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Mystery Cemetery — Is It Calvary?

Old Cemetery - Detail

  • Old Cemetery – Detail

Calvary Cemetery - Today

  • Calvary Cemetery – Today

Last week I posted an old Poland photograph showing a cemetery in Memphis, and I wondered just where it was. Something about the image made me think of Calvary Cemetery, and so I drove over there one day recently and tried to find the exact same location in the old photograph.

I wasn’t entirely successful, but I might be very close. Take a look at the two pictures here. In the background of the old photograph (shown here on the left), I noticed a rather unusual white concrete retaining wall (the image is fuzzy but you can see it) with an undulating top and posts at each end surmounted by large concrete (or stone) balls. There’s also apparently a post close to the center of this little wall, also topped with a somewhat smaller ball.

Well, my recent journey to Calvary turned up an almost identical formation, as you can see in the second image (on the right). The center ball is missing, but you can tell that one was once mounted here. The roadway in the background also looks similar to the roadway in the original photo (you’ll have to scroll down a bit to see the original photo in its entirety).

Now keep in mind, as I’ve said, that the original photo could easily have been taken as long as 100 years ago, so lots of other elements in the photo — the number of monuments, the size or shape of the trees — would have changed drastically.

At the same time, you get a vague impression that the view in the old photograph is looking UPhill, whereas I’m looking DOWNhill in the current photograph. So maybe I need to get over there again and walk all around this particular wall and see if I can find a downward angle on it.

The location of the middle ball also seems just slightly off-center in the newer photograph, while it’s almost exactly centered in the old photo. Though that could be because of the camera angle. It’s too bad the original image is so blurry!

Or maybe I’m in the wrong place entirely, and am going completely insane.

What do you think? About the cemetery part, I mean. Am I getting warm?

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Memphis Gaydar News

AutoZone, Cracker Barrel Named Worst Companies for LGBT Workers

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Earlier this month, the Human Rights Campaign released its annual Corporate Equality Index, ranking hundreds of America’s largest companies based on treatment of LGBT employees.

Memphis-based AutoZone and Tennessee-based Cracker Barrel both scored in the bottom 10. AutoZone placed ninth-worst for not prohibiting discrimination based on gender identity or expression and for not providing same-sex partners with health coverage.

Cracker Barrel received the third lowest corporate equality score. The company doesn’t prohibit discrimination based on gender, provide partner benefits, or require diversity training that encompasses sexual orientation.

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News

Thabeet to D League

Chris Herrington has some thoughts about the Grizzlies’ evolving situation at the center position at Beyond the Arc.

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Intermission Impossible Theater

Motion of the Ocean: Project: Motion showcases surrealists and storytellers

Project: Motion is joining forces with Seattle artists Juliet Waller Pruzan and Stephen Hando and Pennsylvania dancer/choreographer Ursula Payne for AXIS, an intimate, insightful, and occasionally hilarious collection of performances.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Center, and its Discontents: Haddadi in Rotation, Thabeet to Dakota

Hamed Haddadi, looking cool in the Griz rotation of late.

  • Hamed Haddadi, looking cool in the Griz rotation of late.

The past week has seen a significant shift in the Grizzlies’ rotation, with Hamed Haddadi taking over the back-up center role and with Hasheem Thabeet (along with Lester Hudson) now set to be sent to the Dakota Wizards for a developmental league assignment.

First, on Haddadi. After a couple of stints in Dakota himself and either riding the pine of modeling the latest big-and-tall fashions for the first year-and-a-half of his NBA career, Haddadi is now getting a chance to prove he can be a legitimate NBA player. Good for him.

In three consecutive games now receiving rotation minutes as a back-up center, Haddadi has acquitted himself well.

Against New Jersey on Sunday, Haddadi played 15 minutes and though he only shot 1-4 and picked up 5 fouls, he also had 6 rebounds, an assist and a block and didn’t really hurt the team (his plus/minus for the game: +3). He gave the Grizzlies passable back-up center minutes. (Thabeet, by contrast, came into the game and immediately sailed an outlet pass out of bounds. He took a seat after one minute and never saw the floor again.)

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Barbecue in Post-Racial America

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A couple of days ago, slashfood.com posted a story about Maurice’s Gourmet Barbeque, a chain in South Carolina.

The gist: Maurice’s began flying the Confederate battle flag some years ago after the flag was taken down from the South Carolina capital dome. But, now tough economic times have forced Maurice’s to take down most of its flags. The explanation? It’s not that they’re trying to draw back offended customers but to save money on dry-cleaning.

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News

Memphis Best Place to Get Car Repaired

AutoMD.com sent mystery shoppers to auto repair places in the top-50 most populous U.S. cities and asked them how much it would cost to repair the front brakes on a Ford Focus.

The site found the Memphis repair shops ranked the best for fairness and consistency of the prices quoted. Chicago was the worst.

The overall bad news for drivers and car owners is this:

“If you are one of the 88 percent of car owners who feel that they are not getting a fair shake at the repair shop** … this report shows that you are probably right,” said AutoMD.com President Shane Evangelist. “Repair shop quotes in more than half of the cities for the same job had a variance from lowest to highest of over 150 percent – with over two-thirds of the shops overall changing their price quote when presented with an industry standard price.”

But did I mention Memphis was the best?

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Soup Sunday Strategy

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Pop quiz, hot shot. It’s Soup Sunday. You’ve got more than 25 soups (not to mention desserts, breads, and other treats) to taste between 11 a.m. and 2 p.m., while working through a crowd of 2,000-plus at the FedExForum.

What do you do? What do you do?

Hungry Memphis asked Half Shell owner Danny Sumrall for some Soup Sunday strategy. He should know a thing or two, as he helped found the event 21 years ago.

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News

Skateboarding in Greenlaw

Mary Cashiola writes about a new half-pipe in a surprising place.

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Craig Brewer at the Brooks Tonight

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Filmmaker Craig Brewer hosts the “Real to Reel” series at the Brooks Museum of Art tonight and says he will take the audience on a tour of how he came to make his first completed feature, The Poor & Hungry.

Brewer will open the program with a newly cut five-minute trailer of his aborted first feature, Melody’s Surviving. That pre-Poor & Hungry work, which features Brewer, wife Jodi, and siblings-in-law Erin and Seth Hagee, was a partial inspiration for his later breakthrough film Hustle & Flow. The footage for Melody’s Surviving, shot on 16mm film, was never developed and had sat in a box in his shed for the past 10 years, Brewer says.

Recently developed, the raw footage has been edited into a five-minute sequence by Erin Hagee and Brewer collaborator Morgan Jon Fox.

Also on the program will be footage Brewer shot of Wanda Wilson’s 50th birthday celebration at the P&H Café, some brief selections from Mike McCarthy, the local filmmaker who directly inspired Brewer and used Jodi Brewer in his films, and early color footage from a first stab at the ultimately black-and-white Poor & Hungry.