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OKPRI:
Case Files |
The Historical Ritz
Theater

This is an ongoing
investigation for OKPRI & the Ritz has become our permanent research location.
Look for this page to be updated quite often!!

Historical Ritz Theater Movie
Documentary
Date:
July,
August, September, October, November 2008
Initial Stats:
Normal, Quiet
Moon:
67% Full, Waning Gibbous
Temperature:
97 degrees F.
Wind Speed & Direction:
SSE 4mph
Barometer:
30.6 steady
Humidity:
50%
Member’s Present:
Christy, Roger, Kendall, Lisa P. Sheri, Dee, LiLi, Joe, Sara, Chuck, John
& Garry
The
History of Shawnee & The Ritz Theater
The area surrounding Shawnee was settled after the Civil War by a number
of tribes that the federal government had removed to Indian Territory.
Over the course of the 1870s, Texas cattle drovers pushed their herds
across Indian Territory. With the cattle drives came railroads; as a
result, pressure began to build to allow permanent white settlements in
a region that previously had been reserved by treaty to Native
Americans. By 1871, the Quakers moved into this area and opened up a
mission. By 1872 a school was built and by 1876, a post office and
trading post had been established. Beginning in April 1889, the United
States government succumbed to the pressure that had built to open
Indian lands to white settlement.
1890: In
December of 1890, John W. Beard and Dave Perriman went on
a hunting trip to an area called "Brockway" or "Country B" in Oklahoma
Territory. They were very impressed with the area, so much that
they told their friends about it and organized an exploration trip back
to the area.
1891:
The following year, "County B" was able to be settled due to the
government opening up part of the original Indian Territory to white
settlement. A second land run was held on September 22, 1891 and a
group of people including John Beard, left for this area to join the
run. This 2nd land run had hundreds of people who raced to stake
their claims. Four people, John Beard, Etta B. Ray, Elijah Alley,
James Farral were the original four who staked their claim in what is
now the town of Shawnee, Oklahoma. John Beard and Etta B. Ray were
married and the family including Etta's father, built the first
homestead there in Shawnee. It was called the Beard Cabin and it
still remains today in Shawnee.
The
town of Shawnee hasn't always been called Shawnee. In 1892 a
debated meeting was held in a hotel in Oklahoma City to decide the name
of the town. The names that were being debated were Brockway,
Forest City, Beardville, Chicago and Shawnee. The committee
finally decided on Shawnee and thus the town of Shawnee was born.
The
Beard family wanted the railroad to come through Shawnee instead of the
Railroad's original plan of going thru the town of Tecumseh. In
order to get the Railroads to agree to run through Shawnee, John Beard
sold 100 acres and Henry Beard sold 150 acres of their land to the
Choctaw, Oklahoma and Gulf Railroad in 1894. The town of Tecumseh
was angry at the decision and took the town of Shawnee and the Railroad
to court to dispute the agreement but unfortunately the town of Tecumseh
lost their suit. Tracks began being built through Shawnee and the
first train came through in 1895.
1896-1897: The
Railroad became very prominent in Shawnee and in 1896, sold off some of
their property to various individuals. The land on which the Ritz
Theater sits was one of these land sections that was sold. It was
then that the land was purchased from the Railroad by Wesley G.
Montgomery and his wife Dora. Wesley Montgomery was known as a
businessman and was also said to have involvement with banking.
After Wesley Montgomery purchased the land from the Railroads, he
erected a building in 1896 but part of the property changed hands in
1897 when Wesley Montgomery sold half of it to his father-in-law,
William Blackman. This gave the building 2 addresses, 10 & 12 W.
Main Street.
1898-1904:
According to the Sandborn Maps which were created by
the Insurance Companies of those days, Wesley's side was a furniture
Store and William's side as a grocery store. The maps show the
upstairs area/rooms as offices. In 1901 the maps show Wesley's
side to be a dry good & grocery store and William's side as a drug
store. The upstairs was still listed as offices. In 1904 the
maps show Wesley's side as a grocery store and William's side as a drug
store.
1906: The maps
showed William's side as The "Wallace Mann Drug Store" which is the
first documented business name for the building. William Blackman
was thought to have rented out the drug store since he was a capitalist
and businessman . William also died in 1906 and left his business
to his wife Patience.
1907: The
Sanborn Maps show Wesley's side vacant and the Blackman's side as FM
Blakely Drug Store. The upstairs area's use is not mentioned.
1909: The first
documented residency upstairs was by W.C. Hensley.
Wesley also made the top part of the the building into a hotel and named
it "The Gordon Hotel." Wesley had the hotel run by a James Crozier
who started his job on November 1st, 1909. An add was placed in
the Newspaper which read:
"The Gordon Hotel:
James Crozier, Meets all trains, takes care of your baggage.
His
wife ably assists in the conduct of the hotel and sees to it that all
guests are properly served.
Rates are 50 cents per night,
$2.50-$3.00 per week. Free baths.
Telephone connection 1025
black. James and Family came from Sioux City, Iowa.
1910: In
September 1910 Wesley Montgomery sold his side of the building to a Mr.
Thomas Ellis.
1911-1912:
Mr. Ellis turned his side of the building into a theater and named it
"The Cozy Theater." The Cozy Theater was known for it's "moving &
talking pictures." The Shawnee Director showed the Cozy Theater as
12 W. Main St. with the manager as Wesley Montgomery with the Cozy's
seating capacity at 300 seats. The Blackman's side was then a
grocery store. in 1912 the name of the hotel changed from the
Gordon Hotel to the Savoy Hotel. Wesley Montgomery is listed as
the proprietor of the Cozy Theater and the Savoy Hotel.
1913: Patience
Blackman dies and the property is given to the Blackman children.
Property is still rented out to individual and remains a grocery store.
Wesley Montgomery and Dora divorce and Wesley moves into the Savoy
Hotel.
1914: Thomas
Ellis Sells the Cozy Theater and Savoy Hotel to George McKinnis, a
prominent business man in Shawnee during that time who dealt a lot in
real estate and banking.
1915: George
McKinnis sales the Cozy Theater and Savoy Hotel to Leo Montgomery.
Leo lived in the Savoy hotel upstairs with his wife Lillian who owed the
Cozy Theater and Savoy Hotel with Leo.
1916:
Both lots/side of buildings (Montgomery & Blackman) were combined and
purchased by Jake Jones. Mr. Jones was born in Mount Lebanon,
Syria, and came to the United States in 1888 with his
mother and sister, settling first in Waco, Texas, before moving to
Shawnee in 1903 where he first began operating the city’s
confectioneries and ice cream stores. Jake Jones renamed the Savoy
Hotel to the Cozy Hotel & Boarding House. Even though Leo sold the
building to the Jones family, he was still considered an operatory
(projectionist) at the Cozy Theater. Wesley Montgomery no longer
owned the property however was listed as a boarder in the Cozy Hotel and
Boarding House until his death sometime between 1923-1925. The
Cozy Hotel and Boarding House had many long term boarders including
Barney and Florence Williams, Dora Montgomery, Wesley & Leo Montgomery.
1926: The
Griffith Brothers signed a lease for building to provide inside
furnishing and equipment such as a organ, screen, velvet curtain, ticket
machine, scenery, chairs, ceiling fans, coal and gas furnaces, 10 gas
stoves, 2 moving picture machines and much more. On August 10,
1926, A.F. Hornbeck bought one-third of the Griffith Brothers interest
in the lease. In 1926 the theater's name was changed to "The
Ritz."
1927: "The Jazz
Singer" was the first full-length talking picture shown at the
theater showing Al Johlson.
1933-1935:
Upstairs became apartments
1960: Current
marquee was added
1984: Ritz was
the first historical building to get cosmetic facelift out front.
1988: The Ritz
Theater closes. The last movie shown was "Willow." The Ritz
was the first theater in Shawnee and 3rd in state to show talking
movies.
2000: The Ritz
building was given to the SRDS by the Jones Family.
Shawnee’s population today is now 28,692.
Since Shawnee’s beginning, the town has grown over the years and many
buildings have been erected. The Ritz Theater was one of these
buildings. The Ritz Theater was built in 1899 and was first owned
by Wesley G. Montgomery. The building was originally
constructed as a dry goods store and the building was also once believed to
be a Mercantile/ furniture store and funeral home, where the furniture
boxes from the east coast were made into caskets. Eventually Mr.
Montgomery changed the theme of the building's business and converted the building into a theater and named it, "The Cozy
Theater." In it's beginning, the Cozy only had 350 seats and could
accommodate a large crowd, but still needed some remodeling done to it
to make it better. Unlike the theaters of today, the Cozy Theater
was one of Shawnee's main forms of public entertainment and actually
showed some of Hollywood's first silent films.
In 1913 it was purchased by Jake Jones, Sr.
Mr. Jones was born in
Mount Lebanon, Syria, and came to the United States in 1888 with his
mother and sister, settling first in Waco, Texas, before moving to
Shawnee in 1903 where he first began operating the city’s
confectioneries and ice cream stores. When Jake Jones purchased the old building, he
began renovations and also turned the upstairs boarding house into the Cozy Hotel
& Boarding House.
In 1914, many people were excited to see an organ installed which
enabled the theater to furnish musical
accompaniment to the dramas of
the silent screen. The building was also remodeled to its present 40
foot width and shortly thereafter became a stop on the state
extravaganza circuit. In 1926, the theatre was renamed the Ritz, and
Shawnee’s first talking motion pictures were shown. Ads for the theater
read “5 cents to all,” and Alice Joyce and Lillian Gish were the glamour
girls of the time. Mrs. Williams was a manager of the theatre and she
used to live upstairs in the front of the boarding house. Many people
remember her because she had a parrot that would perch in the front
window and would say “Buy a ticket!” to the people outside.
The Ritz is an Art Deco style, two story building and is the oldest
building standing on Shawnee’s Main Street. Its Boarding House was
finally closed in 1945 during WW2 but for almost 70 years, the Ritz has
been the cornerstone of entertainment traditions in Shawnee, spanning
the eras of silent movies to the first Dolby stereo in the state.
The Ritz also continued to show movies until 1988 when it was closed as
a main theater. Today the first floor and auditorium are in good
condition and reflect lighting fixtures designed and made by Johnny
Jones, son of Jake Jones Sr. Architectural details are still intact but
it does need some restoring. In 2000, the Jones family gave the
theater to the Society for Revitalization of Downtown Shawnee, Inc. This
historic landmark holds the designation of “Save America’s Treasures”.
In the past two years, SRDS has held four to six performances annually
and raised $60,000 towards renovations and restoration.
Who Are the Ghosts of the Ritz Theater?
Many people that have lived in Shawnee for a number of years believe the
Ritz Theater to be haunted by a man named Leo Montgomery. Leo was the
projectionist at the Ritz from 1913 until his dead in 1965. Leo was from
Maryville, Missouri but moved to Shawnee, Oklahoma with his family where
he began attending school. After school he went on the road with the
circus and was a musician. He returned to Shawnee in 1913 because a
projectionist was needed at the Cozy Theater which his father Wesley G.
Montgomery owned at the time. A short time later when the Cozy Theater
was sold to Jake Jones and its name changed to the Ritz, he continued to
work as the projectionist. His plans were only to work for the Ritz for
one more year but soon it turned into decades. Leo fell into love with
Viola Cora Cates who worked across the street from the Ritz at the
Palace of Sweets Candy Shop and eventually asked her to marry him in
1926. They later then took up residency in the boarding house apartments
above the Ritz and lived there until their family began to expand. He
and Viola had several children and through the years, Leo’s daughters
would visit him at the Ritz in the little projection room above the
concession stand where their father would splice film. Leo was known to
have an easy chair and radio and a strategically placed mirror which
allowed him to look at the film’s progress without getting up from his
chair. He also had a bell that would ring when it was time to change the
reel. With as much time as Montgomery spent at the Ritz Theater, he
never watched any of the films. In 1948 the Shawnee News-Star article
did a story on him and quoted him saying, “Why for me to go to the show
would be just like a lifeguard going for a swim on his day off.” Leo was
also known as the PCP or Postcard Philosopher and he earned the
nick-name because of the short rhymes he would write, many of them while
working there at the Ritz.
Leo however met a tragic end one day while working there at the Ritz.
When a movie reel kept spinning one evening after a movie had finished,
someone went to go check on him and found that he had passed away. He
was diagnosed as having died from a massive heart attack. Leo’s memory
has never been forgotten though as Shawnee’s Leo Street is named for
him, awarded after his family lived in the Golden Acres area near
MacArthur and Leo. Leo Montgomery was a husband, father, friend and
philosopher, but to many who never knew him, was the man at the Ritz who
gave the movies life.
The Boarding House is also said to be haunted by a few spirits of the
past. One in particular is that of a young woman by the name of Amelia.
She is said to have caught pneumonia and died at the age of 19 and now
her restless soul still wanders the halls of the boarding house.
Evidence has also shown there to be a few other spirits there that have
wandered into the old boarding house and who have taken up residency.
One is an Italian man and the other is an older woman seen in period
clothing. A few children's voices have also been recorded while in
the boarding house side.
The
Ritz, once a thriving theater but now only a building with a colorful
past, still stands erect reflecting a time long ago when a life was much
simpler. While its memory is lost to many, it still remains a
historical landmark building for Shawnee and those that know it well
know the importance it once held.
Do
ghosts of its past still remain inside the old theater? Does the old
projectionist Leo Montgomery still remain there carrying on the job he
did for so many years? Whatever your decision, the fact remains that
strange activity takes place within the walls of the Ritz Theater and
some say that if you look closely enough, you might catch of glimpse of
the ghosts of its past.
The
Investigation
Our
team was excited about investigating the Ritz Theater even though we
didn’t know much about it. We found out about the Ritz Theater through
Christy who while in Shawnee one day, happened to drive past the old
theater and felt like it would be a good place to check out and
investigate. When we arrived at the theater, we were greeting by Amanda
from the Shawnee News Star and the caretaker, Charlotte who welcomed us
to the Ritz and then who graciously gave us a walk-thru tour of the Ritz
Theater. A secondary walk-thru/interview was conducted with Charlotte
and the research team to get the history of the building and to find out
which areas they were experiencing strange activity. Charlotte did
state that they keep the upstairs boarding area locked and no one has
access to it other than 3 board members who work there. There were
things that had been moved and misplaced since the last time that
Charlotte and staff had been in there last. As we conducted the
walk-thru, we marked those items to see if they would be moved during
the time that we conducted our investigation.
After the walk-thru and interviews were through, the team gathered
together to discuss the different areas of the buildings and to set up a
game plan on starting and conducting the investigation. It was
decided that we would have 2 different teams with one team investigating
the theater side and the other team investigating the boarding house
upstairs. Team 1 started in the boarding house area and Team 2
covered the theater area. While team 1 was in the boarding house,
they kept noticing shadows passing in the hallways and they kept hearing
footsteps and different types of popping and knocking sounds.
The boarding house was checked for stray animals and foul but none were
found. There were even times when the group asked questions and
asked for correlation back and surprisingly it happened. While
team 1 was conducting their investigation, two of the members both heard
an audible "hey" but what was strange bout this was because both of
these 2 members were several rooms apart and both reported hearing the
"hey" as if it was very close to them.
Another
strange thing that both teams noticed while conducting their sweeps was
that there were objects of all kinds that would suddenly appear on the
floor area of the boarding house, especially in the main hallway areas.
On our initial visit there was a Bible that just appeared in the middle
of one of the rooms so one of our investigators marked the Bible by
placing it on a sheet of paper and then marking around the paper.
Since we had investigated the Ritz Theater numerous times, we had set up
little experiments throughout it
and strangely enough the Bible stayed in place for months before finally
moving again. Our investigators took pictures and documented the
placement of the Bible both times that it moved. A bank book was
also found and was in pristine condition to be lying in the middle of
the hallway floor. Both teams also noticed during their sweeps
that they would be at one end of the hallway and they would hear
movement such as footsteps and strange sounds coming from the opposite
end. When they would check out that end of the hallway, the sounds
and footsteps would stop and start up again but this time at the
opposite end. When the team split up with part of the team on one
end and the other part on the opposite end, there would be no sounds
coming from either end of the hallway. Team 1 recorded a great
flickering light anomaly during their sweep time in the boarding house
area.
"Flickering Light Anomaly Video"
Team
2 conducted their sweep of the inside of the theater and this is where
one of our members had the strangest experience of them all. She
was with the team conducting a sit down of the auditorium area when she
suddenly looked to her left and saw a man whom she described to be an
older white gentleman wearing a vest and pants pulled up kind of high.
She also stated that he was going a bit balding and he stopped to glare
at her and then suddenly disappeared. At the time this member did
not know who Leo was nor had she ever seen a picture of him.
Curious to know who this individual was, she asked one of our
researchers who then showed her a picture of Leo Montgomery and she
immediately recognized him as the ghostly man she had just seen a few
moments before in the theater. Here is the video clip of Sara's
experience seeing Leo.
"Video
Interview of Sara When She Saw Leo"
Another neat experience our team had was when Team 1 was investigating
the theater side. They kept hearing audible voices and movement up
towards the front end of the theater by the concession area. They
also witnessed the projection room light come on and flood the room for
about 3 seconds and then go off again. Team 1 went up to the
projection room to see if they could recreate the light coming on but
unless there was someone physically in the the project room who could
turn on the heavy light switch, the light should have had no way to come
on. Also, when the heavy switch was flipped up or down, those
present not only in the projection room but also in the theater area
could hear the light switch being flipped off and on but ironically
enough this loud flipping sound was not heard during the time that the
projection light came on. Strange individual lights were also seen
in the theater during both team's sweeps.
Based off our our groups personal experiences and the evidence that we
collected, we feel like the Ritz Theater is definitely haunted by some
of the shots of its past and ghosts that have wandered into the theater.
Psychic Investigator's
Comments:
- Christy Selfridge -
I really enjoyed
this investigation not only because it was a historical landmark but also
because of the connection I made with a few of the spirits present there.
I went into this investigation not knowing anything
about this building or its history. I will say that I stumbled onto this
location one evening whenever I drove by and saw it one evening. There was
something about that building that tagged me and I felt very drawn to it.
It was then that I gave the information to our group's case managers to see what
they could find out about the building and to see if our group could obtain
permission to conduct an investigation. Luckily we were granted permission
so our sincere thanks goes out to those staff members there at the Ritz Theater!
Once we
were there conducing our investigation, I walked into the old theater
and boarding house not sure of what to expect. I first helped
conduct an investigation of the boarding house and found it to be quite
intriguing as not only did I heard and see the same types of paranormal
activity, but I also was given extra information by a man who died of a
massive heart attack and a young woman who died of either pneumonia or
tuberculosis. I encountered the man in the hallway of the boarding
house and he seemed a bit concerned about us being there. I asked
him his name but he would not give it to me right away. While
sitting there quietly in the dark, I kept hearing a heart beat and heard
the heart beat suddenly stop and I felt a pain in my chest and left arm.
I knew that he had died of a heart attack but I didn't feel like it had
happened there in the boarding house. I also felt like he might
have worked at the theater at one time but I wasn't too sure until I
visited the theater side itself. The woman that I encountered was
around the age of 18 or 19 and I felt like she had become very sick.
I saw this woman lying in this bed which had a homemade quilt on top of
it with different colored patches. She told me her name was Amelia
and then she showed me her much younger brother (who did not understand
the severity of her sickness) putting crickets in her bed. She was
scared of crickets and had trouble getting them out of her bed since she
was so ill. I saw an older woman putting a cloth on her forehead
and I knew she was burning up with fever. I don't honestly think
she knew she
had passed as she kept insisting to me that she was feeling
better and was no longer sick.
The
theater part itself actually felt very peaceful but I did feel like we
were being watched. It wasn't until I entered the projection room
that I encountered this man head on who called himself Leo. As
quickly as he was there, he was gone again but even though I couldn't
see him any longer, I still felt his presence around. I
tuned into him on a spiritual level and as if a past memory, I saw Leo's
spirit standing beside his body which was still sitting in a chair where
he was before he had passed. I again heard a heart beat and I knew
that this was the same man that I had encountered inside the boarding
house. I felt like Leo knew that he had passed but I still felt
like he felt like he was needed there at the theater. I don't
think that Leo stays at the Ritz theater all the time as I feel like he
visits his family and friends but I do feel like he does stop into the
Ritz quite often and helps out where he is needed. I also feel
like he keeps an eye on the Ritz and is there to make sure that the Ritz
is taken care of.
Evidence Collected
  
Photographs:
There
were 1 positive photographs from
this location

Video:
1 positive video clip of a
Flickering Light Anomaly
Flickering Light
Anomaly Video
Evp:
There were 6 evps recorded from this
investigation.
“Talk to me”
“Putzarella”
“Go get out”
“I am dead”
“I am Leo”
“I’m Tired”
“It’s Jack”
“My Jesus is Dead”
“Oh give me a break”
“Oh lord, crazy women”
"I know my way
around"
"Someone killed me"
“Stop that”
“Are we dead”
“Baby crying”
“Mommy”
"Yes”
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