Posted on 08/26/2015 12:03:49 PM PDT by nickcarraway
They placed Hank Williams in a wheelchair and hauled him from the Knoxville hotel to his powder-blue Cadillac convertible, where his driver, a college freshman named Charles Carr, waited.
Loaded on booze, morphine, chloral hydrate, and vitamin B12, Williams crawled into the back seat, wrapped a blanket around himself, and laid down. Tasked with ferrying Williams to a New Years Day gig in Dayton, Ohio, Carr drove out of Knoxville, Tennessee, and into legend.
Near midnight, Carr stopped in downtown Bristol, Virginia, to get gas and look for a relief driver. He went to a cab stand and noticed a diner, the Burger Bar, next door. Carr asked Williams if he wanted anything to eat. Williams declined, saying he just wanted to sleep.
A few hours on down the road, Carr reached back to check on Williams and found he was stone cold. Carr took him to a hospital in Oak Hill, West Virginia, where, just before daybreak, an intern officially declared Williams dead and placed his time of expiration at about 1 AM that morning, New Years Day, 1953.
By the time the 29-year-old Williams expired on a snowy road somewhere in Appalachia, he had blazed his way into country music immortality. Hed been inductedand expelledfrom Nashvilles Grand Ole Opry. Hed recorded 66 tracks under his own name, with more than half becoming hits, plus 14 as Luke the Drifter and a handful as part of a husband-and-wife act, Hank & Audrey. More than 25,000 people gathered for his funeral.
The night of his death is still a hot topic of discussion and speculation more than 60 years later. The only witnesses to the overnight drive were Carr and his temporary relief driver, taken on somewhere in Virginia or West Virginia.
The relief driver disappeared and died a couple of years later before anyone could interview him. Carr shared his story until his death in 2013, but memories can be tricky, especially decades removed from a nighttime drive through the disorienting, windy mountain roads of Appalachia.
The episode in Bristol remains especially murky, particularly on the question of whether it was the location of Hanks final words. The most common account has Williams declining Carrs offer of food. Another version says Williams didnt respond to Carr and may even have been dead by that point. Yet another has Williams walking into the diner and getting a last meal.
That last onewith Williams sitting down to eatcomes more from wishful thinking and marketing than from reality. Its the story that the Burger Bar, the diner where Carr stopped, peddled for decades. The details changed with each owner, but more than one claimed that not only did Williams eat there, but you could see the very spot where he sat.
Thats rubbish, says Joe Deel, the Burger Bars most recent owner and operator.
He didnt come in and eat. He never got out of the car, says Deel, who looks like the grown-up version of the Big Boy-ish logo that adorns the Burger Bar. Back in Knoxville, they put him in the back seat of the car. He was passed out. If he was dead a few hours later, he didnt get better.
In a 2003 blog post at the Tennessean, Peter Cooper sought to debunk the link between the Burger Bar and Williams last words, claiming the building housed a dry cleaners in the 50s. Instead, Cooper says Carr bought food in Bristol at Trayers Restaurant.
Deel believes the Burger Bar connection is legitimate, otherwise it never would have made its way into the story.
For certain, the legend of Williams, his music, and his last ride feature prominently at the Burger Bar. The restaurant and its website are filled with Williams photos and news clippings. Specialty burgers are named after his songs, too, whether its Your Cheatin Heart with green chiles, sautéed mushrooms, grilled onions, and cheese, or its bestseller, the I Cant Help It bacon cheeseburger.
The Burger Bars burgers are comparable to In-N-Out Burgerquality bun and meat, and a selection of specialties that provide variety without pretense.
Its a slight step up from the Burger Bars long history as a greasy spoon, but not quite as high falutin as a previous iteration that tried selling upscale $15 burgers. The restaurant attracts a steady lunchtime set whose regular business is crucial to the bottom line, but also a steady stream of pilgrims who come to pay their respects to Hank Williams and countrys roots.
Bristol is the city, after all, that provides the name of the Bristol Sessions, a pivotal set of 1927 recordings by producer Ralph Peer that included the debuts of Jimmie Rodgers and the Carter Family and exploded the commercial popularity of country music. Later, bluegrass pioneer Ralph Stanley cut his teeth performing on Bristols WCYB radio station with his brother Carter.
Deel reveals a metal door to an alley that connects to the kitchen. Old-timers, he says, have told him that was a special door for Jimmie Rodgers. More likely, it was used to serve food to black customers during the days of Jim Crow, when they werent allowed to dine inside.
Surrounded by all of this country music history in Bristol, its tempting to ask whether Williams made the right decision by turning down a meal at the Burger Bar. In retrospect, opting to stick with his liquor/morphine/chloral hydrate/vitamin B12 cocktail might have been the best move for his legacy, if not for his health. It certainly was the right decision for the Burger Bars business.
No, No, Joe (1950)
Good read, thanks.
BTTT
That will be perfect to use against Biden.
He paved the way for future over-achieving musicians to die before reaching 30.
In a wheelchair, age 29, driven by a teenager through the night.
What could go wrong?
I had not known these details.
There probably are biopic movies, but none recently. There needs to be a new one. The Johnny Cash, Doors and Ray Charles movies were successful, and the NWA/Compton movie also.
Whenever I hear Hank's songs..or name..I think of Jean.
I think there is a new one, probably the reason stories like this are popping up.
Austin Lounge Lizards
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ko0a74S776A
I know that in 1953, the year I was born, there was no interstate highways system, but why was he as far east as Bristol if he was going from Knoxville TE to Dayton OH, [pretty much due north?
When I was just a little fellow, my granddad would play him on the car radio as we were driving out to the farm to dig soap weed, sumac and cactus.
But it had to be just us. Grandma was a church lady and objected to Hank’s wild ways.
“No, No, Joe” is Hillary’s new theme song.
DOH.
I've been had.
Maybe there was something wrong with the GPS.
But if Carr was suppose to take Williams from Knoxville to Dayton, OH, why didn’t he just go north along I-75 ???
Why did he go way east 40+ miles along I-40 and then north for 75 miles on I-81 to the TN/VA state line ???
Was he lost ???
If you look at a road map US 23 runs from the Johnson City, Kingsport, Bristol, TN area through Eastern KY where Ralph Stanley and a whole host of other country singers are from to the West Side of Columbus and Toledo not far from Dayton.
Look it up on WIKI
Alcohol, morphine and chloral hydrate. There’s a death wish for you.
It was snowing. Could there have been a detour because of the snow?
Maybe to avoid gong over Jellico at the TN/OH state line...
It is steep and the trip was 50 years ago before they would have improved the road..
But WV can be snowbound even today..
I wouldn’t go that way in the winter..
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.