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An Inside Look at Ashlar Hall

An open house doesn’t typically show off peeling paint and bullet holes in glass, but Ashlar Hall isn’t a typical place.

An open house fund-raising event was held there last weekend to raise money for restoring the long-vacant, historic property at 1397 Central, often still referred to as “Prince Mongo’s Castle” after the nightclub Robert “Prince Mongo” Hodges operated there in the 1990s.

Now the building’s current owner, Kenny Medlin, wants to transform the old Castle into an administrative property for military veterans.

Visitors ogled the 117-year-old building during the tours, a rare event that brought people out in the hot afternoon. Organizations, some with a military focus, such as Alpha Omega Veterans Services, handed out pamphlets from under a tent.

An autographed George Strait guitar was up for auction to help raise funds. Bluegrass band Rosewater performed for visitors to promote their charity, the Homeless Veterans Project. Donation buckets were scattered around the property.

Old ashtrays still linger on the bar inside Ashlar Hall.

Medlin acquired the building last year after it was transferred to him from its previous owner Hodges. Initially, Shelby County Environmental Court Judge Larry Potter invalidated the transfer after Medlin failed to produce a plan for the property by the January 27th deadline that Potter set. At the time, Medlin had said he wanted to turn the house into a home for terminally ill children.

In February, Potter reversed his decision and upheld the 2013 transfer. But Potter said other groups could still submit their plans for the building.

The Memphis Comic and Fantasy Convention submitted a proposal to turn the property into a center for the arts but pulled out of negotiations to rent the space after conflicts about how much Medlin would charge for rent.

Medlin eventually decided to turn the building into an administrative property for military veterans, using his Urban Renaissance Initiative organization as an underwriter.

“Our goal is to take condemned properties, rehab them for nonprofits, and get them back onto the tax roll. We hope Ashlar Hall becomes the bellwether of those efforts,” Medlin said of the Urban Renaissance Initiative.

Remnants of the building’s former life as a nightclub can still be seen throughout the two-story building: a Laser Music jukebox upstairs, metal-encased CRT TVs in the foyer, ashtrays scattered around the many bar tables.

Futuristic decor such as spaceship light fixtures and random plates of shiny metal were affixed to the walls, leftover from the mansion’s partying days. The many bars within the building still had stacked cups and ashtrays lying around, almost as if the patrons and staff had left in a hurry.

Visitors took pictures in nearly every nook and cranny, finding closets of oddities like a ghillie suit sitting among broken cups and pitchers. The VIP suite on the first floor and the basement were roped off.

Even outside, the neon “ASTLE” (the “C” is missing) remains, giving a glimpse into the property’s former glory.

“We used to hear stories about this place back in the day,” said one visitor, who preferred not to be named. “If only walls could talk.”

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Castles in the Sky

It may not be Hogwarts, but Prince Mongo’s “castle” on Central might be the next best thing for Memphis Harry Potter fans and followers of all sorts of geek culture if the Memphis Comic & Fantasty Convention has its way.

This past weekend, the Memphis Comic & Fantasy Convention team held an open house at the University Club across the street from the historic, long-abandoned Ashlar Hall, where they shared their plans for transforming the castle into a center for the arts.

Ashlar Hall Center for the Arts would offer classes in film-making, comic book design, painting, creative writing, theater, costume design, and more. And Memphis Comic & Fantasy Convention founder Joe Thordarson said they’d also host other weekend festivals.

“If you’re into geek culture, prepare to be spoiled rotten,” Thordarson said. “We could have Harry Potter mini-conventions or steampunk mystery dinners. We would have the ultimate clubhouse.”

Alternatively, Ty Cobb, founder of the Have a Standard Foundation, has dreams of using Ashlar Hall as another location for his CoreFire Commandos training program.

CoreFire Commandos, which Cobb founded in 2001, uses existing training centers in the Kroc Center and Dulins Sports Complex in Cordova to train kids in decision-making and life skills. A team of students is given a fictional scenario, such as the Mississippi River experiencing record flooding, and they must complete an obstacle course, using math and other skills, to solve the problem.

Ashlar Hall was declared a public nuisance because of numerous code violations, and in September, the city agreed to help its current owner, Hodges, find a new owner to donate the property to.

Darth Vader, a TIE pilot, a storm trooper, and a Klingon greet visitors at Saturday’s Ashlar Hall open house hosted by the Memphis Comic & Fantasy Convention.

Shortly after that, a man named Kenny Medlin said Hodges had quitclaimed the property to him, but the move was illegal since the property was being dealt with in Environmental Court. Judge Larry Potter decided to give Medlin a chance however, giving him two weeks to come up with a plan to restore the home. Medlin, who wanted to use the space as a home for kids with cancer, was unable to meet the judge’s request. That deal was voided, and the field was reopened for possible new owners of the property.

Both Thordasen and Cobb will present their plans to Judge Potter at a compliance hearing on February 28th.

Cobb said he was in ongoing talks with Thordarson about possibly collaborating on their plans, but nothing has been decided for certain.

“If we’re all positive and working together, it’s better for all of us and better for Memphis,” Cobb said.

Thordarson acknowledges that the crumbling Ashlar Hall needs a lot of work, but since he works as a contractor, he has managed to get pledges from other contractors to help with the stone work and other needed repairs. Of particular concern are damage to the roof and swimming pool.

And he said his group has been encouraged by the postive reaction from Ashlar Hall’s Central Gardens neighbors.

“We want to reassure them that we’re not looking to change the architecture, and we’re not going to be out there at 4 a.m. with wild stuff going on,” Thordarson said, referring to Ashlar Hall’s time as a nightclub run by Hodges.

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Prince Mongo To Give Up His Memphis “Castle”

Ashlar Hall

  • Ashlar Hall

Robert “Prince Mongo” Hodges is apparently looking to give up the keys to his Central Avenue “castle.”

Facebook posts over the last two days from the perennial Memphis mayoral candidate and self-identified native of the planet Zambodia claim he is looking to give up Ashlar Hall, at 1397 Central, to a nonprofit group. Wednesday’s post welcomed “any licensed charitable organization interested in a donation” of the building to leave their intentions in the comments section of the post.

“Will need funding to renovate and operate, the building will not be demolished,” according to the post.

A Tuesday post said he is looking for a charitable organization with funds to renovate and operate already in place. “Business plan and financial statement required,” it said.

As of Thursday afternoon, more than 11,500 people “liked” the post and most of the commenters suggested giving the building to Choose901, the group dedicated to attracting talent to Memphis.

The group launched “Operation Ashlar,” a Facebook drive to “help Prince Mongo choose Choose901.”

“We would turn it into a social hub for young adults and a development center for nonprofits and schools,” says the Choose901 website.