Showing posts with label delta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label delta. Show all posts

Saturday, October 13, 2018

Abbay & Leatherman - Robinsonville Blues Trail South Haven, MS

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MISS US 61
Abbay & Leatherman - Robinsonville
Abbay & Leatherman, one of the oldest and largest cotton plantations in the Delta, is known to music enthusiasts worldwide as the boyhood home of blues icon Robert Johnson (c. 1912-1938). Johnson lived here with his family in a tenant shack by the levee during the 1920s. The powerful and impassioned recordings he made in 1936-37 are often cited as the foundation of rock ‘n’ roll, and the facts, fantasies, and mysteries of his life and death are a continuing source of intrigue.
Abbay & Leatherman - Robinsonville
Abbay & Leatherman - Robinsonville
Abbay & Leatherman - Robinsonville
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Robert Johnson would become known as the “King of the Delta Blues,” heralded not only as a dramatic and emotional vocalist but also as an innovative and influential master of the guitar and a blues poet who could chill listeners with the dark depths of his lyrical vision. But he was recalled only as a good harmonica player who had limited skills as a guitarist during his adolescent years here on the Abbay & Leatherman Plantation. Johnson left the Delta around 1930, but when he reappeared about two years later he possessed such formidable guitar technique that Robinsonville blues luminary Son House later remarked that Johnson must have “sold his soul to the devil.”  The 1986 Hollywood movie Crossroads was based on the legend of Johnson’s alleged deal with the devil, as were several subsequent documentaries and books.

Johnson was born in Hazlehurst, Mississippi, the illegitimate son of Julia Dodds and Noah Johnson. May 8, 1911, is often cited as his birthdate, although some sources, including a census listing and his death certificate, point to 1912. His mother once sent him to Memphis to live with his father, Charles Dodds (aka Charles Spencer) but took him back after she married Willie “Dusty” Willis at Abbay & Leatherman in 1916. Johnson, then known as Robert Spencer, reportedly lived here for a decade or more beginning in about 1918. Records from the nearby Indian Creek School verify his enrollment there. However, the 1920 census shows Will and Julia Willis and Robert Spencer in Lucas, Arkansas, in the same county where Abbay & Leatherman owner Samuel Richard Leatherman once acquired additional cotton-farming property.

Johnson married Virginia Travis in Tunica County in 1929, but his 16-year-old wife died in childbirth on April 10, 1930. Back in Hazlehurst, Johnson found himself a new wife, Callie Craft, as well as a musical mentor, guitarist Ike Zinnerman.  He soon left married life behind to pursue a career as an itinerant musician, now able to play alongside the best bluesmen in the Delta, including Son House and Willie Brown, and to entertain crowds wherever he went with a reputation for being able to play any song after hearing it just once. He began recording in 1936, and though his recordings proved highly influential in the course of blues and rock ‘n’ roll history, few of them sold well during his lifetime. His death near Greenwood on August 16, 1938, has often been attributed to poisoning, although the case remains a mystery. Johnson was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame in its first year, 1980, and into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame also in its initial year, 1986.

I'm gon' get up in the mornin',
I believe I'll dust my broom.
Girlfriend, the black man you lovin'
My girlfriend can get my room.
"I Believe I'll Dust my Broon""
Robert Johnson
An aerial view of part of the Abby & Leatherman plantation from the 1920s. At its peak, more than 45-0 families lived and worked here, according to Bobby Leatherman. The plantation traces its history back to 1831 when Richard Abby purchased land from the Chickasaw Indians tribe. 

I Believe I’ll Dust My Broom” was one of many of Robert Johnson’s classics later covered by blues and rock performers. Others include “Sweet Home Chicago,” “Cross Road Blues,” “Love In Vain,” “Come On In My Kitchen,” and “Stop Breakin’ Down Blues.”

The deep Delta blues of Son House and fellow Delta legends Charley Patton and Willie Brown were a major inspiration to Robert Johnson. House, Brown, Louise Johnson, Howlin’ Wolf, Fiddlin’ Joe Martin, Woodrow Adams, Willie Johnson, and Tommy Bankhead were among the blues recording artists who lived and performed at various times on plantations in this area.

The mystique surrounding Robert Johnson helped propel the boxed set, The Complete Recordings, to the Billboard pop music charts in 1990. It was the first album to feature a photograph of Johnson; earlier album covers, including that of the historic 1961 compilation King of the Delta Blues Singers, relied on illustrators’ imaginations.



Willie Coffee and R. L. Windum were local childhood friends of Robert Johnson. Coffee was one of several musicians who played in the area at house parties and juke joints but who never recorded commercially; others he recalled included Willie Polk, Robert Newman, Henry Neyland, Mitchell Winters, Mamie Fletch, Will Loving heart, Walter Rogers, and Sol Henderson. Windum (1910-2003) and Johnson played harmonica together as youngsters. He recalled “Three O’Clock in the Morning” as a favorite harmonica piece of Johnson’s.
LONGUEROR Recording Company
“I Believe I'll Dust My Broom”
 Robert Johnson
Welcome to one of the many sites on the Mississippi Blues Trail 

Visit us online at www.MSBluesTrail.org

Memphis Minnie-Walls Miss US 61 Blues Trail South Have, MS

MISS US 61
Memphis Minnie - Walls
Memphis Minnie (Lizzie Douglas, 1897-1973) was one of the premier blues artists of the 1930s and ‘40s. Her singing and songwriting, spirited demeanor, and superlative guitar playing propelled her to the upper echelons of a field dominated by male guitarists and pianists. In the early 1900s, Minnie lived in Tunica and DeSoto counties, where she began performing with guitarist Willie Brown and others. She is buried here in the New Hope M.B. Church Cemetery.

Memphis Minnie 
Memphis Minnie 
Memphis Minnie 
MEMPHIS MINNIE spent most of her childhood in Mississippi, where she was known as “Kid” Douglas. U.S. Census listings of 1900 and 1910 place her in Tunica County, but she gave her birthplace as Algiers, Louisiana (June 3, 1897). When she was a teenager, her family moved to Walls, but Minnie soon struck out on her own, inspired to make a living with her voice and guitar. She reportedly joined the Ringling Brothers circus as a traveling musician and performed locally at house parties and dances with Willie Brown, Willie Moore, and other bluesmen around Lake Cormorant and Walls.

The lure of Beale Street drew her to Memphis, where she worked for the streets, cafes, clubs, and parties. She began performing with Joe McCoy, whom she married in 1929. After a talent scout heard the duo performing for tips in a barbershop, they made their first recordings that year, billed as “Kansas Joe and Memphis Minnie.” “Bumble Bee” was their big hit, and has been recorded by many other blues singers, although in later years their most recognized song would become “When the Levee Breaks.” The couple soon relocated to Chicago and continued to perform and record together before Minnie took on a new guitar-playing husband, Ernest Lawlars (or Lawlers), a.k.a. “Little Son Joe.” Minnie recorded prolifically throughout the 1930s and ‘40s, scoring hits such as “Me and My Chauffeur Blues,” “Please Set a Date,” “In My Girlish Days,” and “Nothing in Rambling.” Her showmanship and instrumental prowess enabled her to defeat the top bluesmen of Chicago, including Muddy Waters and Big Bill Broonzy, in blues contests. Minnie gained a reputation as a down-home diva who could handle herself, and her men, both on and off the stage. In 1958 Minnie returned to Memphis, where she died in a nursing home on August 6, 1973.

One of the rare women of her era to gain prominence as a guitarist, Minnie overcame considerable odds to achieve success, battling both racism and sexism. She has been heralded as a champion of feminist independence and empowerment. She was elected to the Blues Hall of Fame in its first year of balloting (1980). The Mt. Zion Memorial Fund erected a headstone for her here in 1996. Her songs have been recorded by women such as Big Mama Thornton, Lucinda Williams, and Maria Muldaur, as well as by men, including Muddy Waters, Elmore James, and Western swing pioneer Milton Brown.

Columbia Recording Company
“When the Levee Breaks”
 Kansas Joe and Memphis Minnie 

If it keeps on rainin',
Levee's goin' to break.
And the water gonna come and
You'll have no place to stay.
Oh, cryin' won't help you,
Prayin' won't do no good.
When the levee breaks, mama,
You got to move.
It's a mean old levee,
Cause me to weep and moan.
Gonna leave my baby and
My happy home.
When the Levee Breaks
Kansas Joe & Memphis Minnie

When the Levee Breaks, recorded June 18, 1929, was the first release by Kansas Joe McCoy and Memphis Minnie. McCoy was the vocalist on this song and many others during the years of his partnership with Minnie. Led Zeppelin brought the song to rock audiences when they recorded it in 1971, and its lyrics carried its renewed prominence as a theme song for documentaries about Hurricane Katrina after the levees broke in New Orleans in 2005.

In Woman with Guitar, Memphis Minnie's Blues at 1922 Da Capo Press book. Paula and Beth Garon documented Minnie's life and music analyzing her work from sociological, political, and surrealist perspectives.
Welcome to one of the many sites on the Mississippi Blues Trail 

Visit us online at www.MSBluesTrail.org 

Highway 61 Blues - Tunica Miss US 61 South Haven, MS

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Miss US 61
Highway 61 Blues - Tunica
U.S. Highway 61, known as the "blues highway," rivals Route 66 as the most famous road in American music lore. Dozens of blues artists have recorded songs about Highway 61, including Mississippians Sunnyland Slim, James “Son” Thomas, “Honeyboy” Edwards, Big Joe Williams, Joe McCoy, Charlie Musselwhite, Eddie Shaw, Johnny Young, Eddie Burns, and Mississippi Fred McDowell. The original route, now called Old Highway 61, was just west of here.

HIGHWAY 61 BLUES
HIGHWAY 61 BLUES
Highway 61 Blues - Tunica
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Highway 61 Travel has been a popular theme in blues lyrics, and highways have symbolized the potential to quickly “pack up and go,” leave troubles behind, or seek out new opportunities elsewhere. As the major route northward out of Mississippi, U.S. Highway 61 has been of particular inspiration to blues artists. The original road began in downtown New Orleans, traveled through Baton Rouge, and ran through Natchez, Vicksburg, Leland, Cleveland, Clarksdale, and Tunica in Mississippi, to Memphis, and north to the Canadian border. Mississippi artists who lived near Highway 61 included B. B. King, Robert Johnson, Charley Patton, Son House, Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf, Sonny Boy Williamson No. 2 (Rice Miller), Ike Turner, Robert Nighthawk, Sunnyland Slim, Honeyboy Edwards, Sam Cooke, James Cotton, Jimmy Reed, and Junior Parker.

The first song recorded about the road was Roosevelt Sykes’s “Highway 61 Blues,” cut in 1932; at the time Sykes was a resident of St. Louis, the first major city along Highway 61 above the Mason-Dixon line. In 1933 two Memphis bluesmen, Jack Kelly and Will Batts, recorded "Highway No. 61 Blues," and the Tupelo-born Sparks Brothers cut "61 Highway." Other 1930s recordings included "Highway 61," a sermon by Raymond, Mississippi, native “Hallelujah Joe” McCoy; "Highway 61" by Jesse James; and "Highway 61 Blues" by Sampson Pittman, recorded for Alan Lomax of the Library of Congress. In 1947 Gatemouth Moore recorded a jump blues version of “Highway 61 Blues,” and in 1956 pianist Sunnyland Slim (Albert Luandrew) of Vance, Mississippi, recorded “Highway 61.” Over the next decades, Highway 61 songs often appeared on albums by James “Son” Thomas of Leland, Honeyboy Edwards, Big Joe Williams, Mississippi Fred McDowell, and other traditional blues veterans.

Although many bluesmen used the lyrics “Highway 61, the longest road that I know,” their descriptions of the highway’s route were often misleading. Some suggested that the road started at the Gulf of Mexico (100 miles south of New Orleans) and ran through Atlanta, New York City, or Chicago. Many Mississippians certainly did begin their migrations to Chicago via Highway 61, but most finished their journeys by continuing from St. Louis to the Windy City along the famous Route 66. In 1965 the road gained an even more mythological reputation when Bob Dylan recorded his influential album “Highway 61 Revisited.” Dylan was well versed in the blues, but his inspiration may also have come from the fact that Highway 61 ran through his home state of Minnesota.
Well, I'm leavin' here in the morning
I'm goin' down Highway 61.
Girl, I'm lookin' for my baby.
Boy, you know that ain't no fun.
If she done left Mamphis
There's one thing, boy, that worries me;
She's down in New Orleans
"Down on Rampart Street  Highway 61"
Suland Slim

The blues artists pictured here are among the many who lived along the route of Highway 61 It is the northern Delta area of Mississippi and or in Memphis or Missouri

Muddy Waters
James Cotton
Jimmy Reed
Junior Parker 
Sunnland Slim 
Cobra Record Corp
 “Highway 61”
Sunnyland Slim
 
Welcome to one of the many sites on the Mississippi Blues Trail 


Visit us online at www.MSBluesTrail.org 

Friday, October 12, 2018

Tanger Outlet Blues Trail South Haven, MS

Tanger Outlets 
Documenting the Blues Miss US 71
Hubert Sumlin
Howlin'Wolf
Robert Johnson
Birth Place of America's Music
MISSISSIPPI 
Peavine Railroad
Albert King 
"One of The Best"
"our knowledgeable friend and Blues tour guide described the B.B. King Museum as one of the best museums she had ever been to, and I have to agree. Allow several hours for this visit and make a special trip to Indianola to go there. You won't be sorry. My three teenage sons learned a great deal. Fantastic displays, many of which were interactive."
-A visitor from Houston, Texas
400 Second Street Indianola, S www.bbkingmuseum.org
BB King Museum
"Brought Me to Tears"
"This was our last stop on our Delta Blues Pilgrimage. And we saved the best for last. A beautiful building and museum. A part of the museum is a cotton gin where BB King used to work. The exhibit progress through his childhood up to the present day. The video of him speaking about his life brought me to tears. Worth the drive to Indianola."
-A Visitor from Mobile, Alabama
400 Second Street Indianola, S www.bbkingmuseum.org
BB King Museum
"So Much Fun for Every Age"
"This facility is nothing short of amazing. It's a haven for anyone that loves and appreciates the music of all genres. We didn't
t want to leave!"
-A Visitor from Tennessee
800 West Sunflower Road Cleveland, MS
GRAMMYMuseumMS.org
662-441-0100
Recording Academy
GRAMMY MUSEUM
MISSISSIPPI
"This Place is Amazing "
"It has a lot of interactive features where you would spend hours listening to music and learning about the awesome past and present GRAMMY winners."
-A Visitor from Colorado
800 West Sunflower Road Cleveland, MS
GRAMMYMuseumMS.org
662-441-0100
Recording Academy
GRAMMY MUSEUM
MISSISSIPPI
"A Wealth of History! "
"Plan on spending at least two hours looking at this museum. You will find pictures articles, instruments, clothing, and more about these talented musicians. It helps clear up all that was going on in that area and how it affected the music. Don't miss this place."
A Visitor from Daytona Beach, Florida
1 Blues Alley Clarksdale, MS
www.deltableebluesmuseum.org
DELTA BLUES
MUSEUM
Large Guitar 
Muddy Waters
Gateway to the Blues "Great exhibit"
"This place has guitars from all the blues greats, they even have Son House's resonator guitar on display. Eric Clapton's and BB King's guitars are on showcase as well Great exhibit, owned by Ceasar's of Las Vegas fame."
-A Victor Calexico, California
13625 HighwaY 61 North Tunica Resorts, MS
www.tunicatravel.com
Gateway to the
BLUES
Tunica, MS

Elvis Presley & WC Handy 
The Blues Trail
Birthplace of America's Music Mississippi 
Large Guitar 
Large Guitar 



Elvis in Tupelo, MS 
"A Must see if you are in Memphis!"
"By far our best experience in Memphis. The house itself is just full of history and memories. A very emotional experience. You can almost feel the joy and happy memories that Elvis and his family had there."
-A Visitor from the Newcastle United Kingdom
3717 Elvis Presley Boulevard Memphis,  TN
www.graceland.com
Graceland
The home of Elvis Presley 
"Awesome to sit on his front porch."
"As a lifelong Elvis fan, this was a must-see on my visit I was not disappointed, the tiny house was amazing to see and it was great to get a photo taken on the swing outside with lots of interesting information and great insight into the early years of his life."
306 Elvis Presley Drive Tupelo, MS
www.elvispresleybirthplace.com
Elvis
BIRTHPLACE
Jessie Mae Hemphill
Graceland 

Friday, June 10, 2016

King Biscuit Time Helena, Arkansas

The Sound of Soil and Soul
The music of the Arkansas Delta is the music of America. With roots in the gospel or "church music," the blues, jazz, country, and rock n'roll flowed from the rich, fertile landscape bordering the lower Mississippi River and spread out across the country and the world. Follow the Arkansas Delta Music Trail to experience the sounds that shaped the land, its people, and the nation.

KFFA 1630 HELENA 

King Biscuit Time
"King Biscuit Time" first aired live on November 21, 1941, on Helena, Arkansas's KFFA 1360 AM radio. Since that time, the program has become the longest-running daily blues radio show in the United States, as well as an influential platform for up-and-coming blues performers. The award-winning program has aired more times than the "Grand Ole Opry" and has outlasted "American Bandstand" by at least a generation. Legendary bluesman Sonny Boy Williamson was the original host of King Biscuit Time, playing live with Robert Perkins and James Peck Curtis in the KFFA studio. The show was named after King Biscuit Flour, distributed throughout the Arkansas Delta by Interstate Grocer Company. The company agreed to sponsor a radio production for Sonny Boy and his band in exchange for live commercials for King Biscuit Flour.
King Biscuit Time was the first regular radio show to feature blues and has influenced generations of delta blues and
rock n' roll artists whose sounds are based on the raw energy of Sonny Boy Williamson's music. The daily programming of Sonny boy Williamson, Pinetop Perkins, Robert Jr, Lockwood, and other Delta blues legends laid the foundation for the blues, rock, pop, and hip-hop music of today.

Award-winning "Sunshine" Sonny Payne has hosted the show since 1951 and has been a presence on King Biscuit Time since its inception in 1941. A recognized blues musician in his own right Payne welcomes visitors to the live broadcast each week at noon. In keeping with tis tradition of broadcasting live music from the studio, King Biscuit Time still welcomes artists in the studio almost weekly, and the show's record-setting 15,000-plus broadcasts document the formation of a truly American form. Under Sunshine Sonny's direction, King Biscuit Time was awarded the prestigious George Foster Peabody Award in 1992, which recognizes outstanding achievement in the field of radio and broadcast journalism.

The Delta Cultural Center became "home" to King Biscuit Time in the early 1990s, and the show is broadcast live daily from a special studio in downtown Helena and streamed around the world via KFFA's website,www.kffa.com 
King Biscuit Time with Sonny Sunshine Payne
Listening to Biscuit time with Sonny Sunshine Payne at KFFA 1360 AM
King Biscuit Time Sonny Payne St
Longest Running Blues Show
The music of the Arkansas Delta is the music of America. With roots in the gospel or "church music,"
the blues, jazz, country, and rock n'roll flowed from the rich, fertile landscape bordering the lower Mississippi River and spread out across the country and the world. Follow the Arkansas Delta Music Trail to experience the sounds that shaped the land, its people, and the nation.
KFFA 1360 Helena

King Biscuit Time

"King Biscuit Time" first aired live on November 21, 1941, on Helena, Arkansas's KFFA 1360 AM radio. Since that time, the program has become the longest-running daily blues radio show in the United States, as well as an influential platform for up-and-coming blues performers. The award-winning program has aired more times than the "Grand Ole Opry" and has outlasted "American Bandstand" by at least a generation.
Legendary bluesman Sonny Boy Williamson was the original host of King Biscuit Time, playing live with Robert Perkins and James Peck Curtis in the KFFA studio. The show was named after King Biscuit Flour, distributed throughout the Arkansas Delta by Interstate Grocer Company. The company agreed to sponsor a radio production for Sonny Boy and his band in exchange for live commercials for King Biscuit Flour.
Pass the biscuits! It's King Biscuit Time!
King Biscuit Time was the first regular radio show to feature blues and has influenced generations of delta blues and rock n' roll artists whose sounds are based on the raw energy of Sonny Boy Williamson's music. The daily programming of Sonny Boy Williamson, Pinetop Perkins, Robert Jr. Lockwood, and other Delta blues legends laid the foundation for the blues, rock, pop, and hip-hop music of today.
Tell it! Sing It! Shout it!
The King Biscuit Blues Festival
Award-winning "Sunshine" Sonny Payne has hosted the show since 1951 and has been a presence on King Biscuit Time since its inception in 1941. A recognized blues musician in his own right, Payne welcomes visitors to the live broadcast each week at noon. In keeping with its tradition of broadcasting live music from the studio, King Biscuit Time still welcomes artists in the studio almost weekly, and the show's record-setting 15,000-plus broadcasts document the formation of a true American art form. Under Sunshine Sonny's direction, King Biscuit Time was awarded the prestigious George Foster Peabody Award in 1992, which recognizes outstanding achievement in the field of radio and broadcast journalism.
King Biscuit Time
Radio Station
K.F.F.A. & W.R.O.X
KING Biscuit Flour
Sonny Boy
Meal
The Delta Cultural Center became "home" to King Biscuit Time in the early 1990s, and the show is broadcast live daily from a special studio in downtown Helena and streamed around the world via KFFA's website, www.kffa.com 
Listen
King Biscuit Time
over
K.F.F.A HelenaW.R.O.X. Clarksdale Miss
12:15 Monday thru Friday
King Biscuit Flour Sonny Boy Meal
Arkansas Delta Music Trail
Paid for with a combination of state funds and regional tourism promotion association funds
www.deltabyways.com
The Biscuit
The King Biscuit Blues Festival is the largest free blues festival in the south and one of the best-loved blues festivals in the world, attracting tens of thousands of fans to historic Helena in the heart of the Delta each October for three days and bights music multiple stages.
From its outset in 1986, the Festival has been a collaborative effort between Main Street Helena, a non-profit group dedicated to the revitalization of downtown Helena, and the Sonny Boy Blues Society, a volunteer-based group dedicated to the preservation of Delta Blues.

"Da Biscuit," as it's affectionately known, is not devoted exclusively to blues from the Delta. Rather, in celebration of the Delta as a birthplace of the blues, the Festival showcases blues of all styles and from all regions of the country. 












Friday, June 12, 2015

2012~ January 16-18, Tunica, Corinth, MS & Helena, Arkansas

Day 1:  Monday, January 16, 2011
For breakfasts, I cooked ham and eggs. 
We went to St. Joe to buy our weekly lottery tickets. 
We are on our way to Tunica MS., for three days of fun.
Our first stop was in Corinth MS., at McDonald’s to use the restroom, our next stop was at the Welcome Center on S. Tate Rd MS.
We went inside meet three nice women working there, they said I could take pictures inside the Welcome Center, which was full of Civil War Memorabilia.
They gave us some information about Mississippi, we thanked them and were on our way once again.
We stopped at Murphy Gas 5970 Goodman RD.,  Olive, MS, where we spent $49.00, a pump 9, for unplus gas at $3.319 per Gallon for 14.762 gallons. 
We rode thru Olive Branch, Lake Horn, and South Hampton, stopping in Tunica, MS.
We stopped at the Welcome Center “Gate Way to the Blues” in Tunica MS., it was over 100 years old, it was a train depot that they had moved to Tunica along with some of the old train tracks.
Train Tracks
Welcome Center “Gate Way to the Blues” 
This will be the Starting point of  Blues Park, which is to open this spring, with lots of blues entertainers performing there.
I took pictures of several of the different types of guitars hanging from the walls of the Welcome Center some were signed by Blues entertainers. 
Guitar list is below:
Jimmy Rogers had a Gibson E-S-345 (1966)
Albert Collins had a Fender Telecaster (1983) 
Stella was a 12 string (the 1960s)
Key-Value Leader was (the 1960s)
Kay Archtop was (the 1960s)
Hand Painted guitar case was (the 1960s)
Harmony Archtop (the 1960s) signed by John Lee Hooker
Harmony Archtop (the 1960s) signed by John Lee Hooker
National Trojan Resonator (1932) signed by Bonnie Reitt
Key flattop was (the 1950s)
Harmony H-54 Rocket (1968) signed by Muddy Waters
Kay Kraft Model N was (the 1930s)
Kent flattop was (the 1950s)
Orpheum Archtop was (the 1930s)
Fender Stratocaster (1984) signed by Ike Turner
Gibson Trine Lopez was (1965)
Gibson Trine Lopez was (1965)
We picked up some brochures on the Blues Trail at Tunica Welcome Center thanked the nice women. Outside I took pictures of the Welcome Center and the Blues Marker “Highway 61.”

Our next stop was at Fitz's Casino Restaurant in Tunica, where I purchased two prim ribs buffet dinners at a cost of seven dollars each.
 Fitz's Casino Restaurant & Casino  
We each had to sign up for a Key Rewards card before we could purchase a meal, our numbers were 001624571 and 001624573.
We both ordered prim ribs but I didn’t care for the bloody meat.
I piled on my plate shrimp, onion rings, stir-fried green beans, a sweet roll, a cream cheese roll located at the Chinese area of the buffet, for dessert I ate a slice of carrot cake, we both ate way too much food.

After dinner we rode to Tunica Roadhouse Hotel to check into room 117,  we unloaded luggage, rested, watched some TV, and we went next door to play the slot machines.
Tunica Roadhouse Hotel
We tried the twenty-cent machine with no luck, we played the one-cent machines, won fifteen dollars on the fire truck one-cent slot machine, we cashed out and went next door to Gold Strike.

We had to get a membership, I was a new member so I was given fifteen dollars to play with?
I walked to the one-cent machine, won thirteen dollars on the Magic Slot Machine.
We walked to our room, hubby took a shower because he said his clothes smelled like smoke.

Day 2: Tuesday, January 17, 2011
We both took a shower, dressed, loaded into the van and started looking for somewhere to eat breakfast.
We stopped at McDonalds 1375Hwy 61 Tunica, MS a big breakfast cost $6.59. 

We rode south down highway 61in the wind and rain to Helena Arkansas. We drove right out of the rain into the sunshine, it was a beautiful day got up to 68 degrees.

We stopped at the Mississippi Welcome Center just before crossing the bridge into Helena, Arkansas. 
We rode down to the Mississippi River to see the Isle of Capri Casino.
We crossed the Mississippi River into Arkansas and stopped to take a picture of the Historic marker of Helena Arkansas.
We stopped at the Delta Cultural Center Museum located on 141 Cherry St in Helena. Bill Branch the curator said we could take pictures inside the museum.
We were told to come back at 12:15 to listen to Sonny “Sunshine” Payne broadcast over the radio KFFA 1360 A.M.
King Biscuit Time
Sonny “Sunshine” Payne broadcast over the radio KFFA 1360 A.M.
Me at KFFA Radio Station being an interview
We walked outside where I took pictures of the Blues Trail Marker and the cemented handprints in the ground with names such as Jack Johnson, Rufus Thomas, Robert Lockwood, Jr., Pinetop Perkins, Sam Myers, Sunshine Sonny Payne, Lennie Shields, and others.  
We walked toward the Train Museum and to the Levee Walk where I took pictures then we went inside the Train Museum.
Train Depot Museum
In the Train Museum on the first floor was a history of Arkansas and a movie of the great flood of Helena, upstairs was artifacts about the Civil War in Helena. 
We walked back to the Delta Cultural Center to listen to Sonny Payne. 
I bought myself some Blues eye sunglasses with guitars on either side of them and they lit up.
Blues eye sunglasses 
My granddaughter, Sierra, called said she was sick in the health room at school and she could not get her mother on the cell phone.
She wanted to know where we were, I said we are in Arkansas and that we could not come to get her. 

KFFA radio broadcast last thirty minutes, playing Blues music since the early ’40s.
Mr. Payne has been with the show since the 1950s.
During Mr. Payne’s show, he announced he had two visitors from Alabama. 
He said where in Alabama are you from and I replied to the Northwest corner of Alabama. 
We asked several other questions, then Mr. Payne went back to playing his music. 

We had our picture taken with Sonny Payne, dropped a couple of dollars in the donation box, thanked Mr. Payne and the curator of the museum.

We rode down Cherry Street to the historic courthouse, I took pictures of the courthouse markers, war markers, several churches, and other historic markers.
Cherry Street Helena, Arkansas
We drove to Maple Hill Cemetery to take pictures of the  Civil War Markers at Civil War Hill, which was located on a hill overlooking the river.
We stopped at a Jewish church that was being restored, I was invited inside, ask if I could take some pictures, they said yes.

We rode down to the Mississippi levee walk where I took several pictures.
It was getting way past lunchtime so we left Helena stopping at the Arkansas Welcome Center where we ask if there were any good places to eat nearby, the woman said to go to Ground Zero Blues Club 352 Delta Avenue Clarksdale, MS 38614-4213  (662) 621-9009 but it was closed. 

We ate at Western Sizzlin, I ordered a sirloin steak, baked potato, and a salad.
Hubby ordered a 16-ounce rib eye, a salad, a baked potato, and dessert, we spent $33.12. 

On the way back to the hotel I took pictures of  Yazoo Pass, Hernando De Soto Bridge, WROX Radio, and Hunts Mill.

We stopped in the historic town of Tunica where I took pictures of war markers, James Cotton Blues marker.
I took several pictures of thousands of birds flying, landing in trees in the park and surrounding area. 

When we arrived at the hotel we purchased some snacks, took them to our room.
It had been a very long day so we both took a shower and went to bed.

We were rudely awakened by a fire alarm at 1:00 A.M. 
We proceeded to leave the room, it was a false alarm. 
Everyone went backs to their room, it was hard to go to sleep knowing that it could be another alarm. 
We had everything packed and ready to go just in case.

Day 3: Wednesday, January 18, 2011
We showered, dressed, checked out and rode to Cracker Barrel in Horn. Lake where I ordered one egg, bacon, and toast. 
Hubby ordered three pancakes, eggs, bacon, and biscuits, we spent  $17.50. 

We stopped at Murphy Gas in Horn Lake where we spent $40.00 on Unplus pump 8, gas price $3.249 for 12.31 gallons of gas. 

We paid $9.00 to wash the van and seventy-five cents to vacuum it.

We stopped in Corinth, MS., at the Interpretive Center, Civil War Trail, Crossroads Museum, and the C. A. R. E.  Honor Garden.
America goes to war with itself
Cannons at the Interpretive Center
the Interpretive Center
the Interpretive Center
We bought three musketeers, Mt Dews at a gas station in Corinth, MS. 
We stopped in Iuka, MS., where I took pictures of the Battle of Iuka, 11 Ohio Battery, Front St, Episcopal Church, Methodist church, Old Tishomingo County Courthouse, Twin Magnolias World famous Mineral Springs Park, Iuka, and War Markers. 
Episcopal Church in Iuka, MS
Twin Magnolias World famous Mineral Springs Park
Old Tishomingo County Courthouse
We stopped at Foodland in Killen to buy Shrimp, Crab legs, and milk. 

When we arrived home, the slid out on our RV would not work, we noticed the refrigerator was not cooling, and the heater was not working.
Hubby pulls out his electrical tools to repair the slide-out, the refrigerator, and the heater.
He did some rewiring to make the slide out and refrigerator work but now the hot water is not working. 

The next day we had no hot water and had to take a shower at his sister's.

Hubby had to go to work the next day and when he came home he worked on the hot water heater, he said a wire was loose. 

He said he did not have time to fix the wiring it would have to wait until his off day.
Every time we go on a trip and come back home something is broken.
You would think after a while there would be nothing left to fix.

Two hundred twenty-three dollars and twenty-one cents was the total cost of our trip to Tunica MS.

Spent $82.50 Tunica Roadhouse for two nights
Gas $40.00 Horn Lake Murphy Gas
Gas $49.00 Olive Branch, MS., Gas
Food $17.50 Cracker Barrel Horn Lake MS
Food $33.12 Western Sizzlin in Clarksdale MS
Food $18.50 Fitz's Casino and Restaurant Tunica MS
Food $6.59 McDonalds Tunica, MS
Other $9.00 Car Wash 
Museum $6.00 Corinth MS
Museum $4.00 Helena MS
Snack $10.00 Tunica Roadhouse Hotel Vending Machines
Snacks $6.00 Corinth, MS., Shell Gas Station
Total  $223.20 
Spent 15 gambling won 15 broke even
Spent 15 of hotel money won 13 so 13 to the good.


Played on one cent machines

2024 Apr 27, Car & Tractor Show, Tee-Ball Game, Art Museum and Sisters

Hubby and I  rode to Killen Park for the Killen Log 877 Classic Car Show which featured bikes, jeeps, classic cars, and new cars. Cahaba Shr...