Perry Crosier
Perry E. Crosier (1890-1953[1]) was an architect based in Minnesota, best known for the theatres he designed throughout Minnesota. He also designed apartment complexes and residences.[1] Several of his works are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
He was born November 17, 1890 in Minneapolis. In 1909 he became a draftsman for Minneapolis architect Harry W. Jones. During 1910-13 he worked variously for architects Bertrand and Chamberlin, for a real estate firm, for a building contractor, and more.[1]
He worked independently later. His firm became Perry E. Crosier & Son, in 1946, when his son Paul joined. He died in August 1953.[1]
Works by "Perry Crosier" or "Perry Crosier and Son" include:
- theatres in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area
- Boulevard Twins Theatre (1939)
- the Avalon Theatre (1937)
- the St. Louis Park Theatre (1938)
- the Hopkins Theatre (1941)
- West Twins Theatre, West St. Paul.
In collaboration with Liebenberg & Kaplan:
- the Westgate Theatre (1934)
- the Cinema Theatre in Detroit Lakes, Minnesota
- the Princess Theatre in Wabasha, Wisconsin
- Village Theatre (1944–46) in Faribault, Minnesota[1]
- other theatres
- Falls Theater (1933), 117 First Street S.E., Little Falls, Minnesota, a contributing building in the NRHP-listed Little Falls Commercial Historic District[2]
- Strand Theatre, 618 Hill Ave., Grafton, ND (Crosier, Perry E. and Son), NRHP-listed
- Walla Theater, 909 Central Ave., Walhalla, ND (Crosier, Perry E. & Son), NRHP-listed
- West Theatre, now The Tarlton Theatre (1941 converted to a theatre), in Green Bay, Wisconsin, in Art Deco and Art Moderne styles.[3]
Other works include:
- the Belmont, an apartment complex
- the Oak Terrace, an apartment complex
- the Fair Oaks (1939), an apartment complex
- the Loring Medical Building (1926), Minneapolis.
- Golden Valley Road apartments, North Minneapolis[1]
He is reported to have designed 1211, 1215, 1221, 1227, and 1233 Russell Avenue North, and the Tazewell Apartments in St. Paul.[1]
References
- Northwest Architectural Archives Perry Crosier Papers, University of Minnesota archives, as reported at [https://historichomewood.blogspot.com/2015/02/perry-crosier-architect-of-two-homes-on.html "Perry Crosier, Architect", a Historic Homewood Neighborhood blog
- Susan Granger and Scott Kelly; Norene Roberts and Joe Roberts; State Historic Preservation Office; Jan Warner and Bruce Mellor (1994). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Little Falls Commercial Historic District". National Park Service. Retrieved April 13, 2020.CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link) With 40 accompanying pictures by Joe Roberts from 1993 (photo #1 is the theatre