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211:. Construction using Bohlen's designs, began in 1883, and extended more than two years at a cost of $ 125,000. The first floor housed offices and overflow from the City Market, while the second floor contained a large auditorium with a seating capacity of 4,200 people in the audience and an additional 650 people on the stage.
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The hall was destroyed by fire on
January 30, 1958, allegedly after a pigeon dropped a lit cigarette on the roof of the building. The city issued a contract to demolish the building, but a group of citizens who wanted to maintain the civic landmark obtained a restraining order on March 10. The judge
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had given to the city for use as a public market, could be used for other purposes. Some of the city's leaders also feared that the erection of a public hall would ultimately require a tax increase. The city council decided that the new structure would house both the public hall and the city market.
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The will of
Indianapolis druggist Stephen D. Tomlinson, who had died on November 14, 1870, provided that the residue of his estate would, upon the death of his wife, Mary Todd Brown Tomlinson, be given to city of Indianapolis to construct a "public building" on the western portion of what was then
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The demolition dealt only with the aboveground portions of the structure. The basement had been used to transport and store goods in a cooler location for the market vendors on the first floor. Subsequent construction of a new west wing of the City Market in the 1970s retained the basement. Since
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Beginning in the 1930s, Tomlinson Hall began to deteriorate, leading city leaders in the 1950s to consider what should be done with it. A persistent proposal was to demolish it and build a parking garage on the site. In 1955, the
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The hall was host to several kinds of public activities during its history, including concerts, fund raisers, political events, conventions, and sporting events. Notable entertainers who performed there included
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When the adjacent City Market was rehabilitated in the 1970s, an arch from
Tomlinson Hall that had been incorporated into a later wall was uncovered and renovated as a memorial to the hall and its benefactor.
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subsequently vacated the order on May 13, finding that because
Tomlinson Hall was not part of the original market trust, the city was within its rights to raze it. The demolition was completed in July.
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The city reached an agreement with Mrs. Tomlinson in 1874 to receive the estate immediately. However, construction was delayed while the question of whether the site, which the
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The building was named for
Stephen D. Tomlinson, an Indianapolis druggist, whose will had bequeathed the money to build it.
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then the 20,000-square-foot (1,900 m) underground area, while no longer used for any purpose, has become known as the
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for president of the United States. Rallies were held in 1917 to mark the declaration of war on
Germany in
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184:. It hosted a variety of public events from 1886 until January 30, 1958, when it was destroyed in a fire.
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On June 27, 1888, the hall was the site of a large celebration honoring the nomination of
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of the 1920s. The hall was also host to the city's annual May Music
Festival. During the
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Original dedicatory plaque for
Tomlinson Hall that was relocated after the 1958 fire
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558:"Beneath Indianapolis' Bustling City Market Lies a Forgotten Underground Expanse"
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Vanderstel, Sheryl D. (1994). Bodenhamer, David J.; Barrows, Robert G. (eds.).
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585:"City Market--Indianapolis: A Discover Our Shared Heritage Travel Itinerary"
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A Design Study for the
Redevelopment of Market Square, Indianapolis, Indiana
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East Market Square, a farmer's market that had operated since the 1830s.
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The city organized a design contest that was won by local architect
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RetroIndy: Tomlinson Hall was the gathering place for
Indianapolis
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Tomlinson Hall was inaugurated on June 2, 1886, as a part of the
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Music Festival that raised money for the construction of the
472:(Master of Architecture thesis). Cambridge, Massachusetts:
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Tomlinson Hall, with the City Market to the right, c. 1909
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was one of the dignitaries presiding over that event.
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Tomlinson Hall (left) and City Market (center) in 1888
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called the structure the "city's worst fire hazard".
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Burned buildings and structures in the United States
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653:Demolished buildings and structures in Indiana
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16:Public meeting hall in Indianapolis, Indiana
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250:and in 1920 to mark the city's centennial.
623:Buildings and structures completed in 1886
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529:Roberts, Richard R. (December 28, 1958).
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618:Buildings and structures in Indianapolis
463:Kenneth Shimer, Wood (August 15, 1958).
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531:"Indiana's 10 biggest stories of 1958"
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258:and his band (which featured soprano
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638:Tourist attractions in Indianapolis
556:Nalewicki, Jennifer (May 6, 2018).
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301:National Board of Fire Underwriters
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413:Dawn Mitchell (October 28, 2013).
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498:. September 19, 1902. p. 19.
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355:. Indianapolis and Bloomington:
233:Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument
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643:Sports venues in Indianapolis
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172:was a public meeting hall in
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357:Indiana University Press
237:William Tecumseh Sherman
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282:were held in the hall.
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108:4,200 plus 650 on stage
359:. pp. 1336–1337.
313:Indianapolis Catacombs
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286:Deterioration and fire
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590:National Park Service
535:The Indianapolis Star
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79:39.76861°N 86.15389°W
266:, silent movie star
98:City of Indianapolis
633:Theatres in Indiana
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215:Opening and events
209:Diedrich A. Bohlen
162:Diedrich A. Bohlen
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268:Rudolph Valentino
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244:Benjamin Harrison
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594:. Retrieved
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537:. p. 15
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174:Indianapolis
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129:June 2, 1886
113:Construction
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563:Smithsonian
512:|work=
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383:|work=
262:), pianist
248:World War I
82: /
57:Coordinates
612:Categories
323:References
191:Beginnings
142:Demolished
70:86°09′14″W
67:39°46′07″N
514:ignored (
504:cite book
435:ignored (
425:cite book
385:ignored (
375:cite book
272:big bands
158:Architect
153:$ 125,000
121:1883-1886
104:Capacity
43:Location
596:May 21,
569:May 21,
541:May 28,
480:May 21,
178:Indiana
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134:Closed
126:Opened
470:(PDF)
118:Built
95:Owner
598:2021
571:2021
543:2021
516:help
482:2021
437:help
387:help
361:ISBN
145:1958
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Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.