CRADLE OF THE BLUES
Posted: Thu Oct 03, 2013 12:55 pm
The American Queen Steamboat Company is headquartered in Memphis, TN and while we employ many natives, we’ve also brought a number of people to the area as well. And we’ve noticed that the newcomers are often as enthusiastic, if not more so, than those who have spent their lives in this distinctive community. What engenders such passion? There are many reasons, ranging from traditions such as the march of the ducks at the Peabody Hotel, the many varieties of barbeque found throughout downtown, the presence of the mighty Mississippi River, and Elvis’ sprawling Graceland just south of the city. However, one area that everyone flocks to time and time again is legendary Beale Street, where the blues was nurtured and dreams come true.
The street itself runs for nearly two miles through downtown and to the riverfront where a brand new cruise terminal and public space was built just a couple of years ago. Beale Street’s place in the history of Memphis, and its barbeque joints and blues clubs have made it hugely popular with both locals and visitors and it is often a hub for celebrations, street fairs and concerts. Guests sailing on the American Queen usually make a beeline for Beale Street to soak in the atmosphere. Since we offer a free one-night pre-cruise deluxe hotel stay in the embarkation city on every voyage as part of the cruise fare, sailings from Memphis are particularly popular.
Beale Street’s history goes back only to 1841 when the street was named by developer Robertson Topp to honor a military hero of the era. The street’s proximity to the Mississippi River made it an ideal location for merchants who served the burgeoning steamboat trade. Over time, the area saw entertainers and musicians arrive to provide amusement for the steamboat passengers and crews and it became a well-known stop for traveling black musicians. It seemed Memphis’ trajectory was onward and upward until the city was hit by yellow fever so savagely that it was almost depopulated. But where there is tragedy there is often opportunity and Robert Church, who reportedly became the first black millionaire in the South, bought up large tracts of land on and around Beale Street. The Orpheum, known originally as the Grand Opera House, opened in 1890 and nine years later Church created the immodestly named Church Park. At this point, music became the lifeblood of Memphis. An enormous auditorium in the park was the epicenter for blues performers and Beale Street began to develop a truly unique identity.
With the opening of Church Park in 1899, Beale Street entered the 20th century as a cultural center complete with stores, cafes, fine restaurants and countless clubs and bars. Unlike many cities with similar concentrations of amusements, a number of Beale Street’s establishments were under the proud ownership and management of African-Americans. And this is where the rich history of Beale Street comes into play. Ida B. Wells owned and was editor of a Beale Street-based newspaper called Free Speech which preached an anti-segregationist message, a rather bold move for a city in the South. If you know your history then you know the name Ida B. Wells; she went on to co-found the NAACP. If you’re a historian, then you also know about the Beale Street Baptist Church, a structure dating back to the Civil War that played a role in the fledgling civil rights movement.
But, above all else, Beale Street is famous for the blues. Music lovers know that William Christopher Handy, W.C. Handy for short, is widely acknowledged as the “Father of the Blues.” Handy found his niche in Memphis initially as a music teacher for Memphis Mayor Thornton’s Knights of Pythias Band after being recommended by Booker T. Washington. The blues was born.
A campaign song written by Handy in the early 1900s was eventually known as “The Memphis Blues” and in 1916 he wrote a blues standard called “Beale Street Blues.” Unfortunately, Beale Street was actually formally known as Beale Avenue at the time but the song became so popular and influential that the city decided to change the thoroughfare’s moniker from avenue to street to make sure the musical association was recognizable to all. For the next generation, blues and jazz greats flocked to Memphis. B.B. King, Louis Armstrong, Muddy Waters, Rosco Gordon and many others all got their start on Beale Street as a unique style of music dubbed the Memphis Blues took root. By the 1930s, Beale Street was recognized as the birthplace of the blues and Wikipedia notes that a book about the rise of the blues, called Beale Street: Where the Blues Began, became the “first book by a black author to be advertised in the Book-of-the-Month Club News.”
In 1966, a portion of the street became a National Historic Landmark and by 1977 Congress designated Beale Street as the “Home of the Blues” with an official act. Though Beale Street was rundown at the time, it is now the shining jewel in Memphis' downtown necklace. The American Queen Steamboat Company has a number of voyages that either begin or end in Memphis, including several holiday cruises which currently have special offers that include savings of up to $1,850 per stateroom* or the chance to book two staterooms and receive a third for free.** Just make your reservations before December 21, 2013 and come find out what makes Beale Street the epicenter of the blues.
ELVIS HOLIDAY TRIBUTE
New Orleans to Memphis
November 29 - December 7, 2013 | 9 Days
New Orleans, LA * Oak Alley, LA * St. Francisville, LA * Natchez, MS
Vicksburg, MS * Memphis, TN
Save up to $1,850 per stateroom*
OLD FASHIONED HOLIDAYS
Memphis to New Orleans
December 6-14, 2013 | 9 Days
Memphis, TN * Helena, AR * Vicksburg, MS * Natchez, MS * St. Francisville, LA
Baton Rouge, LA * Houmas House, LA * New Orleans, LA
Save up to $1,850 per stateroom* or Book 2 staterooms and Get the 3rd FREE**
New Orleans to Memphis
December 20-28, 2013 | 9 Days
New Orleans, LA * Oak Alley, LA * St. Francisville, LA * Natchez, MS
Vicksburg, MS * Helena, AR * Memphis, TN
Save up to $1,850 per stateroom* or Book 2 staterooms and Get the 3rd FREE**
NEW YEARS EVE
Memphis to New Orleans
December 27, 2013 - January 4, 2014| 9 Days
Memphis, TN * Helena, AR * Vicksburg, MS * Natchez, MS * St. Francisville, LA
Baton Rouge, LA * Houmas House, LA * New Orleans
Save up to $1,850 per stateroom* or Book 2 staterooms and Get the 3rd FREE**
*Offer expires December 21, 2013 and is valid on new bookings only. Not valid on groups and may not be combined with other offers. Savings of 15% is valid on these 2013 voyage dates: 11/29, 12/6, 12/20, 12/27. Offer applies only to the price of the cruise; not valid on taxes, port charges, insurance, gratuities, or airfare.
**Offer expires December 21, 2013 and is valid on new bookings only. Not valid on groups and may not be combined with other offers. Complimentary stateroom category will be equal to the lowest stateroom category booked for each reservation and will be assigned upon final payment. Only cabin categories of B, C, D, E, F, G, H, and I are available for this offer and only on these 2013 voyage dates: 12/6, 12/20, 12/27. Offer does not apply to the 11/29 voyage. Offer applies only to the price of the cruise; not valid on taxes, port charges, insurance, gratuities, or airfare.
Port Charges of $109 per person are additional and not included in the fare. Promotional fares and amenities are capacity controlled, may vary by sailing and category of accommodations and may be withdrawn without notice. Fares quoted are in U.S. dollars, are per person and do not include air or land transportation. Additional terms and conditions may apply. The American Queen is owned and operated by the American Queen Steamboat Company; is regularly inspected by the U.S. Coast Guard; is U.S.-flagged; and employs American officers, crew and staff.
The street itself runs for nearly two miles through downtown and to the riverfront where a brand new cruise terminal and public space was built just a couple of years ago. Beale Street’s place in the history of Memphis, and its barbeque joints and blues clubs have made it hugely popular with both locals and visitors and it is often a hub for celebrations, street fairs and concerts. Guests sailing on the American Queen usually make a beeline for Beale Street to soak in the atmosphere. Since we offer a free one-night pre-cruise deluxe hotel stay in the embarkation city on every voyage as part of the cruise fare, sailings from Memphis are particularly popular.
Beale Street’s history goes back only to 1841 when the street was named by developer Robertson Topp to honor a military hero of the era. The street’s proximity to the Mississippi River made it an ideal location for merchants who served the burgeoning steamboat trade. Over time, the area saw entertainers and musicians arrive to provide amusement for the steamboat passengers and crews and it became a well-known stop for traveling black musicians. It seemed Memphis’ trajectory was onward and upward until the city was hit by yellow fever so savagely that it was almost depopulated. But where there is tragedy there is often opportunity and Robert Church, who reportedly became the first black millionaire in the South, bought up large tracts of land on and around Beale Street. The Orpheum, known originally as the Grand Opera House, opened in 1890 and nine years later Church created the immodestly named Church Park. At this point, music became the lifeblood of Memphis. An enormous auditorium in the park was the epicenter for blues performers and Beale Street began to develop a truly unique identity.
With the opening of Church Park in 1899, Beale Street entered the 20th century as a cultural center complete with stores, cafes, fine restaurants and countless clubs and bars. Unlike many cities with similar concentrations of amusements, a number of Beale Street’s establishments were under the proud ownership and management of African-Americans. And this is where the rich history of Beale Street comes into play. Ida B. Wells owned and was editor of a Beale Street-based newspaper called Free Speech which preached an anti-segregationist message, a rather bold move for a city in the South. If you know your history then you know the name Ida B. Wells; she went on to co-found the NAACP. If you’re a historian, then you also know about the Beale Street Baptist Church, a structure dating back to the Civil War that played a role in the fledgling civil rights movement.
But, above all else, Beale Street is famous for the blues. Music lovers know that William Christopher Handy, W.C. Handy for short, is widely acknowledged as the “Father of the Blues.” Handy found his niche in Memphis initially as a music teacher for Memphis Mayor Thornton’s Knights of Pythias Band after being recommended by Booker T. Washington. The blues was born.
A campaign song written by Handy in the early 1900s was eventually known as “The Memphis Blues” and in 1916 he wrote a blues standard called “Beale Street Blues.” Unfortunately, Beale Street was actually formally known as Beale Avenue at the time but the song became so popular and influential that the city decided to change the thoroughfare’s moniker from avenue to street to make sure the musical association was recognizable to all. For the next generation, blues and jazz greats flocked to Memphis. B.B. King, Louis Armstrong, Muddy Waters, Rosco Gordon and many others all got their start on Beale Street as a unique style of music dubbed the Memphis Blues took root. By the 1930s, Beale Street was recognized as the birthplace of the blues and Wikipedia notes that a book about the rise of the blues, called Beale Street: Where the Blues Began, became the “first book by a black author to be advertised in the Book-of-the-Month Club News.”
In 1966, a portion of the street became a National Historic Landmark and by 1977 Congress designated Beale Street as the “Home of the Blues” with an official act. Though Beale Street was rundown at the time, it is now the shining jewel in Memphis' downtown necklace. The American Queen Steamboat Company has a number of voyages that either begin or end in Memphis, including several holiday cruises which currently have special offers that include savings of up to $1,850 per stateroom* or the chance to book two staterooms and receive a third for free.** Just make your reservations before December 21, 2013 and come find out what makes Beale Street the epicenter of the blues.
ELVIS HOLIDAY TRIBUTE
New Orleans to Memphis
November 29 - December 7, 2013 | 9 Days
New Orleans, LA * Oak Alley, LA * St. Francisville, LA * Natchez, MS
Vicksburg, MS * Memphis, TN
Save up to $1,850 per stateroom*
OLD FASHIONED HOLIDAYS
Memphis to New Orleans
December 6-14, 2013 | 9 Days
Memphis, TN * Helena, AR * Vicksburg, MS * Natchez, MS * St. Francisville, LA
Baton Rouge, LA * Houmas House, LA * New Orleans, LA
Save up to $1,850 per stateroom* or Book 2 staterooms and Get the 3rd FREE**
New Orleans to Memphis
December 20-28, 2013 | 9 Days
New Orleans, LA * Oak Alley, LA * St. Francisville, LA * Natchez, MS
Vicksburg, MS * Helena, AR * Memphis, TN
Save up to $1,850 per stateroom* or Book 2 staterooms and Get the 3rd FREE**
NEW YEARS EVE
Memphis to New Orleans
December 27, 2013 - January 4, 2014| 9 Days
Memphis, TN * Helena, AR * Vicksburg, MS * Natchez, MS * St. Francisville, LA
Baton Rouge, LA * Houmas House, LA * New Orleans
Save up to $1,850 per stateroom* or Book 2 staterooms and Get the 3rd FREE**
*Offer expires December 21, 2013 and is valid on new bookings only. Not valid on groups and may not be combined with other offers. Savings of 15% is valid on these 2013 voyage dates: 11/29, 12/6, 12/20, 12/27. Offer applies only to the price of the cruise; not valid on taxes, port charges, insurance, gratuities, or airfare.
**Offer expires December 21, 2013 and is valid on new bookings only. Not valid on groups and may not be combined with other offers. Complimentary stateroom category will be equal to the lowest stateroom category booked for each reservation and will be assigned upon final payment. Only cabin categories of B, C, D, E, F, G, H, and I are available for this offer and only on these 2013 voyage dates: 12/6, 12/20, 12/27. Offer does not apply to the 11/29 voyage. Offer applies only to the price of the cruise; not valid on taxes, port charges, insurance, gratuities, or airfare.
Port Charges of $109 per person are additional and not included in the fare. Promotional fares and amenities are capacity controlled, may vary by sailing and category of accommodations and may be withdrawn without notice. Fares quoted are in U.S. dollars, are per person and do not include air or land transportation. Additional terms and conditions may apply. The American Queen is owned and operated by the American Queen Steamboat Company; is regularly inspected by the U.S. Coast Guard; is U.S.-flagged; and employs American officers, crew and staff.