The Soul of Memphis
Despite setbacks, the Mississippi River city has held onto its rollicking blues joints, smokin' barbecue and welcoming, can-do spirit
- By Jamie Katz
- Photographs by Lucian Perkins
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2010, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 8)
The lower end of the trolley route swings through the South Main Arts District, which is dotted with lofts, galleries and eateries, among them the Arcade Restaurant, Memphis’ oldest, where you can sip a malted in Elvis’ favorite booth or relive a scene from Jim Jarmusch’s 1989 film Mystery Train, some of which was shot there.
The Lorraine Motel is just a short walk from the Arcade and a half-mile south of Beale Street. In its day, it beckoned as a clean, full-service establishment with decent food—one of the few lodgings in Memphis that welcomed African-Americans, Sarah Vaughan and Nat King Cole among them. Even after the Civil Rights Act of 1964 dismantled legal barriers, the Lorraine was that rare place where blacks and whites could mingle comfortably. In hot weather, a mixed group of musicians might drop in from recording sessions at Stax, which had no air conditioning, to cool off in the Lorraine swimming pool. Guitarist Steve Cropper—one of several white artists integral to the Stax sound—co-wrote “In the Midnight Hour” with Wilson Pickett just a few doors down from No. 306, the $13-a-night room where King customarily stayed.
Shortly after 6 p.m. on the evening of April 4, 1968, the civil rights leader stood outside that room, bantering with friends down in the parking lot. One of them was a respected Memphis saxophone player named Ben Branch, who was scheduled to perform at a mass rally that night. “Ben, make sure you play ‘Precious Lord, Take My Hand’ in the meeting tonight,” King called out. “Play it real pretty.” Those were his last words.
Barbara Andrews, 56, has been curator of the adjoining National Civil Rights Museum since 1992. “It is a very emotional place,” she said of the Lorraine. “You see people crying, you see people sitting in silence.” The exhibits trace the painful, determined journey from abolitionism and the Underground Railroad to the breakthroughs of the 1950s and ’60s. You can board an early ’50s-vintage city bus from Montgomery, Alabama, and sit up front near a life-size plaster statue of Rosa Parks, who famously refused to give her seat to a white man; every minute or so, a recording of the driver asks her to move to the back. (“No!” snapped Durand Hines, a teenager in town from St. Louis for a family reunion.) The museum’s narrative moves on to Birmingham and Selma and Dr. King’s work in Chicago and the Memphis sanitation workers’ strike of 1968. As you approach the end—the carefully preserved motel rooms and the balcony itself—you hear a recording of Mahalia Jackson singing “Precious Lord” with a calm, irresistible power, just as she did at King’s funeral: “Precious Lord, take my hand / Lead me on, let me stand.”
Not everyone makes it all the way. Andrews recalls walking the late African-American Congresswoman Barbara Jordan through the museum. “Actually I was pushing her wheelchair—and she did pretty well through most of the exhibits. But by the time we had come around by Chicago—you could hear Mahalia singing—she asked that I turn back. She said she knew how this ends. It was just too much for her to bear.”
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On April 17, 1973, a Dassault Falcon jet took off from Memphis bearing the first Federal Express overnight delivery. That night, 14 Falcons carried 186 packages to 25 cities. The original plane is on display at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum’s Udvar-Hazy Center.
Fred W. Smith had dreamed of creating such a service as an undergrad at Yale, where he was a flying buddy of John Kerry and a frat brother of George W. Bush. During two tours of duty in Vietnam, where Smith flew on more than 200 combat missions, he gained valuable exposure to complex logistical operations. It paid off. Today, Memphis-headquartered FedEx is a $33 billion company serving 220 countries and handling more than 7.5 million shipments daily. “Memphis without Fred Smith and FedEx is hard to conceive,” says Henry Turley. “FedEx is the economic engine.”
Memphis is also a major river port, rail freight center and trucking corridor, and a key distribution hub for Nike, Pfizer, Medtronic and other companies. At the cavernous FedEx SuperHub at Memphis International, where packages tumble along 300 miles of automated sorting lines, the noise level is deafening. Handlers wear earplugs, back belts and steel-toed shoes. The pace quickens after 11 p.m. “At night, we gang-tackle everything,” said Steve Taylor, a manager of the SuperHub control room, who shepherded me around. “We’re sorting 160,000 packages an hour.”
With a payroll of more than 30,000, FedEx is by far Memphis’ largest employer. Those jobs are a key to undoing the legacies of poverty and racial inequality, said Glenn D. Sessoms, 56, who was then managing daytime sorting operations at the SuperHub. “Think about it—there’s probably about 2,000 or more African-Americans on my 3,500-person shift here,” he said. “Well, a lot of them are managers, team leaders and ramp agents.”
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Comments (21)
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I live in Kentucky and my husband and I have best friends in Florida. We are always looking for places to visit and meet together outside our home states. Thanks to the new series Memphis Beat, on TNT starring Jason Lee, we became interested in visiting Memphis. We found this article by the Smithsonian online and now have decided that this is going to be one very great time!
I am not discouraged by the Haters, as I was also warned heavily about crime in New York City, but have come to love it and have been there many times. You can always look for the bad in anyplace if you're a pessimist and a bit antisocial.
Thanks for the article, we now have lots to do. My husband and his friend are both musicians and will love the museums.
Posted by Kathy Potter on August 20,2010 | 11:48 AM
Grew up and lived in Memphis for over 50 years. Everyone was in a garage band. Clubs resided in every alley way. Allman Bothers and such played in venues that seated only 1000. Ask Bonnie Rate, ask The Band, Bob Dylan, Elvis Costello—They went to Memphis to learn about music. And why? Because Memphis is music! Memphis (for many good and bad reason) has been slow to change. Because of conflict, disagreement, and lack of funds, the area has retained a unique urban setting. Maybe because there is no other place like it or maybe because it's home, I fail to see the success of other metropolises without Memphis's ongoing pulse of music.
Posted by Marianne on July 8,2010 | 09:07 AM
Memphis is sooo indie that the hipsters haven't discovered it yet. I'm from there, now live in AZ and miss it dearly! Sure, it has its issues, but it also has its cheerleaders and people who are working hard to see it rise to the status is truly deserves. Great article, kudos SMITHSONIAN!
Posted by Candice Curtis on June 24,2010 | 11:06 PM
Many thanks to readers for your thoughtful comments.
An important update to the article, which I mostly researched before the Great Recession: Michael Powell's recent piece in the New York Times—"Blacks in Memphis Lose Decades of Economic Gains"—at http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/31/business/economy/31memphis.html.
Posted by Jamie Katz on June 14,2010 | 12:00 AM
For the past 20 years, I have been visiting my daughter for 2-wk periods, 2x per year in Memphis. For the first couple years, I spent much of my time hitting all the tourist and historical highlights, which are almost all within 30 minutes of anywhere in the metro area. Now, I would much rather go to grandkids' soccer games, school events, and Scout ceremonies, where my grand-daughter is the token white child in the group. The teachers, coaches, and leaders have extended true southern hospitality to me and have accepted me as part of their extended family. I have learned that the Memphis Black community has the same aspirations and goals in life as the white Scandinavians do in my native Minnesota. I think the politics are no more corrupt than any other same size city. Memphis must have something going for it or there would not be so many movies based on life there and other great institutions founded by notables. Someday I may have to make Memphis my home when I am unable to live alone. I'd have moved there by now except that I don't like driving on black ice - more dangerous than anything else I've encountered. As cities go, I'd pick Memphis over all others I've visited or lived in, with the exception of one very far south suburban area of Minneapolis, MN. It was nice to read the positive article about my almost adopted home on the Smithsonian website.
Posted by Boneita on June 2,2010 | 08:49 PM
Nice, Fair article. It pains me to see all these negative things about our fair city. It's like I tell my children, most of the crime occurs between people who already know each other, so watch who you hang out with." That aside, I agree that we have done a fairly good job of "giving props" to the past but now need to look more to our future, as Turley has done. Our politics are corrupt, our crime rate too high, our summers too humid and there is no where else I would rather live. Memphis, love it----or go somewhere you do love.
Posted by Peggy Wise on May 13,2010 | 03:58 PM
Memphis is where I was born and raised. I left as a young adult and 10 years later returned to raise my children here. To all those that speak badly of her, you have choices. I love her and choose happily to live here as no where I have lived from Louisiana, to Massachusetts to Indiana is perfect. Every community has its issues and troubles, our nation as a whole does. But in Memphis, we keep it real and talk it out and work on it and yes... we have soul! I choose Memphis! Love the article, thank you Smithsonian!
Posted by Lisa Moore on May 10,2010 | 11:51 PM
3 Cheers for Chris Reyes.
Posted by Ryan on May 7,2010 | 08:29 PM
Great article!
I love Memphis. If you start a conversation with someone you have never met, chances are you know at least 5 people in common. It's home.
Hey "Trying to Get Out of Town", Do you need help packing?
Posted by Sarah S on May 7,2010 | 10:44 AM
A fair, balanced article - kudos to the author. I grew up in Memphis, traveled after I left and kept finding myself flying back home. What can I say; the roots run deep.
As far as I'm concerned, Memphis is a musical tapestry that is passed around by family. We might have problems - all cities do. However, we take the tapestry and add to it. From a rich history and legacy, with a couple of fresh ingredients, we constantly pass it around to others that want to add to it.
I have a loft in a building next to Cotton Row and a family home in the 'burbs. We go to the Redbirds, the Zoo and the parks. I enjoy the fantasticly-talented - and often free - musicians that play everyone in town on the weekends and enjoy a fairly comfortable lifestyle.
Again, thanks for shining your light on us for a bit ... come back and visit anytime.
Posted by Chris Murphy on May 5,2010 | 11:06 PM
Thank you for the great article on Memphis. We moved here in 2002 and live in the downtown area. We were brought here by the Navy (to NSA Millington) and moved away for one year before returning for good. When asked what Elvis missed about Memphis when he was in the Army, he stated, "everything." That about sums up what we missed as well. Memphis is a wonderful place to be. The downtown area is becoming more robust and it is a fun place to live, enjoy world class restaurants, and shop. There is a Farmer's Market, too! It is small enough to maneuver around and is really a small town in many respects. Certainly Memphis has problems like most cities do. But there is a positive spirit here that will keep people moving forward -- to a better, cleaner, nicer Memphis!
I encourage anyone to come here for a visit or come here to live. Thanks for the article and the photos, too.
Posted by Betsy Bird on May 4,2010 | 11:18 AM
Mailed the following letter to Mayor Wharton and Commercial Appeal - The May 2010 Smithsonian Magazine article "The Soul of Memphis" by Jamie Katz offers a nine-page capsule history of Memphis including political, music and culinary topics in a positive and thoughtful manner. It is the first really upbeat picture (warts and all) to corral our mixed and basically total feelings. Most well-known personalities, places and events are presented in a flowing style of connections that have contributed to our reputation in the past and present as "the city of good abode". We not only need to commend Ms Katz for her insightful evaluation of Memphis as a whole entity but thank her for seeing beyond the headlines and into our "soul". This reminds me of the movie star that extolled upon receiving the Oscar award: "You really like me, You really like me." We might use a version of this thought to create a new Memphis slogan: "You'll really like us."
Posted by Mary Louise Nazor on May 3,2010 | 01:04 PM
Loved the article, was in the Corps and stationed at the Naval Air Station in Millington for years, several different times and have seen unbelievable changes in the city. I have lived there more than 12 years in total, although I no longer do, I love the city and the haters are WRONG. This is a fabulous city, real, authentic, friendly, and tons of fun. A quality life style can be maintained here despite the crime. Plenty to do, lots of recreation and many different kinds of BBQ (for THAT hater).
I graduated from Christian Brothers, worked all over the city, lived north, south, downtown and the east. Like most cities, there are places one should be alert and wary and there are others that are just a natural blast. I've stayed in Harbor Town and think it is one of the best New Urbanist developments in the country.
Again, like any city, there is room for improvement, and hopefully with a new mayor and some CHANGE, the city will get better. A good start might be PAYING the cost of the U-Hauls for those haters who wish to leave !
Posted by Bill Dozier on April 29,2010 | 01:42 PM
I got so work up defending Memphis against the haters I forgot to say... Nice Article! Thanks from a Memphis believer.
Posted by Christopher Reyes on April 28,2010 | 08:51 PM
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