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News The Fly-By

MEMernet: Paint, Dean Strickland, Tourney Time

Memphis on the internet.

Paint

“The paint is coming off!!” wrote u/CUrlymafurly on Reddit last week. Some MEMernet citizens cringe at painted brick in general. But this paint job hit a note for many more.

The mansion was once the stately Nineteenth Century Club. It was being painted in preparation for the new Tekila Modern Mexican restaurant. But owners made an agreement with preservationists and the paint is now being removed.

Dean Strickland

Posted to X by University of Memphis

“Jim Strickland, the 64th mayor of the city of Memphis, was announced today as the next dean of Cecil C. Humphreys School of Law,” the University of Memphis tweeted last week.

Tourney Time

Posted to TikTok by Bleacher Report

Jaylin James, a content creator with Bleacher Report, had fun at the NCAA tournament here last month. He hit Beale, ate Central BBQ, shared some popcorn with a basketball fan, experienced his first buzzer beater, and captured it all in a fun TikTok video.

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News The Fly-By

MEMernet: Paint Update, Litter Buggy, and BOLO

Memphis on the internet.

Paint Update

Memphis Heritage reached an agreement last week with the owners of Tekila Modern Mexican that will stop the painting of the former Nineteenth Century Club and remove any paint already applied. A GoFundMe for the project had raised $715 of its $10,000 goal as of press time.

Litter Buggy

Posted to Reddit by u/g713

Memphis Redditor u/g713 posted a cool video this weekend of a trash pickup around Overton Park using a litter buggy. The remote-controlled trash cart helped remove about 40 gallons of litter between the park and Union.

BOLO

Memphis-area phones, tablets, watches, and more buzzed or chimed over the weekend to alert locals of a killer on the loose.

On Saturday, Mavis Christian Jr. began a string of shootings at three locations that left one woman injured and four women dead. Police said the man knew his victims and that the spree was likely a result of domestic violence incidents.

Officials issued a rare be-on-the-lookout alert as the citywide manhunt for Christian was underway. Police said the man took his own life after finding his car and body in South Memphis.

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News News Blog

Appeal to Save Nineteenth Century Club Withdrawn

Nineteenth Century Club

  • Nineteenth Century Club

Standing on the sidewalk outside the crumbling and boarded-up Nineteenth Century Club, attorneys Steve Mulroy and Webb Brewer announced that the plaintiff in an appeal to save the stately historic home at 1433 Union has decided to withdraw. That means the building’s owners, the Lin family, may go forward with any plans they have for the property.

“We continue to believe we had a strong case legally, but without a buyer to purchase and preserve the property, any legal victory would be a hollow victory,” Mulroy said.

The plaintiff in the case is a former member of the Nineteenth Century Club who believes the club’s vote to auction the property violated its bylaws because the entire membership wasn’t notified about the planned sale. The property was sold at auction after a vote was held by some members of the Nineteenth Century Club. The club’s president Lynn Heathcott donated the money from the sale to the Children’s Museum of Memphis. Heathcott has contended that the club could not afford the repairs on the property, which was in violation of Memphis Fire Department code, leaving no other option than to sell it at auction.

Chancery Court Judge Walter Evans declared the sale of the property had been properly conducted, but the plaintiff appealed. Memphis Heritage had been helping promote public awareness around the plight of the building, which they believe the Lins intend to demolish to make way for a strip mall with a Chinese restaurant. The Lins currently own New Hunan Restaurant on Park, Kublai Khan Crazy Mongolian Stir Fry on Airways, and Red Fish Sushi Asian Bistro in Lakeland. The Nineteenth Century Club is one of the few historic properties left on shopping center-heavy Union Avenue.

When the plaintiff appealed, there were two potential buyers who had offered to purchase the property from the Lins. One was from Nashville, and the other was from California. But both deals have since fallen through. Memphis Heritage members had raised $100,000 to pay a bond for the appeal.

“We didn’t want to put our donor money at risk when there wasn’t a clear-cut idea for a buyer,” said Memphis Heritage president Joey Hagen.

Mulroy said the $100,000 would be distributed back to the Memphis Heritage donors.

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Letters To The Editor Opinion

Letters to the Editor

Erasing History

Regarding Bianca Phillips’ well-written article, “Erasing History”: Let me see if I have the facts right. The owners of the Nineteenth Century Club decided they did not want to keep the broken-down building that had been theirs for a very long time.

So a smart businessman (Dick Hackett) convinced them to auction the building and donate a big chunk of money to a well-deserving organization (the Children’s Museum). A successful couple made the highest bid and decided that the best option for their businesses was to replace the broken-down building with a few shops that they believe the city of Memphis will support. Not one tiny neighborhood mind you, the city of Memphis. I don’t think the “65 percent” of Midtowners that the Memphis
Heritage group claims will not shop there will affect their business in the slightest. People love to shop for exotic Asian spices, foods, and other products. Do you really believe that the only customers who shop at Whole Foods are from the two-mile radius of Poplar and Mendenhall?

This debacle reminds me of the protests of Chick-fil-A when they
wanted to tear down the old building at Union and Rembert. The claim at that time was that Chick-fil-A was going to demolish a church to build a business. That was a lie. My father worked as a commercial artist in that building for nearly 30 years. It was never a church; the building was designed to look like a church because the Frontier Press printing company’s only customer was the Cumberland Presbyterian Church.

In my opinion, the reason that Memphis Heritage can’t raise enough money for their cause is simply because it is unnecessary, and most people know that buildings come and go, and the city of Memphis is always growing and changing.

Barclay Frazier

Memphis

Grammar Police

The only time I can’t be critical of someone who uses improper language (Steve Hiss, Letters to the Editor, July 4th issue) is when it’s committed by someone I like, such as Tim Sampson.

My most noticed “misuse” is of two words — politics and ethics — both of which are singular nouns and take singular verbs. I can’t count the number of times the Flyer and The Commercial Appeal have not caught this.

As for Paula Deen (Tricia Watson, Letter to the Editor, July 4th issue), I never noticed her use of the “N-word,” probably because I never watched or listened to her. When I stumbled onto her by accident, I noticed that she used a pound of sugar and a pound of butter in almost everything she cooked, which was far more offensive to me than any breach of grammar. Apparently, she doesn’t do that anymore, as she has lost an enormous amount of weight.

The two most harmful foods you can put in your body are the wrong kind of sugar and the wrong kind of fat.

Miriam Rachels

Memphis

Relax

Every day, the news is full of depressing stories about various crises, scandals, trends. Relax! The apocalypse is not nigh. In fact, while the U.S. has many problems — and always has — things are on the upswing. In the fourth year of a slow but steady recovery, the economy is adding close to 200,000 jobs a month. The stock market has doubled in four years; housing prices are coming back; inflation is half of what it was in 2008. America is not turning into Greece.

Meanwhile, U.S. carbon emissions have dropped to the lowest level in two decades, and so have oil imports. Admittedly, all this good news would make a boring summer movie, but maybe we should enjoy it anyway.

Ron Lowe

Nevada City, California

Puzzling

What’s the deal with that postage stamp masquerading as a crossword puzzle? I have difficulty both reading the clues and filling in the answers.

My guess is that most crossword fans have old, tired eyes like mine.

I’d say, either have a crossword or don’t, but if you do, make it usable. This used to be one of the things I looked forward to each week, but I can certainly get my fix elsewhere.

Will Cooper

Memphis

Editor’s note: We will endeavor to make it bigger.

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News News Blog

Nineteenth Century Club To Be Auctioned Off

The historic home at 1433 Union Avenue that’s better known as the Nineteenth Century Club will be auctioned off to a member of the public in a sealed bid auction on Thursday, January 24th at noon.

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Built in 1909 for Rowland J. Darnell, the Colonial Revival-style home is one of the last remaining historic structures along the commercial-heavy Union Avenue. It was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979. At the time it was built, similar mansions lined the street, but most all of them have been demolished to make way for shopping centers, fast food restaurants, and gas stations.

Memphis Heritage is circulating a petition asking potential new owners to respect the home’s history and save it from the wrecking ball. As it stands, there is little in the auction guidelines to prevent a new owner from demolishing the property. Memphis Heritage has also started a Facebook group called “Save the 19th Century Club.”

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Special Sections

Elizabeth Messick and Messick High School

MessickDemolition.jpg

This is a depressing scene, isn’t it, showing the demolition of once-proud Messick High School. I wonder what happened to that big block of stone? It would have looked very fine in the Lauderdale Mansion courtyard, even all chipped up.

One of the oldest — if not the oldest — schools built in Shelby County (the folks at Central and Tech will argue forever about that honor), Messick first held classes back in 1909. Over the years, the mighty Panthers trounced teams throughout the city, and kids came to regard the old red-brick building at the corner of Spottswood and Greer as a home away from home. But the buildings decayed, the school district changed, and in the early 1980s the condemned buildings fell to the bulldozer. Although some of the campus sites remain, it’s not a typical high school anymore. These days the city school system calls it the Memphis Adult Education Center, and you can enroll for vo-tech courses and also earn a GED, among other things.

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Special Sections

President William McKinley’s 1901 Visit to Memphis

McKinleyCourtSquare.jpg

I really have no idea how many U.S. presidents have visited Memphis over the years. Somebody I’ll have to look through the Lauderdale Mansion guest books and make a list. But I do know that William McKinley paid us a visit here on April 30, 1901, because I found proof of it, in the form of an old stereopticon card, showing him making a speech in Court Square.

Our 25th president had been elected to a second term in office in 1900 and, for reasons that he never made clear to me, decided to embark on a goodwill tour of the country the following year, taking with him five of his cabinet members. The party left Washington, D.C., by train in mid-April and made a looping journey through the sunny Southland. Newspapers reported that the individual railroad cars, “among the handsomest ever constructed in this country,” were given names. The president’s special coach was the Olympia. Others were Omena, Guina, St. James, Pelion, and Charmion. Just in case anyone asks you.

After a brief stop in Corinth, Mississippi, the train arrived at the Calhoun Street Station (site of today’s Central Station), on Tuesday afternoon, April 30th. An artillery squad fired a 21-gun salute, and Company A of the Confederate Veterans (yes, there were plenty of them still alive) formed an honor guard as McKinley and his entourage filed into fancy carriages for the drive to Court Square. The newspapers of the day noted the irony, “as the men in grey with the western sun beaming fiercely on their grey heads and stooped forms marched as a guard to the former leader of the blue and the Grand Army of the Republic.” We were still cranky about the way that whole thing turned out, you see.