Thursday, March 9, 2023

Hilltop Drive-In Movie Theater, 1800 Maple Road, US 6 (Old Rte 66), Joliet, Illinois. (1955-2001)



Hill-Top opened in 1955. This popular 1950s vintage drive-in, with a large, single screen and capacity for 623 cars, suddenly closed in the middle of the 2001 season. It has remained abandoned, falling victim to vandals and disrepair. 

On August 10, 2020, a straight-line wind storm knocked over about 80% of the drive-in's brick screen. Hill-Top was razed later in 2020.
Hilltop Drive-In Entrance.


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In 1940, Route 66 was realigned to pass through Plainfield and bypass Joliet. Multiple additional alignments were done over the subsequent years while building the Interstate at the time called the freeway, in accordance with a 1943 bill.



The movie reel projection booth.
Car speaker pole.
 
Projection booth equipment.
Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D.

Jeffery Theater, 1952 East 71st Street, Chicago, Illinois (1923-1997)

The Jeffery Theater was constructed in 1923 in the heart of the South Shore neighborhood’s commercial center at 71st Street between Euclid Avenue and Jeffery Boulevard.

It opened in 1924 as a vaudeville and movie house for the Cooney Brothers circuit.

The Neo-Classical style Theater could seat 1,798 and was designed by architect William P. Doerr (who also designed the Neo-Georgian style East Park Towers in Hyde Park). It had a tall vertical marquee that rose over the facade of the Theater and could be seen up and down 71st Street.


The Jeffery Theater was operated by Warner Brothers in the 1930s and 1940’, under a movies-only policy. It was later run by the Coston family, which operated South Side houses like the Beverly Theater and the Hamilton Theater.
1955



The Jeffery Theater, a long-time South Shore landmark, was demolished in 1997, except for its facade and lobby area, which now houses a bank. A drive-up was located where the auditorium formerly stood. In September 2017, plans were proposed to demolish the remainder of the building to build a Cinegrill on the site. In August 2020, a demolition permit was released for the façade and lobby of the Jeffrey Theater and the Spencer Arms Hotel.

Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D.