Market St - 1400

From Historic Wheeling
Revision as of 18:02, 10 April 2018 by Api (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<div id="content_view" class="wiki" style="display: block"><div id="toc"> =Table of Contents= <div style="margin-left: 2em">[#x-Looking north up 1400 block of Market St. 193...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search

Table of Contents

[#x-Looking north up 1400 block of Market St. 1930s? Looking north up 1400 block of Market St. 1930s?]
[#x-1416 Market - McGhee Building 1416 Market - McGhee Building]
[#x-1419 Market Street - Bruce-Kain Building 1419 Market Street - Bruce-Kain Building]
[#x-1421 Market Street - Charles Hanke Building 1421 Market Street - Charles Hanke Building]
[#x-1425 Market Street - Vames Building 1425 Market Street - Vames Building]
[#x-1431 Market Street - Commercial Building 1431 Market Street - Commercial Building]
[#x-Tin Pan Alley Tin Pan Alley]
MarketSt-c30s800pi.jpg

Looking north up 1400 block of Market St. 1930s?

MarketSt-c1940s800pi.jpg
Same scene as above with Rex Theater (1422 Market) on right. The Bing Crosby movie, Here Comes the Groom dates this to 1951. The green Brown Tailors sign on the top card is faded in the lower one.
Postcards from Chuck Julian collection.


1416 Market - McGhee Building

Lovely colonaded upper stories. Until recently McGhee Office Supplies and Furniture.
McGheeBld1978.jpgMcGheeWallSign.jpg
Photos from 1978 from Natl Register of Historic Places nomination for Wheeling Central Business District.
Offerred in 2012 for $49,900.

1419 Market Street - Bruce-Kain Building

c. 1870, Italianate style


1421 Market Street - Charles Hanke Building

c. 1870, Italianate style.


1425 Market Street - Vames Building

c. 1895, Victorian and Neo-Classical style with Medieval overtones.


1431 Market Street - Commercial Building

c. 1900, Victorian and Neo-Classical architecture.
Offered for $85,000 in 2012.


Tin Pan Alley

Behind 1429 Market Street. Zeller's night club, active from 20s thru 1970s with 3 floors of live entertainment. The 70s music scene. Part of brick wall collapsed in March 2015, making at least partial demolition likely.


This page has been edited 15 times. The last modification was made by - tychocrater tychocrater on May 13, 2015 1:42 pm