[Dixielandjazz] Bing Crosby's childhood home

Robert Ringwald rsr at ringwald.com
Tue Oct 4 21:07:47 PDT 2011


When forwarding any email, please use "Netiquette." Delete all names, email addresses,
forwarding tags, etc. Just forward the content.


Crosby Home Opens for Tour
by Mike Prager
Spokane (Washington) Spokesman Review, October 4, 2011
A big slice of Spokane history is going to be on display this weekend in a historic
home tour at Gonzaga University and the adjacent neighborhood.
A highlight will be a stop at the Bing Crosby House where the crooner spent a large
part of his boyhood.
The house was completed in 1913 by Crosby's father and two uncles, and the family
lived there until it was sold in 1936.
The tour is a fundraiser for Spokane Preservation Advocates, which uses proceeds
to support historic projects.
Crosby's fame as a singer and Hollywood film star continues to interest people nearly
34 years after his death.
While the Craftsman-style Crosby House, 508 E. Sharp Ave., is used for a pair of
GU administrative programs, it is also something of a tourist attraction in Spokane.
GU psychology major Sara Galgalo, of Spokane, greets visitors from as far away as
New Zealand and Denmark, she said.
Just last week, three people stopped in while on a trip from Washington, D.C.
"I get a few young people" as visitors, Galgalo said. "But normally it's the older
generation."
The interior of the main floor is largely the same as it was when the Crosbys built
the house. It has extensive woodwork done in the "curly fir" style that was popular
in the period. The floors are a fine white oak. A mantel and bookshelves along the
west wall have cutouts that are characteristic of the Craftsman era. The original
quarry tile in front of the fireplace remains intact, although the brick on the fireplace
itself has been painted white.
The GU alumni association acquired the Crosby House in 1978. The university took
possession when the alumni association last year moved to the Huetter House, 503
E. Sharp Ave.
Mac McCandless, of GU's plant services department, said the university wants to maintain
the historical integrity of the house.
Harry Lillis Crosby was born in Tacoma on May 3, 1903, one of seven children.
Crosby acquired the nickname Bing as a boy from a comic newspaper feature called
the Bingville Bugle with a leading character named Bingo.
In 1921, Crosby joined a six-piece combo called The Musicaladers, playing at dances,
parties and a restaurant on Riverside Avenue.
According to GU, the manager of the Clemmer Theater, now the Bing Crosby Theater,
hired Crosby and Al Rinker for live shows before movies for several months in 1925.
That fall, Crosby and Rinker left Spokane for Los Angeles, where they joined the
vaudeville circuit, a move that led to Crosby's stardom. By 1926, they were recording
with the Paul Whiteman Orchestra.
In addition to the Crosby and Huetter houses, GU is opening St. Aloysius Church at
330 E. Boone Ave., which is celebrating the centennial of the church's completion
this weekend.
A half section of land was acquired by the Jesuits for GU in the 1880s, with a portion
of the land being developed with homes.
Several of the private residences on the tour were developed through the nonprofit
Pioneer Educational Society, a separate corporation that dealt with real estate in
the area.
The other tour homes are at 329 E. Sinto, 404 E. Sinto, 424 E. Sinto and 427 E. Sinto.
Sunday's historic home tour in the Gonzaga University area is from noon to 5 p.m.
Tickets are $15 and available at 329 E. Sinto Ave. during the tour. Children 12 and
under are free.


--Bob Ringwald
www.ringwald.com
Fulton Street Jazz Band
530/ 642-9551 Office
916/ 806-9551 Cell
Amateur (Ham) Radio K6YBV

I hate all this terrorist business. 
I used to love the days when you could look at an unattended bag on a train or bus and think to yourself
"I'm going to take that."




More information about the Dixielandjazz mailing list