1890 - 506 (Old 504) 1st Street
Introduction
Text-to-speech Audio
Remodeling has hidden the original architecture of this building. This is another one erected by Paul Bocion in 1890 after the great fire the prior year destroyed the wood building that had held a general merchandise store then a restaurant. Both this building and the one on the corner were referred to as the Bocion Block.
Images
Lyon & Castleman grocery 1904
Map of block, 1890
William D. Switzer, 1890
View of Street early 1900s
The Bargain Shop ad, May 1965
View of the block 1971
View of block, 2000
View of block, 2007
Rokkos' Teriyaki Restaurant 2018
Interior of Rokko's Teriyaki restaurant, 2018
View of 506 1st, 2020
Backstory and Context
Author-Uploaded Audio
Text-to-speech Audio
This is a one-story commercial structure with a flat built-up roof and a basalt foundation. No elements of the original can be seen on the exterior. Reinforcement with cement block and extensive remodeling have erased the original design.
The first tenant was Thomas Quick & John Taylor's general store while they waited for their new brick building to be completed across the street.
Switzer Drug Store opened here November 1890. William Switzer had been quite unlucky when it came to fires. His drug store had been badly damaged or destroyed in all three of the major fires in Cheney, 1883, 1889, and February 1890. Each time he quickly set up shop again in a new location.
Switzer was followed in 1904 by Lyon & Castleman Fancy Groceries and E.M. Crawford & Company grocery. A 1916 map shows the building being used as a moving picture house. Cheney had several early silent movie theaters.
This was the original location of Bair's Grocery store from 1932 to 1934, before they moved to their long-time location over at corner of 1st and F streets, now the parking lot for Owl Pharmacy. In the late 1930s, the building was used as storage for Webb Transfer Company. Bob Tubb's Cheney Newstand occupied the building from 1955 to 1958.
In the mid-1960s, structural remodeling re-enforced or replaced the original brick with concrete blocks to halt the deterioration of the building which was probably made of brick from the Cheney Brick & Tile Manufacturing Company, some of which was of poor quality and has not aged well.
Other businesses that spent time in this space have included The Bargain Shop, Al Isakson's Sears Catalog Store (1966-1970 when Elsie Ableman purchased it and moved to the Odd Fellows building), Empire Interiors, Town & Country Television, Ms Moustache Boutique, Amy's Boutique, Sunrise Natural Foods, the Collector's Gallery, Book Recycler, a massage business, and a gift shop.
In 2012, developer, Steve Emtman, remodeled all three of the buildings on this side of the street. This former 504 1st Street was renumbered 506 and was the site of Rokko's Teriyaki Restaurant February 2012 to November 2019.
Sources
- Sanborn Fire Insurance Maps 1884, 1888, 1890, 1891, 1897, 1905, 1908, 1916, 1939.
- Cheney Historical Preservation Commission Reports
- Southwest Spokane County Historical Society image collection
- Cheney Sentinel, 1890
- Cheney Free Press, various dates
- Cheney phone books 1955 - 2010
Southwest Spokane County Historical Society collections
Sanborn Fire Insurance Co. 1890
The Cheney Sentinel, 1890
Southwest Spokane County Historical Society collections
Cheney Free Press, 28 May 1965
Southwest Spokane County Historical Society collections
Spokane County Assessor
Southwest Spokane County Historical Society collections
Southwest Spokane County Historical Society collections
Southwest Spokane County Historical Society collections
Google Street View