328 for the Reed Marionette show and a loss on Rigoletto.
Board stresses the need for new membership. Carrico proposes that the room on the north side of the lobby be

Ray Ford Country &amp;
Western Music Show

Adults
$1.50,
children
50 cents

Reed Marionettes

“Stag Night” Tommy Watkins
of the Detroit
Lions will speak
and show films
of Lions games,
door prizes, free
cigarettes
Concert

Puppet Show

Source

12-02-66 DR
12-09-66 DR

12-01-66 DR
12-08-66 DR
12-09-66 DR

Coldwater
Chamber of
Commerce

Ray Ford, Jim
Pipkins, Tal
Timber Boys,
Wayne
Smith &amp; the
Wheels, Tiny
Ross, The
Highland
Ramblers
Robin &amp;
Edith Reed

12-01-66 DR
12-02-66 DR
12-09-66 DR

10-26-66 DR
12-01-66 DR
12-05-66 DR
12-06-66 DR
12-07-66 DR
12-10-66 DR
12-12-66 DR
12-13-66 TA

Burdick, 114

�Day

Date

Year

Sat

Dec 17

1966

Mon

Dec 19

1966

Ticket
price

Adults
$1.50,
children
50 cents

Name of show/
lecture topic

Company name

Type of event

Sponsored
Director
by
*OR RENOVATION MEETING/EVENT &amp; PERSONS INVOLVED*

Performers

torn out and a display case for art exhibits and old theatre programs could be exhibited at estimated cost of $300.
Board approves a trip to NYC for Carrico in regards to summer shows. Letter from Department of Labor received
re: Barbara Bernahl’s claim of $737.50. Letter from attorney Arthur G. Lyon approved to be sent in reply.
Ray Ford Country &amp;
Concert
Ray Ford,
Western Music Show
Law
Brothers,
Wayne
Roberts,
Jerry
Howard
and Big Tiny
Tim
Duke Ellington
Orchestra
(never happened? No
publicity of any sort)

Source

12-01-66 DR
12-02-66 DR
12-09-66 DR

09-30-66 TA

Burdick, 115

�Advertisements, Photos, &amp; Documents 1958-1966

Burdick, 116

�1958

Burdick, 117

�Exterior: Tibbits Art Deco Facade, Movie Days.

Interior: Tibbits, Movie Days.

Burdick, 118

�Service Group Survey. 1958. Tibbits Opera House Archives, Tibbits Administration
Building, Coldwater. June 9 1958.

Burdick, 119

�1959

Burdick, 120

�Burdick, 121

Minstrel Ad. 1959. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, March 13 1959 p2.
Minstrel Ad. 1959. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
March 7 1959 p3.

�Minstrel Show. 1959. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
March 12 1959.

Burdick, 122

�Minstrel Show. 1959. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, March 13 1959 p2.

Minstrel Show. 1959. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, March 13 1959.

Burdick, 123

�Gay Nineties Revue. 1959. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, May 15 1959 p10.

Burdick, 124

�Coldwater Players Declaration. 1959. Tibbits property file, Coldwater Assessor’s
Office. Oct 1959.

Burdick, 125

�Coldwater Players Declaration. 1959. Tibbits property file, Coldwater Assessor’s
Office. Oct 1959.

Burdick, 126

�1961

Burdick, 127

�Coldwater Key Club. 1961. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Jan 23 1961.

Burdick, 128

�Burdick, 129

Karl Staley. 1961. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Feb 11 1961.

Key Club. 1961. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Jan 23 1961.

�Burdick, 130

Coldwater Exchange Club Scrub All. 1961. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Feb
17 1961.

Lions Clean Up Tibbits. 1961. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Feb 16 1961.

�Burdick, 131

Kiwanis &amp; Rotary Help Out. 1961. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, March 3 1961.

�Now Let’s Do it This Way Fellas.
1961. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, March 26 1961.

Mr. Minstrel Himself. 1961.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, March 26 1961.

Burdick, 132

�Ready for Debut Tonight. 1961. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
March 27 1961.
Blackface Again. 1961. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, March 28 1961.

Burdick, 133

�Brothers, Belles Meet.. 1961. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, March 27 1961.

Burdick, 134

�Burdick, 135

Bull in a China Shop. 1961. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, June 16
1961.

Scene From China Shop. 1961. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
June 14 1961.

�The Banjo-Tainers. 1961.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Oct 30 1961.

Appear Tonight. 1961.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Nov 4 1961.

Burdick, 136

�Lonesome Polecat. 1961. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Nov 1
1961, p10.

To Sing Here. 1961. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Nov 3 1961, p10.

Burdick, 137

�Burdick, 138

Rotary Starts Work on Minstrel Show 1961.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Dec 12 1961.

Final Rehearsal. 1961. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Dec 2 1961.

�‘Pure As the Driven Snow’ Poster. 1961. Personal collection of Terry Mulchahey.
Dec 1961.

Burdick, 139

�Lloyd Luce. 1961. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Dec 15 1961 p2.

Burdick, 140

�1962

Burdick, 141

�Burdick, 142

Norm Moore. 1962. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Jan 31 1962.

Tibbits Campaign Chairmen Named. 1962.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Jan 22 1962.

�Old Landmark Disappearing. 1962. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Feb 7 1962.

Burdick, 143

�Burdick, 144

In Final Rehearsal Stage. 1962. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Feb 15
1962.

�Rotary Minstrels Open Tonight. 1962. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Feb 15 1962.

Burdick, 145

�Burdick, 146

Burdette Harris. 1962. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, April 3
1962.

Franc Gay. 1962. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Feb 16
1962.

�Burdick, 147

Free Parking This Way. 1962. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, May 18 1962.
New Parking Lot. 1962. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, May
18 1962.

�Burdick, 148

Twistin’ for Tibbits. 1962. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, June 16 1962.

Engineers Check Tibbits Today . 1962. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, July 7 1962.

�Twistin’ for Tibbits Ad. 1962. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, June 14 1962.

Burdick, 149

�Burdick, 150

Beauties by the Sea. 1962. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Oct 30 1962.

Tibbits Mementos. 1962.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, Sept 8
1962.

�1963

Burdick, 151

�Minstrel Ad. 1963. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Jan 26 1963 p20.

Burdick, 152

�Tax Relief Letters. 1963.
Tibbits Opera House
Archives, Tibbits
Administration Building,
Coldwater. Sept 22
1963.

Burdick, 153

�Mrs. Joyce Stannell
Godfrey. 1963.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Sept 9
1963.

Lights on Again. 1963.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Sept 25
1963.

Burdick, 154

�Roger Williams. 1963.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Oct 1
1963.

Artist Visits Theater.
1963. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Oct 21 1963.

Burdick, 155

�Coming Down. 1963. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Oct 21 1963.

Burdick, 156

�Signed Roger Williams Promo Photo. 1963. Personal collection of Terry Mulchahey. Oct 23
1963.

Burdick, 157

�George Vaughn Lowther Letter to Family. 1963. Personal Collection of George Vaughn
Lowther. Nov 7 1963.

Burdick, 158

�Face Changing. 1963.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Nov 5 1963.

Grand Ole Opry Ad. 1963.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Nov 16 1963 p3.

Burdick, 159

�Grand Ole Opry Ad. 1963. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Nov
13 1963 p2.

Grand Ole Opry Ad. 1963. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Nov
19 1963 p12.
Burdick, 160

�Mrs. Gertrude Harding. 1963. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Nov 21 1963.

Burdick, 161

�Burdick, 162

Show Stopper Ad. 1963. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Nov 28 1963 p8.

�Sweet Adeline Chorus.
1963. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Dec 2 1963.

George Vaughn Lowther,
Manager. 1963. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, De 6
1963.

Burdick, 163

�Burdick, 164

Next at Tibbits. 1963. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, De 10 1963.

Jack &amp; the Beanstalk Ad. 1963. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Dec 10 1963 p2.

�Jack Shows Mother. 1963. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Dec 12 1963.

A Scene from Jack. 1963. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Dec 16 1963.

Burdick, 165

�Community Carol Sing. 1963. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, Dec 21 1963 p2.

Burdick, 166

�1964

Burdick, 167

�Children’s Theatre at Coldwater. 1964. Personal collection of George Vaughn
Lowther. The Fort Wayne News Sentinal, Jan 11 1964.

Burdick, 168

�Burdick, 169

Children’s Theater at Coldwater. 1964. Personal collection of George Vaughn Lowther. The Fort Wayne News Sentinal, Jan 11
1964.

�Burdick, 170

Trio &amp; Accompanists in Concert. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Jan 20 1964.

Chad Mitchell Trio. 1964. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Jan 10 1964.

�Burdick, 171

Chad Mitchell Trio Ad. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Jan 13 1964 p3.

�Burdick, 172

Agnes Moorehead. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Jan 24 1964 p21.

�Western Michigan University
Choir. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Feb 9 1964 p2.

Tibbits to Feature ‘Pajama
Game’ Soon. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Feb 10 1964.

Burdick, 173

�Western Michigan University Choir. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Feb 11 1964 p2.

Burdick, 174

�Burdick, 175

Seven Ways of Love. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Feb 19 1964 p12.

The Pajama Game Ad. 1964. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
Feb 13 1964 p12.

�Pajama Game. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Feb 19 1964.

Bruce King and Marty
Bagdon. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Feb 21 1964.

Burdick, 176

�Cotton-Medina Play Wins High Praise. 1964. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Feb 20
1964.

Burdick, 177

�Signed Patricia Medina Headshot. 1964. Personal collection of George Vaughn Lowther. Feb 25
1964.

Burdick, 178

�Signed Joseph Cotten Headshot. 1964. Personal collection of George Vaughn Lowther. Feb 25 1964.

Burdick, 179

�New Wallpaper.
1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Feb
22 1964.

Howard Teeter.
1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Feb
28 1964.

Burdick, 180

�Burdick, 181

Kai Winding Ad. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, March 4 1964 p12.

�Signed Clebanoff Headshot. 1964. Personal collection of George Vaughn Lowther. March 6 1964.

Burdick, 182

�Harding Plaque.
1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter,
March 9 1964.

Ernest W. Luse. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, March 13 1964.
Burdick, 183

�Coming to Tibbits. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, March 12 1964.

The Friars. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, March 16 1964.

Burdick, 184

�Fashion Show. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, March 16 1964 p10.

Burdick, 185

�Mens Glee Club Ad. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, March 17 1964.

Kiess Donation. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, March 18 1964
p12.

Burdick, 186

�Mural. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, March 19 1964.

Naughty 90’s Ad. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, March 21
1964 p20.

Burdick, 187

�Bob Newhart Ad. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, March 23
1964 p2.

Burdick, 188

�Signed Bob Newhart Headshot. 1964. Personal collection of George Vaughn Lowther. April 12 1964.

Burdick, 189

�Hear it in Person Ad. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, March 23 1964
p10.

All Aboard Ad. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, March 26 1964 p2.

Burdick, 190

�The Tibbits Mural. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
March 28 1964.

Rehearsals Shift. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, March 27 1964.

Burdick, 191

�Coldwater Rotarians. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, April 1
1964.

The Three Producers. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, March 31 1964.

Burdick, 192

�Rotary Show. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, April 3 1964.

Burdick, 193

�First Night Sold Out. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, April 2 1964.

Coldwater Rotary. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, April 4 1964.

Burdick, 194

�Dave Nault. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, April
4 1964.

The Outsiders. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, April 7 1964.

G. Otis Pierce. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, April
10 1964.

Burdick, 195

�Painting. 1964. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, April
12 1964 p41.

The Button-Down Mind at Work.
1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, April 12 1964.

Burdick, 196

�Henry L. Scott Promo Photo. 1964.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, April 16 1964.

Henry L. Scott Ad. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, April
17 1964.

Burdick, 197

�Signed Henry L. Scott Promo Photo. 1964. Personal collection of George Vaughn Lowther. April
17 1964.

Burdick, 198

�Wayne King. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, April 22 1964.

Burdick, 199

�Spring Drum Festival Ad. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, April 25 1964 p20.

American Theatre Festival Ad. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, April 27 1964 p12.

Burdick, 200

�Jim Hayes. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, April 30 1964.

Michigan Gas Donation. 1964.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, April 30 1964.

Burdick, 201

�Boris Goldovsky. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, May
02 1964 p12.

Wayne King Ad. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, May 02
1964 p2.

Burdick, 202

�Signed Jim Hayes Promo Photo. 1964. Personal collection of George Vaughn Lowther. May 2
1964.

Burdick, 203

�Signed Wayne King Promo Photo. 1964. Personal collection of George Vaughn Lowther. May 2
1964.

Burdick, 204

�New Welcome Signs. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, May 04 1964.
Kenneth Kohn. 1964.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, May 04
1964.

Burdick, 205

�Burdick, 206

Reynard the Fox. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, May 08 1964.

The Crow. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
May 05 1964.

�Virginia Symphony Ad. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, May 13 1964.

Burdick, 207

�Glenn Crane. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, May 14 1964.

Kathy Zeller. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, May 15 1964.

Black Like Me Ad. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, May 15 1964
p12.

Burdick, 208

�Jose Molina and Maria
Del Rocio. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, May 20
1964.

Griffin Speaks at
Tibbits. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, May 21
1964.

Jose Molina Ad. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, May 22
1964 p2.

Burdick, 209

�Jose Molina Ad. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, May 25 1964 p2.

Burdick, 210

�Molina Company in Spanish
Costume. 1964. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, May
25 1964.

Molina Costumes. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, May
27 1964.

Burdick, 211

�Tom King. 1964. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, May 28 1964.

Irene Belcher. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, June 03 1964.

Burdick, 212

�William Walsh. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, June 04 1964.

First National Bank Donation.
1964. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
June 05 1964.

Burdick, 213

�Ladies Only Ad. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, June 05 1964 p2.

Welcome America’s
Gracious Ladies. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, June 05 1964 p2.

Burdick, 214

�Burdick, 215

American Theatre Festival. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, June 05 1964.

�Virginia and Joel Marsh.
1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, June 08 1964.

La Boheme. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, June 11
1964 p12.

Burdick, 216

�Solid Gold Cadillac. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, June 16
1964.

Tom and Rosemary King. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, June 18
1964.

Dinner-reception. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, June 18
1964.

Burdick, 217

�Burdick, 218

Solid Gold Cadillac Ad. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, June 22 1964.

Work, Work, Work. 1964. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, June 19 1964.

�Last Minute Preparation. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, June 23 1964.

Burdick, 219

�American Theatre Festival. 1964. Personal collection of Terry Mulchahey. June 24
1964.

Burdick, 220

�Teamwork. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter,
June 26 1964.

Pursuit. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter,
June 27 1964 p2.

Burdick, 221

�ATF Producers Letter of Loan. 1964. Tibbits Opera House Archives, Tibbits
Administration Building, Coldwater. 27 June 1964. TS. Coldwater, MI.
.

Burdick, 222

�Burdick, 223

Kathy Zeller and Tom King on Stage. 1964.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, June 30 1964.

Stuckey’s ‘Pursuit of Happiness’ Ad. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, June 29 1964 p2.

�Stukey’s Man Who
Came to Dinner Ad.
1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 06
1964p10.

Scene from
‘Pursuit’. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter,
July 01 1964.

Burdick, 224

�Veteran Actor. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 06 1964.

William Walsh. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 08 1964.

Special Pleading.1964.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, July 07 1964.

Burdick, 225

�Irene Belcher. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
July 09 1964.

Jack Shouse. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter,
July 10 1964.

At Work. 1964.
Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter,
July 11 1964 p2.

Burdick, 226

�ATF Yum Yum Ad. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, July 13 1964 p7.

Burdick, 227

�Stukey’s Yum Yum Ad. 1964.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, July 13 1964 p10.

Hogan. 1964. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
July 13 1964.

In this Scene. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 14 1964.

Burdick, 228

�Tom King. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 15 1964.
Hogan. 1964. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
July 16 1964 p2.

Suzy and Tony Showalter and Charlotte Button. 1964. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, July 17 1964. Burdick, 229

�Ten Nights in a Barroom Ad. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, July 17 1964 p2.

Burdick, 230

�Virginia Marsh and Bob Miller. 1964.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
July 18 1964 p2.

Stuckey’s Ten Nights
in a Barroom Ad.
1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, July
20 1964 p10.
Ten Nights in a
Barroom. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter,
July 20 1964.

Burdick, 231

�Pianist. 1964. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, July 21 1964.

David Higgins and Jack Shouse. 1964.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
July 23 1964.

Burdick, 232

�Burdick, 233

Mister Roberts ATF Ad. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, July 24 1964 p2.

�Howard Teeter. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, July 25
1964.

Stukey’s Mister Roberts
Ad. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 27 1964
p2.

Burdick, 234

�Mr. Roberts. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, July 27 1964.

The Members of the Crew. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, July 28 1964.

Burdick, 235

�Tensions Too Much to
Handle. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 29 1964.

Dreamer. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, July 30
1964.

Burdick, 236

�Burdick, 237

The Girls in 509. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, July 30 1964 p2.

�Stukey’s Girls in 509 Ad. 1964.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Aug 03 1964 p12.
Nerves Already.
1964. Microfilm
Archives,
Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter,
July 31 1964.
A Chauffeured
Rolls Royce.
1964. Microfilm
Archives,
Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter,
Aug 03 1964 p2.

Burdick, 238

�Stukey’s Picnic Ad. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Aug 08
1964 p12.

Attorney Aubrey
McKittridge. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Aug 04
1964.

William Walsh. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Aug 05
1964.

Burdick, 239

�ATF Picnic Ad. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Aug
08 1964 p2.

Kathy Zeller and David Higgins,
Picnic. 1964. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, Aug 08 1964.

David Higgins. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Aug
08 1964 p3.

Burdick, 240

�Virginia Marsh Explains. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Aug 13 1964
p2.
Millie. 1964. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, Aug 11 1964 p2.

Howard Bevans. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Aug
12 1964 p2.

Burdick, 241

�Burdick, 242

ATF Seven Year Itch Ad.. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Aug 14 1964 p2.

�David Higgins. 1964. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Aug 14 1964.

Stukey’s Seven-Year Itch Ad. 1964.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Aug
17 1964 p2.

American Theatre Festival Favorite. 1964.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Aug
17 1964.

Burdick, 243

�Dr. Brubaker. 1964. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Aug 18 1964, p2.

Joel and Virginia
Marsh. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter,
Aug 20 1964 p2.

Heap Big Injun.
1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Aug 21
1964.

Burdick, 244

�Stilson Letter to Stukey. 1964.
Tibbits Opera House Archives,
Tibbits Administration Building,
Coldwater. 24 Aug 1964. TS.
Coldwater, MI.
.

Burdick, 245

�Little Mary Sunshine
Ad. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Aug 24
1964 p10.

Miss Keller. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter,
Aug 24 1964.

Walter Stump. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter,
Aug 25 1964.

Burdick, 246

�David Higgins as Yellow Feather. 1964.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
Aug 25 1964.

Miss Keller. 1964. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Aug 24 1964.

Miss Tylor. 1964. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Aug 28 1964.

Burdick, 247

�American Theatre Festival Favorite.
1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Sept 01 1964.

Director Carleton Fitzgerald. 1964.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
Aug 31 1964.

Stukey’s Light Up the Sky Ad. 1964.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
Aug 31 1964 p12.

Burdick, 248

�Carleton Fitzgerald. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Sept 03
1964.

Guest Artists. 1964. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Sept 11 1964.

William Walsh. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Sept 05
1964 p2.

Burdick, 249

�Stukey Letter to Stilson. 1964. Tibbits Opera House Archives, Tibbits Administration
Building, Coldwater. 16 Sept 1964. TS. Coldwater, MI.
.
Burdick, 250

�Anita Bryant. 1964. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, Sept 17 1964.

Stan Getz. 1964. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, Sept 25 1964.

Stockton Burns. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Sept 29
1964.

Burdick, 251

�Stockton Burns. 1964. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Oct 07 1964.

Delta Iota Project. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Oct 07 1964
p16.

Carl Sandburg. 1964. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Oct 06 1964.

Burdick, 252

�Kiwanis Travelogue Ad. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Oct 17 1964 p3.

Opening Tonight. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Oct 08 1964 p2.

Burdick, 253

�Stockton and Miss Chambers. 1964.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Oct 31 1964 p2.

Charles Marsh. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Nov 03 1964 p2.

Candida Ad. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Nov 03 1964 p2.

Burdick, 254

�Mr. Burgess. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Nov 03 1964.

No Title. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Nov 04 1964.

Glenn Crane. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Nov 05 1964.

Burdick, 255

�Candida Ad. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, Nov 06 1964 p2.
To Appear. 1964. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Nov 06 1964.

Hummon Sisters Ad. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Nov 06 1964
p2.

Burdick, 256

�Anita Bryant. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Nov 07 1964 p2.

Anita Bryant Sings. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Nov 10
1964.
Iva Jo Robison. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Nov 12 1964.

Burdick, 257

�Barbara Annear. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Nov 16 1964 p2.

Play Rehearsal. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Nov 14 1964 p13.

Burdick, 258

�Ondine Ad. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
Nov 18 1964 p2.
Miss Annear and Strong. 1964.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
Nov 18 1964.

Man and Superman. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, Nov 17 1964.

Burdick, 259

�Prince Eric. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Dec 01 1964.

Paul Sparer. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Nov 19 1964.
In One Scene. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Nov 19 1964.

Burdick, 260

�Hans and Ondine. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Nov 20 1964.
Joyce Jolley as Frosty.
1964. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Dec 01 1964.

Burdick, 261

�Kath Zeller. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Dec 03 1964.

March of Toys. 1964.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Dec 02 1964.

Burdick, 262

�Burdick, 263

Quartet to Perform. 1964. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Dec 04 1964.

The Sweet Adelines. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Dec 03
1964.

�Sweet Adeline Ad. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Dec
04 1964 p2.

Stukey’s Adeline Ad. 1964.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Dec 04 1964 p12.

Dial M For Murder. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Dec
04 1964.

Burdick, 264

�Beautiful Rapunzel. 1964.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Dec 07 1964.

Dial M For Murder Ad. 1964.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Dec 07 1964 p2.

Burdick, 265

�Ray McKinley. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Dec 08
1964.
Stukey’s Glenn Miller Ad. 1964.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Dec 09 1964 p14.

Rapunzel. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Dec 09 1964.

Burdick, 266

�Burdick, 267

Tony Wendice. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Dec 11 1964.

Tense Moment. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Dec 10 1964.

�Trio of Headshots. 1964. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Dec 18 1964.

Rubinoff. 1964. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Dec 31 1964.

Burdick, 268

�Stilson Resignation Letter to
Aitchison. 1964. Tibbits Opera
House Archives, Tibbits
Administration Building,
Coldwater. 23 Dec 1964. TS.
Coldwater, MI.
.

Parke Resignation Letter to
Patterson. 1964. Tibbits Opera
House Archives, Tibbits
Administration Building,
Coldwater. 26 Dec 1964. TS.
Coldwater, MI.
.

Stukey Loan Donation Note. 1964. Tibbits Opera House
Archives, Tibbits Administration Building, Coldwater. 30 Dec
1964. HS. Coldwater, MI.
.

Burdick, 269

�1965

Burdick, 270

�Burdick, 271

Kenneth Kohn Letter to Patterson.
1965. Tibbits Opera House
Archives, Tibbits Administration
Building, Coldwater. 06 Jan 1965.
TS. Coldwater, MI.
.

�Winnifred Morency Letter to Board Members.
1965. Tibbits Opera House Archives, Tibbits
Administration Building, Coldwater. 06 Jan
1965. TS. Coldwater, MI.

Scene From The Shrew. 1965. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
Jan 05 1965.

Frederic De Santis. 1965. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Jan 04 1965.

Burdick, 272

�Rubinoff Ad. 1965. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Jan 07 1965 p2.

Stukey’s Rubinoff Ad. 1965. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Jan 07 1965 p12.

Burdick, 273

�Rubinoff ‘s Greatest
Attractions. 1965.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Jan 11 1965.

Rubinoff Shows His
Proudest Possession.
1965. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Jan 12 1965.

Burdick, 274

�Stukey’ Taming of the
Shrew Ad. 1965.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Jan 21 1965 p2.

Shrew Tamer. 1965.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Jan 20 1965.

Burdick, 275

�Taming of the Shrew Ad. 1965. Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Jan 21 1965 p12.

Purchase Perchance. 1965. Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Jan 21 1965.

Burdick, 276

�De Santis and Miss
Cunningham. 1965. Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Jan 25 1965.

Kiwanis Travelogue Ad. 1965.
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Jan 29 1965 p12.

Burdick, 277

�Woody Herman. 1965. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Jan 29
1965.
Cooking School &amp; Fashion Show Ad.
1965. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Jan 30 1965 p3.

Winning Cooks. 1965. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, Feb 01 1965.

Burdick, 278

�To Appear. 1965. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Feb 02 1965.

Tonda Attardi. 1965. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Feb
04 1965 p3.
Woody Herman Ad. 1965. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Feb
04 1965 p2.

Burdick, 279

�Stukey’s Woody Herman Ad. 1965.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Feb 04 1965 p12.

Woody Herman Ad. 1965. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Feb
10 1965 p2.

Appears Tonight. 1965. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Feb
10 1965 p2.

Burdick, 280

�The Herd. 1965. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Feb 11 1965.

Roger Williams Ad. 1965. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Feb 22
1965 p2.
Stukey’s Roger Williams Ad. 1965.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
Feb 18 1965 p12.

Burdick, 281

�Correction. 1965. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, Feb 22 1965 p3.

Sunday Night. 1965.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, March
01 1965.

In Coldwater. 1965.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Feb 26
1965.

Burdick, 282

�Stukey’s Roger Williams Ad.
1965. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Feb 18 1965 p12.

Junior Play. 1965. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, March 11 1965.

Burdick, 283

�On Stage. 1965. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, March 13 1965 p2.

Prop Girls. 1965. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, March 16 1965 p2.

Poetry Corner. 1965.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, March 15
1965.

Burdick, 284

�Burdick, 285

Baby Needs Shoes. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, March
18 1965.

Pop Kwimper. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, March 17 1965.

�President Patterson Letter to Burrill. 1965. Tibbits Opera House Archives, Tibbits Administration
Building, Coldwater. 18 March 1965. TS. Coldwater, MI.

Burdick, 286

�Roaring 20s Rotary Ad. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, March 19 1965 p2.

Burdick, 287

�Miss Kailer. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, March 24 1965.

Carolyn Gillespie. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, March
19 1965.
Enthusiasm
Keynoted. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, March 19
1965 p2.

Burdick, 288

�Covered With Color. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
March 26 1965.

Spring Fashion Show Ad. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, April 02 1965 p3.

Summer Dress Up. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
April 011965.

Burdick, 289

�Stukey’s Spring Fashion Show Ad. Microfilm
Stukey’s Rotary Show Ad. Microfilm Archives,
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
The Daily Reporter, April 021965 p3.
Reporter, April 06 1965 p2.

Rehearsals. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, April 06 1965.
Burdick, 290

�Rotarians Revive Twenties. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, April 09 1965 p2.

Burdick, 291

�Holy Week Ad. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, April 09 1965 p12.

This Was The Scene. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, April 06 1965.

Burdick, 292

�Jazz Concert Ad. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, May 05 1965 p16.

Rehearsals. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, May 05 1965.

Stukey’s Concert Ad. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, April 21 1965 p16.

Burdick, 293

�Brenda Davis. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, May 06 1965.

All-Star Jazz Band. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, May 07 1965.

Robert Sphatt. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, May 11 1965.

Burdick, 294

�Burdick, 295

Walter Stump. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, May 13 1965.

Roger Blansit. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, May 12 1965.

�Bye Bye Birdie Ad. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, May 14 1965 p14.

Stukey’s Bye Bye Birdie Ad. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, May 14 1965 p14.

Burdick, 296

�Burdick, 297

Cast Works Long Hours. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, May 15 1965 p6.

Birdie Family. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, May 14 1965.

�O-O-O Conrad. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, May 17 1965.

GRRRR. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, May 18 1965 p2.
With Great Dignity. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, May 19 1965.

Burdick, 298

�Hammel. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, May 20 1965.

Next Season. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
May 21 1965.

American Theatre Festival.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, May 27 1965 p2.

Burdick, 299

�The Fantasticks. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, June
09 1965.

Miss Arnberg. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, June 07 1965.
Birdie Profits. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, May 29 1965.

Burdick, 300

�Opens June 15. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, June 10 1965 p2.

Harp Demonstration. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, June 14 1965 p2.

Stukey’s Fantasticks Ad. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, June 101965 p16.

Burdick, 301

�Walsh. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, June 14 1965.

It Depends. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, June 16 1965.

The Fantasticks. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, June 15 1965 p2.

Burdick, 302

�The Fantasticks. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, June 17 1965.

Come Blow Your Horn Ad. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, June 18 1965
p2.
Arcola Clark. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, June 19 1965 p2.

Burdick, 303

�Burdick, 304

Robert Sphatt. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, June 22 1965.
Bum. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, June 21 1965.

�A Shaken Buddy Baker. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, June 23 1965.

That’s Some Cook. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, June 24 1965.

Robert Sphatt. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, June 25 1965.

Burdick, 305

�Shocking. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, June 26 1965 p2.

Stukey’s Tibbits Festive Dinner and Show
Ad. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, June 28 1965 p12.

Abie’s Irish Rose Ad. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, June 28 1965 p2.

Burdick, 306

�The Cast. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
June 28 1965.

Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Cohen.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, June 29 1965.

Burdick, 307

�Abie’s Irish Rose Ad. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, June 30 1965 p3.

Nervous Bride. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 01 1965 p2.

Rare Moments. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, June 30 1965.

Burdick, 308

�The Way to Oz. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 01 1965.

Stukey’s Music Man Ad.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 03 1965
p20.

Gary Indiana. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 02 1965.

Burdick, 309

�Music Man Opens Tues. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 03 1965.

Music Man . Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
July 06 1965.

Stukey’s Music Man Ad. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 06 1965 p12.

Burdick, 310

�Music Man Ad. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 06 1965 p2.

Burdick, 311

�Donation. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 07
1965.

Goodnight My
Someone. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 08
1965.

Music Man Ad. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 09 1965 p2.

Burdick, 312

�Afternoon and Evening. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 10 1965 p2.

Again This Week. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 11 1965.

The American Theatre Festival. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, July 09 1965.

Burdick, 313

�Marian the Librarian.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, July 13
1965.
Mrs. Paroo. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 14 1965
p2.

Larry Life. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 16 1965.

Burdick, 314

�Stukey’s The Drunkard
Ad. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 19 1965
p10.
It’s Difficult. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 20 1965.

Phil Goble. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 19 1965.

Burdick, 315

�The Drunkard Ad. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, July 20 1965 p2.

Burdick, 316

�Stukey’s Happy Time Ad. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, July
26 1965 p2.

Mamma! Help! Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, July 22 1965.

When People Are In Love. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, July
24 1965 p10.

Burdick, 317

�Happy Time Cast. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, July
26 1965.

Craig Davidson &amp; Debbie Carnell.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 27 1965.

Burdick, 318

�The Happy Time Ad. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, July 28 1965 p2.

My Fair Lady Ad. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 30 1965 p2.

Bibi Sticks With Cookies.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 28 1965.

Burdick, 319

�The Transformation. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, July 30 1965.

My Fair Lady. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 31 1965 p2.

Stukey’s My Fair Lady Ad. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Aug 02 1965
p12.

Burdick, 320

�The World’s Greatest Musical. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Aug 02
1965.

Quite a Shock to Discover. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Aug 04
1965.

A-A-O-O-W. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, Aug 05 1965.

Burdick, 321

�Stukey’s My Fair Lady Ad. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Aug 02
1965 p12.

My Fair Lady Ad. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, Aug 09 1965 p12.

Next Week. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, Aug 10 1965.

Burdick, 322

�Too Early For Me. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Aug 13 1965 p2.

Stukey’s Mary Mary Ad. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Aug 16
1965 p12.
New Role. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Aug 12 1965.

Burdick, 323

�Burdick, 324

Mary Mary Ad. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, Aug 17 1965 p2.

Opens Tomorrow. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Aug
16 1965.

�They’d Rather Fight. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Aug 17 1965 p2.

Sitting With His Wife. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Aug 19 1965.

Stukey’s Oklahoma Ad. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Aug 24 1965 p10.

Burdick, 325

�Burdick, 326

Oklahoma. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Aug 25
1965.

The Whole Cast. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Aug 20 1965.

�I Cain’t Say No. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, Aug 27 1965 p2.
Surrey With a Fringe on Top.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Aug 24 1965.

Shake Hands Fellas. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Aug
26 1965.

Burdick, 327

�Two Local Teenagers. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Aug
30 1965.

Don’t Shoot. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, Aug 31 1965.

Burdick, 328

�Curley and Laurey.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Sept 01 1965
p2.

Music, Magic and Mirth
Ad. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Sept 10 1965
p3.

Watson.
Microfilm
Archives,
Holbrook
Heritage
Room,
Coldwater.
The Daily
Reporter,
Sept 11
1965 p2.

Burdick, 329

�Stukey’s Wayne King Ad. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Sept
30 1965 p3.

Wayne King Ad. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, Sept 24 1965 p2.

Here on Oct 5. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, Sept 27 1965.

Burdick, 330

�Byways of Britain Ad. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Oct 06 1965 p2.

Wayne King Ad. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
Oct 01 1965.

Burdick, 331

�Final Plans. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, Oct 04
1965 p2.

Kiwanis Travelogue Ad.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Oct 08 1965 p2.

Preparing for Performances. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, Oct 13 1965 p16.

Burdick, 332

�Folksingers to Appear Here. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Oct 28
1965.

Reeds and Their Marionettes. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Oct 29
1965.

Burdick, 333

�Pinocchio Ad. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Oct 29 1965 p2.

Pinocchio. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Nov 02 1965.

This Afternoon.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Nov 06
1965 p2.

Burdick, 334

�Coming November.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Nov 10
1965 p2.
To Appear. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Nov 15 1965
p2.

Noah. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Nov 15 1965.

Burdick, 335

�Burdick, 336

Driven Beyond Endurance. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Nov 19
1965.

All Is Not Sound and Fury. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Nov 18 1965.

�Sweet
Adelines
Ad.
Microfilm
Archives,
Holbrook
Heritage
Room,
Coldwater.
The Daily
Reporter,
Nov 19
1965 p2.

Womenfolk Ad. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, Nov 20 1965 p7.

Womenfolk Ad. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, Nov 24 1965 p2.

Burdick, 337

�One Performance.
Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter,
Nov 26 1965.

Sunday Evening.
Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter,
Nov 27 1965 p2.

Burdick, 338

�Stukey’s Sweet Adeline Ad. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Dec 01 1965 p14.

Sing Americana Ad.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Nov 29 1965
p2.

In Show. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Nov 30 1965.

Burdick, 339

�Sing Americana Ad. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Dec 02 1965 p16.

The Galloping Grannies. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Dec
011965.

Give My Regards. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, Dec 02 1965.

Burdick, 340

�Director. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, Dec 10
1965.

First Time Tonight. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Dec 04 1965 p3.

Opening. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Dec 06 1965.

Burdick, 341

�Hansel and Gretel Ad. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Dec 14 1965 p2.
On Saturday. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
Dec 14 1965.

Hansel and
Gretel Ad.
Microfilm
Archives,
Holbrook
Heritage
Room,
Coldwater.
The Daily
Reporter, Dec
14 1965 p2.

Burdick, 342

�1966

Burdick, 343

�To Be Presented. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
Jan 17 1966.

Kiwanis Travelogue Ad. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Jan 20 1966 p2.

Community Concert.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter,
Jan 21 1966.

Burdick, 344

�Burdick, 345

Claudius. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Feb 02 1966.

Assistant Director. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Jan 26
1966 p2.

�Hamlet Ad. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Jan 31 1966 p2.

Kiwanis Travelogue. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Feb 17 1966 p14.

The Carricos. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Feb 16 1966.

Burdick, 346

�Character Actors. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Feb 28 1966.

Performance Wednesday.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, March 07 1966.

Burdick, 347

�Stukey’s Chicago Opera Ballet. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, March 08 1966 p2.

Miss Josette Amiel. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, March 10 1966.

The Wise.
Microfilm
Archives,
Holbrook
Heritage
Room,
Coldwater.
The Daily
Reporter,
March 14
1966.

Burdick, 348

�Mrs. Gibbs. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, March 16 1966.

Opening Tonight. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, March 17 1966.

Coming April 3. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, March 25 1966.

Burdick, 349

�Over 400 Attending. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, March
28 1966.

Dukes of Dixieland Ad. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, March
28 1966 p2.

Burdick, 350

�Stukey’s Dukes of Dixieland
Ad. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, April 011966 p2.

Fred and Frank Assunto.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, March 30 1966.
A Sure Sign of Spring.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, March 30 1966.

Burdick, 351

�Fred, Papa Jack, and Frank Assunto.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
April 02 1966 p2.

Stukey’s Rotary Show Ad. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, April
12 1966 p2.

Fabulous Forties Ad. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, April
11 1966 p2.

Burdick, 352

�Curtain Time Near. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, April 12 1966.

Fabulous Forties Ad. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, April 14 1966 p2.
Ok Ya Bums! Ad. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, April 13 1966 p2.

Burdick, 353

�John Walker.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter,
April 14 1966.

Larry Sherman.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter,
April 19 1966 p2.

Burdick, 354

�Burdick, 355

Dukes of Dixieland Ad. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, April 15 1966.

�Burdick, 356

In a Series. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, April 21 1966.

Aunt Gertrude. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
April 20 1966.

�Opening Tonight. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, April 28 1966.

Variety Show. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, April 27 1966.

Lil Abner. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, April 26 1966.

Burdick, 357

�Warming For Concert Night. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, May 02 1966.

Dogpatch Characters. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, April 29 1966.
Burdick, 358

�Tibbits Summer Theatre Ad.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, May 06 1966 p2.

Stukey’s Piano Concert Ad.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, May 12 1966 p2.

Appearing. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, May 03 1966.

Burdick, 359

�Virginia Symphony Ad.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, May 09 1966 p2.

To Perform Saturday.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, May 06 1966.

To Appear Here. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
May 11 1966.

Burdick, 360

�Stukey’s Virginia Symphony Ad. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, May 12 1966
p2.

Marcia Gomley. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, May 18 1966.

Marie Vonmaltzahn. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, May 17 1966.

Burdick, 361

�Egad! Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, June 20 1966.
Down to the Wire. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, June 04 1966.

Sleeping Beauty Ad.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, May
20 1966 p2.

Burdick, 362

�Tibbits Summer Theatre
Ad. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, June 14
1966 p2.

New Carpeting.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, June 14
1966.

Burdick, 363

�South Pacific Ad. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, June 20 1966 p2.

Burdick, 364

�John Whiting. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, June 23 1966.

Gracie O’Shanahan’s Ad. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, June 24
1966 p3.

Stukey’s South Pacific Ad. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, June 24
1966 p2.

Burdick, 365

�Younger Than
Springtime. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, June 28 1966.

Emile DeBecque.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 02 1966
p2.

Luther Billis. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, June 29 1966.

Burdick, 366

�Touching Moment. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 06 1966.

O’ Shanahan’s Summer Theatre Ad.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, July 07 1966 p3.

Show Boat Ad. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, July
07 1966 p2.

Burdick, 367

�Beryldene Powell. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, July 13 1966.
Looking Forward.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, July 08
1966.

Show Boat. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 11 1966.

Burdick, 368

�‘Show Boat’ Leads.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 14 1966.

Stukey’s Showboat Ad.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 18 1966 p2.

Old Man River. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, July 20 1966.

Burdick, 369

�President Patterson Letter to Wayne Feller. 1966. Tibbits Opera House Archives, Tibbits
Administration Building, Coldwater. 06 Aug 1966. TS. Coldwater, MI.

Burdick, 370

�A Fight Breaks Out. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, July 22 1966.
The Sound of Music Ad. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, July 21
1966 p2.

Gracie O’Shanahan’s TST Ad. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, July 21 1966 p16.

Burdick, 371

�The Children.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter,
July 27 1966.

Tom A. Aston.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter,
July 26 1966.

Sound of Music. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
July 25 1966.

Burdick, 372

�Outspoken Members. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, July 29 1966.

Sixteen Going on Seventeen.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Aug 02 1966.

John Whiting and Barbara Link.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Aug 03 1966.

Burdick, 373

�The Student Prince.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Aug 08 1966.

Versatile Jeffery Neill.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Aug 04 1966.

The Student Prince Ad.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Aug 09 1966
p16.

Burdick, 374

�Edward Kingins.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Aug 09 1966.

Harold Themmen and Tibbits Orchestra.
Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Aug
12 1966.
‘Student Prince’ Opening. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Aug 10 1966.

Burdick, 375

�The Student Prince. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Aug 13 1966.

Camelot Ad. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Aug 18 1966.

Reopens Tonight. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Aug 17 1966.

Burdick, 376

�Paul Larou. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Aug 19
1966.

Raymond Sharp.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter, Aug 18
1966.

Monk Watson. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
Aug 24 1966.
Camelot Cast. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter,
Aug 22 1966.

Burdick, 377

�Burdick, 378

�Before the Dinner. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Aug 29 1966.
Happy. Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, Sept 01 1966.

King Arthur. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Aug 31 1966.

Burdick, 379

�Caught in the Act.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Nov 02 1966.

Finishing. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Sept 07 1966.

Art Erickson.
Microfilm
Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater.
The Daily
Reporter, Oct 11
1966.

Cooking School.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter,
Nov 03 1966.

Burdick, 380

�Playing the Role. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter, Nov 07
1966.

Franco Iglesias.
Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter,
Nov 08 1966.

Don
Shirley.
Microfilm
Archives,
Holbrook
Heritage
Room,
Coldwater.
The Daily
Reporter,
Nov 10
1966.

The Tavern.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter,
Nov 08 1966.

Burdick, 381

�Robin and Edith Reed.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Dec 01 1966.

Conductor to
Appear.
Microfilm
Archives,
Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter,
Nov 17 1966.
Robert Hale to
Perform Here.
Microfilm
Archives,
Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter,
Nov 16 1966.

Rigoletto Ad. Microfilm
Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily
Reporter, Nov 10 1966 p2.

Burdick, 382

�Midwestern
Jamboree Ad.
Microfilm Archives,
Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater.
The Daily Reporter,
Dec 09 1966 p2.

Wizard of Oz
Scene.
Microfilm
Archives,
Holbrook
Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter,
Dec 05 1966.

Time Out.
Microfilm
Archives,
Holbrook
Heritage
Room,
Coldwater. The
Daily Reporter,
Nov 18 1966.

Burdick, 383

�Men’s Stag Night Ad. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage
Room, Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Dec 08 1966 p2.

Wizard of Oz. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Dec 06 1966.

Tommy Watkins. Microfilm Archives, Holbrook Heritage Room,
Coldwater. The Daily Reporter, Dec 09 1966.

Burdick, 384

�</text>
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              <name>Title</name>
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                  <text>Tibbits Opera House</text>
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              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                  <text>Miscellaneous items related to the historic Tibbits Opera House in Coldwater, Michigan</text>
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          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="122566">
                <text>Saving the Tibbits Opera House: From Wrecking Ball to Restoration.</text>
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          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="122567">
                <text>Built in 1882, the Tibbits Opera House, a Victorian opera house in Coldwater, MI, still performs live stage-shows via children's theatre, community theatre, and professional theatre. It also functions as a roadhouse for other entertainers like magicians, tribal dancers, and musicians. It has gone through several renovations in its time, functioning as a stage for live performances, to a movie house, and now back to a live-stage venue.&#13;
&#13;
With several other movie theaters in the area as competition, by the late 1950s, the Tibbits ceased functioning as a movie theater and went into disrepair. At this time, there was talk that historic building was going to be razed and turned into a parking lot, and that is when several community groups, led by the Coldwater Players, stepped in with a â€œSave the Tibbitsâ€ campaign. The Schulte Amusement Company agreed to sell the building to the Coldwater Players for a minimal sum of $7500. Not a day went by that there wasnâ€™t an article or photo in the paper about the latest fundraiser, donation request, or labor request. From January of 1961 to April of 1961, everything from new fire doors to a new heating system to a fresh coat of paint was installed by various service groups, with the Tibbits in use from April until December of that year when the fire marshal ordered the building to be closed until further repairs were made.&#13;
&#13;
Another campaign was launched in January of 1962, and by the end of the year a non-profit Tibbits foundation was formed. Even without the balance in hand for repairs, in May of 1963 the board continued plans for repairs of the roof, sprinkler system, and heating system. In November of 1963, the unheated Tibbits officially opened for a Grand Ole Opry show, which played to a shivering but packed crowd.&#13;
&#13;
By December, George Vaughn Lowther was hired as manager and director, and in 1964, the Tibbits was back in use as a professional summer stock venue and roadhouse. Since 1964, the Tibbits has continued to be a steadily-used landmark of the community and has gone through several managers and renovations. Currently, the Tibbits still functions as a non-profit organization and the Foundation still owns the building, which is under restoration. In the fall of 2012, the outside restoration phase was completed and plans to restore the inside are currently underway.</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="122568">
                <text>Stephanie D. (Hemker) Burdick</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="122569">
                <text>August 18, 2014</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="122570">
                <text>(c) Copyright 2014 by Stephanie Burdick, all rights reserved. Posted here with permission of the author.</text>
              </elementText>
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