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3rd Oct – Graceland's
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Back of Elvis's house |
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We had to queue 30 minutes for the
minibus to take us across the road and up the 100yds drive way to the
house. Every visitor is issued with an iPad
and headphones to aid their tour.
The iPad
had 360 degree views of each room and everyone listened intently to their own
audio so there was almost complete silence as we walked around. We joined a continuous line of people through
the downstairs and basement rooms which are open to the public.
Outside in the gardens it was less
crowded. Then another queue for the mini
bus back across the road. If they had
built an underpass to cross the road and let us walk we could have saved
ourselves nearly an hour.
Elvis’s first
record (That’s Alright Mama) was released 60 years ago in 1954 and it is
amazing that nearly 40 years after his death so many people are still visiting
this place (us included).
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Isaac Hayes Gold plated Caddy |
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Despite the success of the 60s
the owner lost everything, including his home, when the company folded in the
mid-70s.
We then headed to Beale Street for a visit to the Rock n
Soul Music Museum which is associated with the Smithsonian Institute. This covered the history of the development
of music in Memphis with particular emphasis on the 50s, 60s & 70s and Rock
& Roll as well as Soul Music. With
such ‘big names’ recording in the city in those years the place must have been
“really rockin’”.
We spent a couple of hours along the busy bar-lined street
were live music was being performed in several places.
4th Oct – Shiloh National Battlefield
The drive from Memphis to the campsite near Savannah didn’t take
long so that left time to visit the Shiloh National Battlefield in the afternoon.
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We drove around the battlefield area which had numerous commemorative
plaques and statues to the fallen.
Notable survivors of Shiloh included, J W Powell, who went
on to become a renowned explorer of the Wild West, rafting down the Grand
Canyon; L Wallace who later wrote the novel Ben Hur; and H Stanley who
afterwards travelled to Africa and found Livingstone.
Tomorrow we move on to visit the Jack Daniels Distillery.
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