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Newark Symphony Hall

Salaam Temple
Newark Symphony Hall & Boys Chorus School.JPG
Symphony Hall and Boys Chorus School
Newark Symphony Hall is located in Essex County, New Jersey
Newark Symphony Hall
Newark Symphony Hall is located in New Jersey
Newark Symphony Hall
Newark Symphony Hall is located in the US
Newark Symphony Hall
Location 1020 Broad Street, Newark, New Jersey
Coordinates 40°43′40″N 74°10′35″W / 40.72778°N 74.17639°W / 40.72778; -74.17639Coordinates: 40°43′40″N 74°10′35″W / 40.72778°N 74.17639°W / 40.72778; -74.17639
Area 1.0566 acres (0.4276 ha)
Built 1925
Architect Grad Associates
Architectural style Classical Revival
NRHP Reference # 77000867
NJRHP #
Added to NRHP October 5, 1977

Newark Symphony Hall at 1020 Broad Street in Newark, Essex County, New Jersey, United States, was built in 1925 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1977. It was known for many years as The Mosque Theater.

Originally built by the Shriners at a cost of more than $2 million as Salaam Temple and colloquially known as The Mosque, the four-story building has been Newark Symphony Hall since 1964. The interior features a Greek and Egyptian motifs, marble columns, a crystal chandelier, gold-leaf fret work and two-columned side promenades. The neo-classical building was designed by Frank Grad, a prominent Newark architect, whose work includes the Lefcourt Newark Building and many others downtown.

The 3,500-seat main concert hall is named for Sarah Vaughan, a native Newarker, and is renowned for its acoustics. Newark Stage is a 200-seat black box theater used by theatrical productions. The Terrace Ballroom is used for receptions. The Studio is a rehearsal space. The Dance Studio is home to one of three facilities in the state used by the school of the Garden State Ballet, founded in 1951.

During its early years the theater received the patronage of Mrs. Parker O. Griffith, with a foundation supported by the Griffith Piano Company. The company also built the Griffith Building, used as a showroom, workshop, office tower and recital auditorium. In the early 1920s, the company formed a partnership with Earl Beach, the Griffith Beach Organ Company. Beach had worked with Robert Hope-Jones at his factory in Elmira, New York. The organ in Symphony Hall is one of ten theatre organs installed in northeastern New Jersey between 1921 and 1925. The Harmonic Tuba has H.J. (Hope-Jones) stamped on it.

New Jersey's first television station, WATV Channel 13, debuted on May 15, 1948 from studios at The Mosque Theater. The commercial station was owned by Atlantic Television, a subsidiary of Bremer Broadcasting Corporation. Bremer also owned two northern New Jersey radio stations, WAAT (970 AM, now WNYM) and WAAT-FM (94.7 MHz., now WNSH) whose studios were also in the building. Today Channel 13 is non-commercial WNET. From 1965-1989 the former WATV-13 studios were home to WNJU Channel 47.


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