Concordia Hall (Baltimore, Maryland)

[1] It was founded in 1866 by Germans from the largest immigrant community in that city.

It was the location for readings by Charles Dickens in 1868, during his second visit to America.,[2] and other visiting lecturers and musical groups, and the site of civic events.

[3] The great Yiddish actor, Boris Thomashefsky, came to Baltimore in the mid-1880s and gave what was probably the first performance of Yiddish theater in Baltimore at Concordia Hall.

In his autobiography he left a description of the Hall: A fire destroyed the Corcordia in 1891.

This article on a music performance venue is a stub.

The Concordia Hall, presented in 1866 in Die Gartenlaube
Interior (1866)
Concordia Opera House by Adolf Cluss