Before radio and television, locally produced musical entertainment
was a popular diversion for thousands of Americans. In Sandusky, Ohio a group
of people formed a club known as the “Tuesday Afternoon Club.” Their first
meeting was held on April 7, 1891. The purpose of the club was “the
promotion of an interest in music, and to afford musical improvement and
enjoyment to its members.” Initially the club members met in private homes, but
later they gathered at various meeting rooms in Sandusky. On February 15, 1900,
the Tuesday Afternoon Club met at Lea’s Hall on Market Street.
The Club performed a cantata by A. Goring Thomas,
entitled The Swan and the Skylark on April 23, 1902, at Carnegie Hall of the
Sandusky Library. Mr. George F. Anderson directed the production.
The names of the performers appear on the back of the program, listed by voice types.
Several programs from the Tuesday Afternoon Club are
found in the Sandusky Library Archives Research Center. They take us back to a
simpler time, when people often relied on local talent for entertainment.
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