Showing posts with label Mobile. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mobile. Show all posts

Friday, October 7, 2016

National Gallery Of Art East Building Re Opens

http://www.nga.gov/content/ngaweb/press/2016/eastbuilding.html

 Click on the pictures to enlarge them.
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hahn/Cock

Here is the blue rooster in Trafalgar Square in London.
 It now sits on top of the National Gallery Of Art East Building.

That is the Alexander Calder Room(new)at the National Gallery Of Art East Building.
All the way up near the top. Below I am standing in the room. One of The Last Of The Mobile Hotshots is standing in a room full of mobiles.

Friday, June 3, 2016

Saturday, August 23, 2014

Joe B. Mobile 1971

Click to enlarge this picture. Taken in Mobile, Alabama in 1971. Notice the tall pine trees.

Monday, October 28, 2013

EUGENE WALTER: 30 SECOND SPOT



I have much more on this blog about Eugene Walter. Click in the label box below
on the name eugene walter.

Click on the link below to see Eugene Walter's grave in the old Church Street Cemetery
in Mobile, Alabama.
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=12693188

On the Record: Eugene Walter


Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Hippie Boy (The Flying Burrito Brothers)(The Guilded Palace of Sin)


Popeye Phillips From Mobile, Alabama on drums.
Chris Ethridge from Meridian, Mississippi on bass.


Monday, June 17, 2013

The CHEVY II /Nova Became Just The Chevy Nova In 1969

Click on the picture to enlarge it.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chevrolet_Chevy_II_/_Nova

Here is picture of me standing in the back of our Chevy Nova in 1971 in Mobile, Alabama
Notice the tall pine trees in the background. This was taken where we lived near the University of South Alabama.

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Ludo Bites Mobile - Queen G's Cafe In Mobile Alabama Was Once The Rebel Queen In The 1950s

Click and double click if necessary to enlarge the photos.
We were watching Ludo Bites Mobile on the Sundance Channel today. I only got a glimpse of the outside of Queen G's cafe and thought it looked familiar. I looked it up on the web and checked the address on google maps and lo and behold I was right. It used to be The Rebel Queen back in the 1950s and 1960s. Located on Old Shell Road only two blocks from my aunt and uncle's house and one block from where my mother and I lived in 1956. I haven't been back to Mobile and that part of Old Shell Road in over 40 years. I would say that takes the cake for visual memory on my part.
This is the Rebel Queen in 1958.
Ludo Bites America. And Ludo Bites Mobile, Alabama.
http://gomiso.com/m/ludo-bites-america/seasons/1/episodes/3?item_id=8073941
Link to Queen G's Website below.
http://queengscafe.com/
http://queengscafe.com/location/
2518 Old Shell Road Mobile, Alabama.
Below is the way it was in 1958. Picture is from an advertisement in the 1958 Mohian which is the yearbook for Murphy High School in Mobile, Alabama.

Friday, October 22, 2010

Graduation From Murphy High School Mobile Alabama In 1958 And A Trip To Biloxi Mississippi That Night

Click to enlarge the above photo.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smirnoff

My high school graduation was in June of 1958. Murphy High School in Mobile,Alabama graduated 823 seniors and sent them out into the world ready or not.

    I had a few friends who had decided to head to Biloxi,Mississippi after the graduating ceremonies were over. That was because 18 year olds could drink alcohol in Mississippi but not in Alabama.

   I had bought two fifths of Smirnoff's vodka. The three other guys had brought along some liquor as well.

So off we went after the graduation ceremonies which were held at Ladd Memorial Stadium in Mobile. Ladd Memorial Stadium as it was then called was also home to The Senior Bowl each year as well as all the local high shool and college football games. It hosted concerts as well by the likes of Ray Charles and Brenda Lee and many others.

Click to enlarge the photos.
  It is a short drive from Mobile to Biloxi. And once you cross the state line you are street legal at 18 years of age. The Miss. folks also sold every kind of fireworks known to mankind. That stuff was also illegal in Alabama.

   When we got to Biloxi we found a motel room right on Highway 90 near the beach and the old downtown part of Biloxi. There wasn't much of a strip of nightclubs in Biloxi back in 1958.  But there were a few places. One of them was the Downbeat Lounge Jazz club mentioned in the post below.
   Now what happened that night was Gulfport High School graduated their seniors the same night as our high school in Mobile. So with all the liquor flowing some kids began to have fights. Some people seem to enjoy fighting more than anything.

 I was in the Downbeat enjoying my first taste of modern jazz. I heard there was a fight outside. I went out to look. Some really bad guy with a bad reputation was surrounded by onlookers. He was begging for someone to fight him. Someone produced a handgun and hit someone on the side of his head. I saw the bad guy from Pritchard, Alabama hit someone and I decided to go back in the nightclub. The police came and locked all my friends up as well as many of the others.

 I was very drunk from all the liquor so I went back to the Motel and went to sleep. Around 3 or 4am the phone rang. I woke up. No one else was in the room. I answered the phone. It was one of the guys wanting me to come down and bail them out. I had no money to bail them out. He sounded terrified. He said the Biloxi jail was a horrible place with only a hole in the floor to go to the bathroom. I told him I was sorry but there was nothing I could do.
   Now how it happened I do not know but all of those guys got out of jail and reappeared in the morning. Including the really bad guy from Pritchard ,Alabama. He had bragged in the past how he like to knock people's teeth out and I had heard of that so I tried to steer clear of him.

It was decided by someone that we would all drive up to Hattiesburg,Miss. So we motored on up there and drove out to Lake Shady outside of town. Here the bad guy decided he was going to part company with us. I had one fifth of unopened Smirnoff Vodka still in the car. He said to all of us that he was taking it. I saw no point in disagreeing with him so I said nothing. After the night before I was no longer thirsty and I was glad to see him go. It was a smart decision I have never regretted.
A few years  later he became a junkie and died an early death in Mobile.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Portrait Of The Artist In A Petting Zoo Mobile Alabama 1971



Click to enlarge this picture.
Portrait of the Artist in a Petting Zoo. Mobile, Alabama 1971.
Photograph by Bhob Stewart

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Helping Out A Merchant Seaman Get Through The Bankhead Tunnel In Mobile Alabama Fall 1964


The picture above is of Admiral Semmes. Click to enlarge. You can read about him down below. His statue is in Mobile right above Bankhead Tunnel.

Click to enlarge these photos of the Bankhead Tunnel in Mobile,Alabama.

In the picture above you can see the statue of Admiral Semmes in the background.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raphael_Semmes
The picture above shows the tunnel heading east out onto the causeway.
The picture below is coming from the east heading west.


Click on the picture above to enlarge the old postcard.
Here is information on the Bankhead Tunnel.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bankhead_Tunnel

I was driving a taxi cab in Mobile Alabama in the Fall of 1964 while waiting to go in the Peace Corps. I was 24 years old.

One night a merchant seaman approached me and asked me if I would take him back to his ship. He said he had no money but would pay me when we got to his ship. Several other taxi drivers had turned him down. He told me I could hold his watch as security.

I was nearby the Bankhead Tunnel and we would have to go through the tunnel to get to the pier where his ship was docked. I said OK.
Once we got through the tunnel he directed me to where his merchant ship was docked. I parked the cab. He told me to follow him onto the ship to so he could get the taxi fare for me.

It was dark and we made out way onto the ship and down to the galley. There were several seamen sitting around a table playing cards.
The seaman got some money from one of them and paid me the taxi fare. I gave him back his watch.

He then offered me something to eat and drink. So we sat down and watched the men play cards. One of them explained to me that the only reason he shipped out on a merchant ship was so he could play cards and gamble.

After some period of time I decided to go on back to the cab.
When I got back to the cab(it had been maybe an hour since I got out of the cab to go on the ship) I could hear the radio calling me.
The dispatcher asked me where I had been. I told him the story.
He said "You are not supposed to leave the cab". I had not told him where I was going.
I drove on back into Mobile through the Bankhead Tunnel coming out on Government Street. It had been a nice little adventure in a boring evening.

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Yellow Cab Stories Mobile Alabama 1964 Plus Checker Cab Shuts Down


http://www.yellowcabofmobile.com/
Click on the above link for some pictures.
I drove a Yellow Cab in Mobile,Alabama in the Fall of 1964 while waiting to go in the Peace Corps.
You had to take a test of your reaction time in stopping. The man in charge would take you out to one of the cabs(an old Checker cab)and give you a road test.
The way this would work was he had a device with a string attached to it that would fire a shot like a pistol shot(I think it even used a little gun)which would shoot some paint or powder on the street when he pulled the string. So he would tell you to ride along the street and stop when you heard the shot. So BANG! and then you stopped as fast as you could. He would then get out of the cab and measure the distance from where you stopped to the mark on the street made by his pistol shot. The little pistol like device was attached the front bumper or around the front tires.
So I passed this test and voila! I was a Yellow Cab driver.

I drove at night and was too young and dumb to realize how dangerous it was. I will tell some taxi stories from that time as I remember them.

#1: I got a call to go down to the docks in the railroad yards. This was at night and as I drove into the railroad yards down near the river it was pitch black. No lights at all except those from the two cab headlights.

I kept going trying to find the address and way they had given me over the radio. Finally my lights hit on some grey mountain of something. As I got closer I saw it was a large mountain of oyster shells shaped like a pyramid taller than a four story building and standing in front of it in my headlights was a tall blond headed slender man bleeding from head wounds. The blood covered his face and shirt. He was laughing. I got him in the cab and headed for the closest hospital.
Turns out he was a Swedish sea captain and he had been mugged.

When we got to the emergency room of the Mobile General hospital I stayed with him and they took him fairly quickly. He did not speak very much English. I stuck around to not only to see how he was but to see if I was going to get paid the cab fare. After they sewed him up they let me speak to him. He was not too badly hurt. He kept on laughing. I asked about the cab fare. He laughed and pointed at his jacket which was covered with blood. He motioned for me to hand it to him and then he motioned for me to look in the lining of the coat. While all this was going on the other patients waiting to be seen were watching me and this man.

I looked in the lining of the coat. Inside was a ten dollar bill soaked in blood. I reached in to pull it out. The other patients kept watching saying nothing. I wondered what they thought of all this. I pulled the bloody ten dollar bill out carefully with two fingers and gave him change.

As I remember I drove him back to his freighter and he had me come aboard and he gave me a drink of something. He was still laughing when I left.


#2. A red headed young man who had just gotten off work on a friday night and wanted to go to the local whore house. The deal with the whore house was the cab driver was given one third of whatever the customer spent.

So I drove him to a motel outside the city limits. I parked in front. He went off with one of the women. The madam told me to move my cab around back. We were outside of Mobile on old Highway 90. I went to move the cab but my foot slipped off the brake and it rolled down in a ditch. I went back inside to call the company since the cab was stuck down at the bottom of a hill. I called and asked for a tow truck and gave the dispatcher the address. He said something like "You are where?"
While I waited the young red headed guy decided to go again and then again. This was in 1964 so three times cost him 30.00. That meant I got ten dollars.
Another old time cab driver showed up and heard what had happened and told me he knew I had stuck the cab on purpose which was not true.
The tow truck eventually showed up and I drove the young man back to Mobile.

#3. I got a call to pick a man up at the Trailways bus station. He told me to just drive around for awhile. Finally he told me what he wanted. He told me we were going to drive out to a local orphanage and park nearby. Again this was taking place at night. The deal was his son was in that orphanage and we were going to wait and pick the boy up when he ran away.

So I parked the cab in a vacant lot several hundred yards from the orphanage and we waited in the dark.
Finally a young boy of about 12 years old appeared out of the dark. We took off and the man told me to drive around while they talked. They had not made up their minds for sure whether we were going to take the kid back to the orphanage after some time or whether he and the kid would take off for good.

The man told me to take them back to the bus station. When we got there he said to come back in an hour and if they were gone they weren't coming back and if they were there we would then take the kid back to the orphanage.
I went back after an hour. They were both gone.


#4. Late at night a Catholic Priest got in my cab when I was parked on a cab stand in front of the Battle House Hotel in Mobile. It was either a Sat. or Sunday night.
He was very very drunk. He was so drunk he was almost incoherent. He said he was really tired. He had been over across the bay in Fairhope or one of those small towns across Mobile Bay and he had been ministering to the sick and dying all day and night. The more he talked the more I saw he was wasted. He told me how sad the work he was doing was. He had been ministering to people all day and had gotten drunk and now he was telling me all his problems. Everybody needs somebody to talk to. Even a priest. I was hearing his confession.
He was worn out and tired of hearing other people's problems. It had finally gotten to him and he tried getting drunk and that made it worse. He talked of having to minister to dying and sick people constantly. I just listened and said nothing. I drove him to where he wanted to go. I let him out. He went off to bed.


Click on the link below for information about Checker Cabs.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Checker_Taxi
Just read about Checker Cab shutting down.
http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/01/14/iconic-checker-cab-company-shuts-dow/

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Last Of The Mobile Hotshots By Gore Vidal And Tennessee Williams


Click on the picture above to enlarge it.
I think I was one of the very few people that ever saw this strange movie.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0064574/

I saw this movie in New York City shortly after it was released. I never saw it again at any theater. I think it was a complete box office bust.
It is a film adaptation by Gore Vidal of Tennessee Williams play the Seven Descents of Myrtle.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Seven_Descents_of_Myrtle