Sterling Opera House // 1889

The Sterling Opera House in Derby, Connecticut, is a landmark performing arts venue and civic center in the state and significant as a rare and well-preserved building constructed in the Italian Renaissance Revival style. Built in 1889, the building is named for Charles A. Sterling, founder the former Derby-based Sterling Piano Company, who paid for much of the costs of construction and design for the building. For his namesake building, Charles Sterling hired architect H. Edwards Ficken, who also  assisted with the designs for the famous Carnegie Hall in Manhattan, New York, to furnish plans for the unique building. The Opera House was built to serve both political and entertainment needs for the community, with the lower two levels and the basement serving as City Hall offices and the police station from when it opened up until 1965. The auditorium was used for hundreds of shows and live musical performances in its day, with many world-famous performers such as Harry Houdini and Red Skelton taking the stage at the Sterling. Shows were held up until 1945 when the curtain closed for the last time. In the past decades the building has been largely vacant and kept alive by grants and a dream by the city to preserve this significant landmark, possibly for reincorporation as the City Hall. 

3 thoughts on “Sterling Opera House // 1889

  1. john44c56be40ee's avatar john44c56be40ee November 8, 2025 / 9:04 am

    What a gorgeous building!

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  2. Lorie Komlyn's avatar Lorie Komlyn November 8, 2025 / 9:43 am

    This is a fantastic building- I studied it and wrote about it in my master’s dissertation about the purpose-built, multifunctional opera house of regional New England. An amazing architectural design, with so much historic fabric remaining. It very much deserves a second life!!

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