Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Spaghetti Warehouse Auction

All that cool stuff at Spaghetti Warehouse could be yours. The owners are holding an online auction ending on December 12th. Bidding starts at $1.

From the release:

Everything in the building will be auctioned off at www.RestaurantEquipment.bid to the highest bidder. All items start at just $1.00 and have no reserves. Depending on how competitive the auction gets, winning bidders could walk away with the iconic furniture, fixtures, decor and professional-grade kitchen equipment for pennies on the dollar.

The auction is live now and ends 12/12/17 at 10:00AM CST
https://www.restaurantequipment.bid/cgi-bin/mmdetails.cgi?rebid30/

There are 293 items in the auction including the novelty decorations that The Spaghetti Warehouse is famous for, like chandeliers, statues, furniture and professional-grade kitchen equipment

Categories
Fly On The Wall Blog Opinion

Want to Buy Johnny Cash’s Rolls-Royce?

Oh, I’d love to wear a rainbow every day. But Instead I’ll just ride around in this sweet Rolls.

Fly on the Wall has documented lots of Elvis related auctions, ranging for the sublime to the ridiculous, but the King of Rock-and-Roll wasn’t the only Sun Studio mega-star to indulge in a little extravagance here and there. And this Johnny Cash-related opportunity is a dream come true for a collector with deep pockets. 

Cash’s music was deeply American, but when it came to cars he could be a bit of an Anglophile, with a taste for the Rolls-Royce driving experience. The Man in Black’s appropriately-colored 1970 Silver Shadow is now currently up for grabs. The final hammer falls at Barrett-Jackson auctions in Las Vegas later this month. 

It’s a 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, automobile.

The car is a relative pup having accumulated only 32,000 miles since it was built to order by Mr. JRC whose initials are monogrammed in gold on the rear doors.  

I’ve been everywhere (NOT!)

Categories
News

Shelby County Sheriff’s Office to Sell Seized Property

Need a beat-up 1993 Dodge pickup truck? Or how about a single-engine Cessna plane? Both items will be sold in a Shelby County Sheriff’s sale on Wednesday, November 28th.

A new feature on the Shelby County Sheriff’s Office website lists items to be sold in auctions of seized property. Items range from major purchases (such as the plane) to everyday goods (i.e. computers).

Often, property is seized when a loan is defaulted. For example, a creditor could get a court order for deputies to seize a person’s real estate or other valuable goods. Most of the money from those sales goes back to the creditor, although the sheriff’s office receives a small fee for conducting the auction.

Other items are seized by the Shelby County Narcotics Bureau. Officers may confiscate a vehicle used in drug sales or a computer used to store information about stolen goods. Proceeds from those sales are used to purchase new equipment for the narcotics bureau.

For more, go to the Shelby County Sheriff’s Office website.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

Two Memphis Golf Courses For Sale

Believe us, nothing impresses the neighbors like your very own golf course. And we’re not talking Putt-Putt here.

Well, now’s your chance, because not just one but two 18-hole golf courses in our area are being sold at a public auction on November 18th. North Creek Golf Course is a 175-acre facility in DeSoto County, Mississippi, and Big Creek Golf Course sprawls across 213 rolling acres in North Shelby County, just outside Millington.

The minimum bid for North Creek is $1.5 million, and the winning price will include a complete clubhouse, pool, kitchen facilities, and all sorts of equipment. Bids start at just $750,000 for Big Creek, but you don’t get a nice pool with that one.

Extra balls not included. Go on, impress your buddies — and never have to wait for a tee time. For information, go here
and here.

Categories
News

Buy David Gest’s Stuff

According to a story in The Independent David Gest will be auctioning off his large collection of memorabilia through an British auction house on December 5th. Among the items up for bid are the gold disc for the Rolling Stones’ “Satisfaction,” sheet music signed by the Four Tops, and a pair of Beatles’ sneakers.

Gest says he began collecting as a teenager after he attended a memorabilia show with Michael Jackson. His collection is so large that he added a third story to his Memphis home.

Gest tells the reporter that his decision to sell part of his collection stems from his stint on the British reality show, I’m a Celebrity … Get Me Out of Here.. “All of a sudden, this life of collecting things seemed… I started to ask, ‘Can you live without all that?’ And I realised that if I could live in the jungle with so little food and still have a happy life, then everything I thought was important just wasn’t.”

To read the story, go here.

Categories
News The Fly-By

Bid Day

Owning a piece of Memphis history may be as easy as cash-and-carry.

Memphis Heritage will host its biannual Architectural Auction October 20th and, for the first time, will include a cash-and-carry section with items priced from $2 to $25.

“That’s our yard sale,” says Memphis Heritage executive director June West. “People can go in and literally buy what they like. We have so much stuff.”

In addition to the cash-and-carry section, the event will feature both live and silent auctions with items from all over Memphis.

There’s a green bar dating back to the 1940s or 1950s that came from South Main’s Chisca Hotel. Memphis Heritage will use it to serve the evening’s drinks, but it’s still for sale.

“It would take a pretty big room,” West says, assessing its lure to potential buyers. “But it’s in two pieces, so it’s very manageable.”

The auction also will feature an E.H. Crump Stadium sign, a juke box once used in a local club, and two animal heads — a giraffe and a wildebeest — formerly at home at the Pink Palace.

“[The giraffe] was at an office supply store on Union for a long time. It was an era when that was something cool to do,” West says, “but I have a hard time with it.”

One donor couple bought a cotton-classing table in Memphis with the intention of converting it to a dining room table. They moved to Texas and took the table with them, but recently donated it to Memphis Heritage.

“It’s a little classier than you might think,” West says. “It was made here in Memphis and has cool emblems on the side.”

There are also items with less definitive history: a grocery store delivery bike, a switchboard, two antique stoves, a Murphy breakfast table (which at first glance, looks like a set of double doors), and assorted finials.

Most of the items are donated or scavenged.

“People call us throughout the year. They’ll say, we have 40 doors from a church. Ultimately, we want to have a warehouse where we sell things year-round,” West says.

For now, though, Memphis Heritage holds the auction every other year to have enough time to amass and organize items.

If the group knows a building is being demolished or renovated, Memphis Heritage might ask for certain architectural elements, such as the top of the former Court Square gazebo or limestone from Number One Beale (both up for auction). Before Baptist Hospital was imploded, the group worked with Bioworks to preserve some of the hospital’s green marble.

“We stay on top of things,” West says.

Or items might be acquired through what Memphis Heritage calls its “preservation posse” or, alternately, its dumpster diving division.

“We’ve got lawyers, carpenters. We’ll e-mail or call people and say, we saw such-and-such on the side of the road. Go pick it up,” West says.

Despite the trash-to-treasure aesthetic, the event’s best-kept secret is perhaps the site of the auction: the old marine hospital near the National Ornamental Metal Museum. Actually, that entire area — located south of downtown and found by heading toward the I-55 bridge to Arkansas — is something of a secret.

The hospital’s earliest buildings date back to the 1880s, but the main building was erected in 1937. It closed as a hospital in 1965, but the government continued to use the facility for other things until the end of the first Gulf War.

For now, the buildings look kind of creepy, but it probably won’t stay that way for long. The owner has plans for the property.

“It ultimately will be made into condominiums,” West says. “The cool thing about that site is that you feel like you’re in a historic Midtown building, but you’re on the river. The views are phenomenal.”

The inside is still raw, however, and with the bargains at the cash-and-carry section, West suggests wearing jeans. But at least you won’t have to dumpster dive.