Big Pavilion construction

LO46

LO46

Name/Title

Big Pavilion construction

Entry/Object ID

2021.87.48

Scope and Content

The Local Observer newspaper Remembering When - Our History article titled "Up She Went" LO46 December 21, 2005. By Jack Sheridan and Jim Schmiechen. Digital files use to create this article and associated resources at 2021.72.02

Context

UP SHE WENT Last week we followed the faint trail left by Limouze and Engle as they breathed life into their pavilion plan. It took three years and more investors, but finally in March 1909 came the word. The Commercial Record announced that work was about to commence on an ”immense pavilion”. The proposed building crowed the paper, “will be 200 feet long by 105 feet wide and cost about $25,000”. (This would be about a half million in 2005 dollars – cheap for a 21,000 square foot building.) “The main entrance will face the north and will have a vestibule 38 x 16 feet. The dancing floor will be 110 x 60 making 6600 square feet of space and there will be no posts in the building as the room will be supported with steel arches 68 feet high from the floor”. In early April a pile driver was brought in from South Haven and began driving the pilings on which the building was to rest near the rivers edge. By the end of April, two large barges arrived with 340,000 board feet of lumber and Henry Gleason and Sons –- using their new, revolutionary, powered cement mixer-- were just about finished with the concrete work. Giant wooden arches were assembled on the rough floor and hoisted into place. A small army of carpenters and helpers swarmed over the site. The Holland City News reported: “Work on the Big Pavilion at Saugatuck has been pushed rapidly ever since it was started and men are now working overtime as long as they can still see, about 75 men being now employed, the payroll being $1,000 a week”. The Limouze target was to be open for the big Fourth of July weekend. Stay tuned… By Jack Sheridan Thanks goes to Kit Lane and her book “Saugatuck’s Big Pavilion: The Brightest Spot on the Great Lakes”. It is available from the Historical Society and at most local book stores.

Collection

Remembering When

Cataloged By

Winthers, Sally

Acquisition

Accession

2021.87

Source or Donor

Sheridan, John "Jack" O. 1938-

Acquisition Method

Donation

Location

* Untyped Location

Digital data in CatalogIt

Relationships

Related Person or Organization

Person or Organization

Engle, H.H., Sheridan, John "Jack" O. 1938-, Limouze, Frederick 1856-, Interurban Railroad 1899-1927, Schmiechen, James A., Saugatuck Amusement Company [operated the Big Pavilion], Gleason, Henry 1925-2019, Lane, Kit 1939-2024, Big Pavilion 1909-1960

Related Publications

Publication

Local Observer

Create Date

December 11, 2021

Update Date

November 18, 2023