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Renovated Pink Palace Mansion to Open in December

Pink Palace

Rending of proposed exhibits


After close to two years of construction, the Pink Palace Mansion is set to re-open December 8th, the museum’s officials announced Wednesday.


Relocated and refurbished exhibits in the mansion will include a Piggly Wiggly store replica, a rural early 20th century country store, and a restored Clyde Parke Miniature Circus, which will be displayed on the second floor of the mansion — a section that has been closed to the public for 40 years.

Bill Walsh, marketing manager for the Pink Palace said opening up the second story of the mansion will “will be a great opportunity for many visitors to see a side of the mansion they’ve never seen.”

Pink Palace

Rending of proposed Clyde Parke Miniature Circus exhibit.

The revamped Piggly Wiggly exhibit will be recreated based on patent drawings and photographs of the original store. There will also be space dedicated to Clarence Saunders, the founder of Piggly Wiggly, who first began building the mansion in the 1920s, but had to turn the house over to the city for a museum after declaring bankruptcy. 

The renovated mansion will also house new exhibits like the Cossitt Gallery, featuring more than 600 artifacts from the city’s first culture and history museum. The museum was set up in a room in the Cossitt Library in the early 19th century. The new gallery will aim to recreate the look of that first museum.

Other new exhibits will include a Memphis streetscape meant to depict the symbolic intersection of black and white culture and history from 1900 to 1925.

The mansion will also have “plush new event rental facilities, state-of-the art lighting and a refurbished grand staircase,” Walsh said.

Walsh said construction is slated to wrap up soon and then the process of installing the exhibits will begin. “The exhibits are going to be spectacular. We’re excited that it’s re-opening during the holidays too. It’s sort of a holiday gift for Memphians,” Walsh said.

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Clarence Saunders’ Amazing KEEDOOZLE Stores

Clarence Saunders Keedoozle

  • Clarence Saunders’ Keedoozle

Most people reading this blog probably know quite a bit about Memphis history, and that means they also know quite a bit about Clarence Saunders, founder of Piggly Wiggly, the world’s first (well, maybe) supermarket. But for some reason, their knowledge of grocery-store history often doesn’t extend much farther than that (I did my dissertation on it at Heidelberg), and what some of you may NOT know is that, after Clarence lost his Piggly Wiggly stores, and his fortune, and his Pink Palace, he started over with something entirely different.

In the late 1930s, he came up with the world’s first fully-automated grocery stores. No carts or baskets, no lugging heavy groceries around the store. You just carried a “key” and picked out your items, which were then whisked by conveyor belts, bagged and tabulated, to the front of the store.

He called the new stores “KEEDOOZLE” and you can learn the whole amazing story by watching the July episode of WKNO’s “Southern Routes.” The show airs Thursday, July 9, at 8 pm, and repeats Saturday, July 10 at 2:30 pm, and again on Sunday, July 12, at 12 noon. For all you folks with more channels than I have, it also airs on WKNO-2 on Saturday, July 10, at 9 pm.

It’s a truly fascinating Memphis business story. That episode also includes a nice feature on my pal Tad Pierson, owner and operator of the American Dream Safari, and a piece on a local piano prodigy (the kid’s only 6 years old). Don’t miss it, or you will hurt my feelings.

PHOTO COURTESY MEMPHIS ROOM, BENJAMIN HOOKS CENTRAL LIBRARY.

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Clarence Saunders’ Colors??

One of my readers recently sent an interesting query: What were the colors of Clarence Saunders’ football uniforms?

Now, if you don’t even know what I’m talking about, that hurts my feelings, because I’ve written many, many times in Memphis magazine about the semi-professional football team that the grocery store magnate fielded here in the 1920s. In fact, as recently as April, I mentioned it AGAIN, when I complained that his decision to turn down an offer to join the NFL was a really, really bad decision.

Here’s what I said, in our cover story called “April Fools” (go here if you want to read the whole thing.)