This house on the southwest corner of West University Drive and Wilcox Street has historical connections to two long-time Rochester businessmen. It was built in the summer of 1916 as the family home of Rochester druggist William
Shulter Starring, who operated Starring's Drug Store at 321 S. Main St. from approximately 1887 until 1923. The Rochester Era
newspaper reported in early June 1916 that Starring had broken ground
for a new bungalow on West Fifth Street (now University Drive), and updated
its readers a week later with the news that the basement of the new
house had been completed. The Starrings moved into their new home in October
1916. After retiring from the pharmacy business, they sold the property in 1924 to another prominent Rochester
businessman, Charles Louis Sterns, and his wife Rena.
Charles L. Sterns operated
the Idle Hour Theatre on Main Street, and in 1936 remodeled it, installed a new Art Deco facade, and re-christened it the Avon Theatre. In 1942, with Rochester's demand for movie seats increasing, Sterns opened the Hills Theatre on the opposite side of Main Street. The Avon closed in the early 1950s and the Hills continued as Main Street's only movie venue until it went dark in 1984.
Rochester Avon Historical Society is currently working on a project to bring back the Hills Theatre. Read about the Society's progress in this story from this week's Rochester Post.
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