Category: Historical
bookmark_borderScenes from my vintage photo collection
Here I present a selection of items from my vintage photo collection, all of which depict locations I've visited during my various road trips across the United States and Canada. They are accompanied by some of my own photos of the same or similar locations.
Grand Canyon, 1922
I visited the Grand Canyon's North Rim in October of 2021. The writing on one of my pair of antique photos identifies the views as having been recorded to film in June 1922, some 99 years prior to my visit. Continue reading "Scenes from my vintage photo collection"bookmark_borderGhosts of DFW music history: Honest Place
The Deep Ellum neighborhood has been home to a dizzying number of music performance venues over the past century. In the early days of Ellum's renaissance, many an aspiring entrepreneur opted to roll the dice on a new venue. Some, like Charlie Gilder, were able to successfully circumnavigate the sea of red tape put forth by the City Council and obtain permits and liquor licenses; other, perhaps more bullish, entrepreneurs chose to go a different way, with all ages clubs and "unofficial" liquor on tap. Some of the resultant venues, such as the Prophet Bar and Theatre Gallery, achieved fairly long term success and drew a regular contingent of music fans and clubgoers, but Deep Ellum's history is also full of short-lived, fly by night venues that had their brief moments in the sun before flaming out and disappearing completely. And perhaps the most infamous of these long gone, also-ran hotspots was a hole in the wall off Commerce Street, a one time weighing scale and butcher equipment outlet turned punk club known as the Honest Place.
Continue reading "Ghosts of DFW music history: Honest Place"
bookmark_borderGhosts of DFW music history: Silver Dollar Rock Shop
The Silver Dollar... it sounds like some sort of cowboy watering hole, a place you might expect to see country and western acts and not a series of metal bands. Yet here I was with an old Deadly Force show flyer in my hands promoting moshing and urging support for the DFW metal underground of the 1980s, and the show was taking place at the Silver Dollar Rock Shop. What kind of place was this? Where was it located, and when did it disappear into the ether?
Continue reading "Ghosts of DFW music history: Silver Dollar Rock Shop"
bookmark_borderSeeking out the ghosts of DFW music history
Jimmy's Lil' Rockhouse
The story begins in April of this year, when I stumbled across a copy of an old hand drawn flyer while browsing some listings on eBay. The bands being advertised were ones I'd never heard of, as was the venue listed for the performance, but I recognized the included "Z Nites" logo as that of a long defunct radio network that was on the air during my middle and high school days. Upon closer examination of the embedded (also hand drawn) map to the venue, one "Jimmy's Lil' Rokhouse," I recognized the names of several streets and was able to discern that the area being pictured was in Arlington, between Dallas and Fort Worth and literally down the street from the University of Texas at Arlington, my alma mater from 1998-2000. The dates given on the flyer suggested a year of 1986, based on when those particular dates and Friday and Saturday nights would line up. Where exactly was this Jimmy's Lil' Rockhouse, and what was it today? I decided I wanted to find out.Continue reading "Seeking out the ghosts of DFW music history"