Clarksdale, Mississippi has been a center for blues culture since the 1920s. Its location as a transportation hubwhere Highways 61 and 49 connect, where the Illinois Central and other railroads maintained depots an passenger terminals, and where the Greyhound Bus Company built a stationmade Clarksdale an economic boom town. Flush times created audiences with money to spend for entertainment, and the blues flourished in the city. Many now-legendary musical artists were born and raised in and around Clarksdale: Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker, Son House, Ike Turner, Jackie Brenston, Sam Cooke, Junior Parker, and W. C. Handy, among them. Clarksdale was a major market for the Delta’s constantly traveling musicians, and the likes of Robert Johnson, Howlin’ Wolf, and Charley Patton are also associated with the city. Today, that historic blues culture is preserved for visitors while contemporary musicians carry on the great Delta blues tradition.
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• Delta Blues Museum The state’s oldest music museum “delivers not only the music but also the culture that produced it.”(NY
Times).
• The Brick Gallery The Brick Gallery
proudly promotes artists
from across the southeast
as well as across the nation.
Located in the popular
tourist destination of
Clarksdale, MS, the Brick
Gallery is able to enlighten
collectors around the world
about our southern artists.
www.thebrickgallery.com
• Greyhound Bus Station This 1930 Art Deco-style passenger
terminal is perfectly preserved, and now serves as a setting for Delta Blues
Museum exhibitions and special events.
• Carnegie Public Library the original home of the Delta
Blues Museum, the library now houses its archives, plus an incredible exhibit
of Native American pottery.
• Riverside Hotel History you can experience
first-hand (see above, “Where to stay”). The Hotel has
been honored with a historic Mississippi Blues Trail marker from
the Mississippi Blues Commission.
• The Crossroads A long-told legend has
it that Robert Johnson, the
quintessential Delta bluesman, sold his soul to the devil at a crossroads at
midnight in exchange for
the talent to play and sing
his haunted, transcendent songs. The intersection of Highways 61 and 49, the
Delta’s two main roads since the early 20th century, is marked by a giant “crossroads”sign
of oversized guitars. In reality, the thousands of crossroads throughout
the Delta were often the locations of local stores and a small cluster
of homes where traveling blues musicians could find ready audiences.
• New World District The Delta’s counterpart to Memphis’Beale
Street, the district, with Issaquena Avenue as its main thoroughfare,
was an active center of African-American cultural life until the
1940s. Now, this largely abandoned area awaits full-scale renovation.
• St. George’s Episcopal Rectory Named
a national Literary Landmark
in 2003, the former rectory was a childhood home of playwright Tennessee Williams,
whose first collection of
one-act plays was titled
American Blues, who suffered from the “blue devils”his
whole life, and who wrote nine plays about life in the Delta, among
them Cat on a Hot Tin Roof.
• Belle-Clark Mansion A model for “Belle Reeve,” the lost family home in Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire. Built by John Clark, the founder of Clarksdale, who had a daughter named Blanche considered eccentric even by the Delta’s
high standards of idiosyncratic behavior.
• Cutrer Mansion This Italian Renaissance villa was home
to Blanche Clark after she married into the Cutrer family. It is now in use as
the Coahoma County Higher Education Center, a partnership between Delta State
University and Coahoma Community College.
• Muddy Waters cabin site A Mississippi
Blues Trail marker has recently
been placed on the site of Muddy Water’s family home on Stovall Farms, just outside Clarksdale.
See the surrounding cotton fields where McKinley Morganfield (his
actual name) drove a tractor before being recorded on his porch
by folklorist Alan Lomax in 1941, an event that inspired Waters
to move to Chicago and make music history. See the cabin itself
inside the Delta Blues Museum.
• Sunflower River Before the Delta was cleared
at the end of the 19th century,
the region’s rivers were the area’s principal “highways.”Many
early Delta towns were founded on rivers like the Sunflower for
ease of transportation through the tangled swamps.
• Hopson Plantation About ten minutes south
of downtown. Site of the
first mechanical cotton picker field tests; one of the original pickers is on
view. Also, see The Commissary,
formerly the plantation’s headquarters. Next door to the Shack Up Inn and Cotton Gin Inn (see “Where to Stay”).
• Highway 61 Blues Museum. Located in downtown
Leland, about an hour south
of Clarksdale, this museum’s collection focuses on the area’s
many mid-Delta musicians through a motley assemblage of posters,
clothing, instruments, and clippings that gives a real feel for
blues as a lived culture. Nearby streets feature murals honoring
many of the same musicians. (662-686-7646/662-686-2063; www.highway61blues.com)
• Friar’s Point A one-time railroad
center (for the Riverside
line, as in Robert Johnson’s “Traveling Riverside Blues”) and therefore a travel and performing hub for Johnson, Robert Nighthawk, and other itinerant musicians, Friar’s Point is twenty minutes northwest of Clarksdale. There you’ll find the North Delta Museum, a throwback to the 19th century idea of the museum as an eclectic collection of esoteric “stuff.”Items
range from Civil War artifacts and farm implements to a small Robert
Johnson display. Call for hours: 662-383-2233.
• Moon Lake One of the many crescent-shaped
bodies of water (called an “oxbow”) left when the Mississippi River shifted its main channel. Moon Lake is notable as the site of Blanche Dubois’ (in Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire) tragic romance with a young man who committed suicide there. (See Uncle Henry’s Place and Inn in “Where to Eat” and “Where to Stay.”)
• Helena, Arkansas While located in neither
the Delta nor Mississippi,
Helena played a large part in the development of Delta blues. Radio station KFFA’s “King Biscuit Time” show gave airtime to many of the Delta’s musicians and was a potent vehicle for selling records and promoting appearances. The Delta Cultural Center, housed in an historic depot, contains exhibits about local history while the DCC Visitors’ Center, on downtown’s main avenue, Cherry Street, features displays about the area’s musicians and hosts live weekday broadcasts of “King Biscuit Time.”About
a half hour northwest from Clarksdale, across the Mississippi River.
(www.deltaculturalcenter.com)
• Mississippi River The Great River Road
Network of museums and interpretive
centers runs through 10 states along the river and includes the Delta Blues Museum.
See the Mississippi
when you cross at Helena,
or from the levee at any point along Highway 1, which parallels the river west
of Clarksdale. (www.mississippiriverinfo.com)
John Ruskey of Quapaw Canoe
Co. in Clarksdale will take you on a canoe tour of the Big Muddy’s waters. (662-627-4070; www.island63.com)