History of the
Brownville Concert Hall
The Brownville Concert Hall originally opened its doors on
April 28, 1990. The present building is a merger of three
traditions. It sits astride the foundations of the
Brownville Episcopal Church. The main body of the building
itself was once the First Christian Church of Peru,
Nebraska. The present improvements were based on use of
the building prior to the July 22, 1991 fire.
In the mid-1800s, the
intersection of Atlantic Avenue and 2nd Street was home not
only to the Muir House, but to two of Brownville's leading
churches. One, the Brownville Episcopal Church, had closed
by the summer of 1894, when 18-year-old Willa Cather came
to Brownville to gather material for a newspaper article
commemorating Brownville's fortieth anniversary.
What she found was a ghost town. The Episcopal Church
building, though abandoned, was still standing. Cather
wrote, "...On the little hill to the east stands the
Episcopal Church where the elite of ancient Brownville
met to worship. The ruin and neglect of the place is
pitiful. The stained glass windows are broken in, the
walls black with the litter of mould, the carpet white with
plaster fallen from the ceiling, the prayer benches broken
and the curtains torn, the bishop's chair warped and split,
the altar cloth so moth-eaten that it scarcely holds
together, the Bible swollen and blistered by rain, and even
the white marble cross shattered before the altar."
Cather continued, "Over the door is painted in gold, 'Peace Be Within Thy
Walls.' Well, there is peace enough and there is likely to
be as long as the walls hold together. The ruins of any
church are pitiful enough, but this little church savors so
strongly of cassocks and gowns and 'world without an end,
amen' and general eliteness, that the ruin and shabbiness
is almost grotesque. It has been more marred than the
other churches in the town because it possessed beauty,
originality, and had something to lose."
The main auditorium of the Concert Hall was built in the
summer of 1904 on 5th Street in Peru, Nebraska. The Peru
Christian Church had been organized in 1896. They held
their meetings in the Peru Opera House. In 1904, Mr. Louis
Fisher offered to pay half of the cost of erecting a church
building. The congregation purchased the building of the
St. Mary's Episcopal Church, which had not been used for
years. The Episcopal Church building was dismantled and
the materials used, in large part, to build the new
structure which opened for services in 1904. The Peru
church ceased to operate in 1970, when the congregation
merged with other churches to form the Peru Union Church.
Thereafter, the building served as a home, an apartment
building, and as a Gospel Church.
The building was abandoned when purchased in 1989 by Jim
and Ruth Keene of Omaha. The building was then moved in
one piece from Peru to Brownville, and set atop a new
foundation and basement. The original 1904 stained glass
windows and church pews came along to Brownville with the
building.
The backstage area was added during the 1989-90 restoration.
An 800-pound cast iron bell, donated by the Joe Ogle family
in his memory, was installed in the steeple. The bell had
once been part of the Ogle's Dawson, Nebraska, church,
which was torn down some years ago. The front of the Peru
church was remodeled slightly to change the two-level
pulpit area into a concert stage. An elevator was added to
accommodate the handicapped. The 1904 stained glass
windows were restored.
The first performance in the Concert Hall was the 1989
Christmas Show. The hall was not yet complete, but the
show worked well.
The building was officially dedicated as a concert hall on
April 28, 1990 in a special ceremony at which Mr. Charles
R. Longsworth, President of Colonial Williamsburg, was the
principal speaker. Mr. Longsworth recounted the history of
Brownville, and talked of the high state of civilization
that existed here, and of the importance of music in the
life of this early, bustling frontier city.
He said, "Surely the cultural history this community offers
will continue to be strengthened, and I hope, expanded with
music, drama, comedy, dance, debates and all the performing
arts presented in the years to come in this extraordinary
building which has been adapted so beautifully."
In July of 1991 lightning struck the steeple and set the
concert hall afire. The fire burned for three hours before
it could be brought under control. By the time the fire
was out, the building and virtually all of the equipment in
it had been ruined. A decision was made to rebuild the
hall. The rebuilding work began during the last week in
August, 1991.
The bell tower and entry were completely destroyed by the
fire. The new bell tower and entry way differ considerably
from the original. The 800-pound cast iron bell has been
replaced by an electronic carillon. The bell is displayed
on a pedestal on the front lawn of the concert hall.
Extensive repair and replacement of the roof was necessary.
The walls and ceilings had to be removed throughout the
structure and replaced. Most of the woodwork was removed
from the damaged structure, cleaned, repainted and reinstalled.
A small addition was added to the front of the building to
accommodate enhanced technical facilities.
The 1904 stained glass windows (with the exception of the
large south window) were essentially destroyed during the
fire. Using the remnants of the damaged windows and
photographs, new windows were constructed which exactly
replicate the originals. Those pieces of glass that
survived the fire were incorporated into the new windows.
The four roundels depicting flowers of the four seasons
replaced the religious symbols of the 1904 windows. The
stained glass windows in the entry way are new, and
commemorate the 1991 rebuilding and reopening of the
facility as Brownville's concert hall.
The hall reopened on November 30, 1991. Once again the
corner of 2nd and Atlantic is an important place in town,
as it was when the Episcopal Church operated. Contrary to
Willa Cather's lament, the beauty of the place is not lost.
The inscription over the door still reads, "Peace Be Within
Thy Walls."
The concert-goer can still gaze at the stained glass
windows and let the beauty of the music recreate the beauty
of the wedding, baptism, or service they might have
experienced in this building in another time.
The three traditions of this building, this piece of
Nebraska history, merge together - through music - to
enhance the lives and souls of all who enter.
Shown above is a reproduction of an
original painting of the Brownville Concert Hall by
Nebraska artist Allan Tubach. Mr. Tubach generously
donated the original painting and reproduction rights to
the Brownville Concert Series.