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Month: January 2015

The Vintage Inn Travels-Nashville and Memphis Part 2

If you follow my blog then you know that I was recently in Memphis and Nashville over the holidays and I blogged about my first part of my trip HERE.

Now onto part 2….Nashville!

Greetings From Nashville-Vintage Travel Postcard.
Source: Cardcow.com

I have been itching to go to Nashville for so many years I think I have lost count. I LOVE Country music, love love love it and have been listening to it all my life and so to finally to walk in the foot steps of so many musical greats, was such a fantastic thrill for me.

Up first we headed to the famous “Loveless Cafe” where we attempted to get in to eat but was greeted by a 2 hour wait. So instead we wandered around the grounds (which used to be a motel, turned into a cafe and shopping area) for a few moments and then headed onto our next destination.

Loveless Cafe Nashville Photo of the Neon Sign. Cool Mid Century Neon Sign.
Loveless Cafe Nashville side of the building

Next Stop..Grand Ole Opry!!!! Yooza I was like freaking out when I stood on the grounds of the Opry. My husband was laughing so much on how I was ohhh”ing” and awwww “ing” and there really was nothing to see! hahaha I’m such a nerd.

Grand Ole Opry Nashville photo
Grand Ole Opry Nashville-Vintage Inn Blog (Liz) posing with a giant guitar in a 1960s vintage Jacket.

After we wandered around the Opry for a bit we then headed over to the super hotel “Gaylord Opryland“.

Hotel is not really a word I would use for this mega complex of hotel rooms, shopping, eating and playing for kids and adults of all ages. It was a pretty spectacular place with palm trees, giant ponds, bridges etc. all over the complex. It was also very easy to get lost and pretty soon everything started to look the same and we found ourselves stuck a few times in corners..dark corners hahaha. Anyways it was fun to see and maybe one day I will get a chance to stay there.

Note: My iPhone took terrible pictures of the inside of this hotel, so I’m showing you others photos so you have a better idea of what it actually looked like.

Daytime:

Opryland Resort Nashville
Source: Tripadvisor.ca

Nighttime at Opryland.

Gaylord Opryland Nashville
Source: Funtimeguide.com

The holiday lights were still up when we were there, but since we were there in the day I never got to see how spectacular they looked at night. Now I can (this is just one small area of many areas that had lights, fyi).

Nashville Opryland Christmas lights
Source: Horton Deakins

After Opryland we were starving so we went and ate at the insanely yummy and totally vintage looking restaurant “Merchants” right on music row (established in 1892). Man for a place in tourist central I have to say they had some of the best food I have EVER eaten. I would go back in a second.

Merchants Nashville restaurant in a 1890s vintage building.
Merchants Nashville Restaurant
Source: Merchants

After dinner it was wander around and look for music time and in Nashville you are never hurting for music options. However after hearing Bryan Adams “Summer of 69” being played at 4 or 5 bars we walked by I was beginning to wonder if Nashville had sent the country somewhere else. Finally we found a bar by the suggestion of a Toronto friend called “Layla’s” and settled in for some good honky-tonk country music. The band was great, and played all my favorites but then they were soon done and we found ourselves in the middle of a Rockabilly night. Yay me! Country and Rockabilly on the same night..win! The band was “Hillbilly Casino” and they were absolutely fantastic, one of the most energetic bands I had ever seen. I recommend checking them out if you get a chance.

Rockabilly Band Nashville- Hillbilly Casino
Source: Hillbilly Casino

Day 2 in Nashville, had me nursing a headache so we took the am slow and headed back to Music Row to check out the Johnny Cash Museum, The Ryman (the Original Grand Ole Opry site) and to at least go IN the Country Music Hall of Fame (we had no time to actually do the tour, next trip for sure). All which were really great and I will get back to these items in a minute but I wanted to talk about the fun things we saw on our walk that were NOT planned.

Like this amazing building that housed “The Barbershop Harmony Society“. Yes Nashville has a society for Barber Shop Quartet Singing , you heard me right and I have the proof right here.

The Barbershop Harmony Society Nashville
I love the Barber Poles on the building

The other find on our walk to Music Row was the Gem of the whole entire day, at least for me because I’m a huge fan of vintage history. We happen to come upon this unassuming building, pictured below.

Union Station Nashville-Vintage Train Station turned Vintage Hotel
Nice..but nothing special

Yes it’s is pretty but nothing that you have not seen before in many different cities. It was called “Union Station” and we figured that it was an old train station laying unused, UNTIL we hit the front of the building and we were very wrong. It is actually a in-use hotel-“Union Station Hotel” that ended up being really nice from the front, so we thought “let’s go inside I’m sure it must be interesting inside”.

Union Station Hotel Nashville-Vintage Train Station turned Hotel.
Now we are talking..wow! Source: Preservation Nation

I’m not sure if the word “Interesting Inside” can really sum up what we walked in on when we opened those doors. We walked into one of the most stunning buildings I have EVER seen in my travels in North America. This is what we saw……

Old Train Station now a hotel in Nashville
Photo Courtesy of Guff.com

My jaw was on the floor! Nobody could say anything because we did not expect that.

Turns out that the hotel was a former railroad terminal Opening on Oct. 9, 1900, to great fanfare, the building’s imposing Gothic design – featuring lofty turrets and towers – was a testament to U.S. ingenuity and energy and was meant to serve the passenger operations of the eight railroads then providing passenger service to Nashville,

During railroading’s glory years, the station saw characters such as movie starlet Mae West and Mafia kingpin Al Capone – who was escorted through here on his way to Georgia penitentiary. Other fascinating facts surrounding our historic Nashville hotel include:

  • Construction began on Aug. 1, 1898
  • Station officially opened on Oct. 9, 1900
  • The track level once held two alligator ponds
  • The Train Shed was the largest unsupported span in America, housing up to 10 full trains at once
  • Officially opened as a hotel in December 1986
  • Re-dedicated on October 9, 2007 after an $11 million dollar renovation (source).

Here are some more pictures….

Union Station Nashville-Vintage train station turned hotel.
I love that they kept details like the door to one of the tracks with the sign
Union Station Nashville-Vintage train station turned hotel. Giant Large Fireplace.
Large Stone Fireplace

The Front Desk-LOVE THIS! Where do you want to go?

Union Station Nashville-Vintage train station turned hotel. The train times sign.

And even one of the banquet rooms looked like a castle from top to bottom.

Union Station Nashville-Vintage train station turned hotel.
Source: TripAdvisor
Union Station Nashville-Vintage train station turned hotel.
Front Entrance of the Hotel

After we picked our jaws off the floor and vowed to return one day to actually stay in a room we headed to our planned events for the day.

1. The Johnny Cash Museum. Which was really well done, very interesting and totally worth every penny.

Johnny Cash Museum Nashville
The Man in Black
Johnny Cash Museum Walk the Line original words on paper.
Walk the Line Lyrics written out by Johnny Cash

2. Visiting the Ryman (at least the outside), as mentioned above it was the original home of the Grand Ole Opry. And In an effort to maintain continuity with the Opry’s storied past, a large circle was cut from the floor of the Ryman stage and inlaid into the center of the new Opry stage (source).

Ryman Nashville
Beautiful building

3. And finally the Country Music Hall of Fame. I really love how it looks like piano from the outside.

Country Music Hall of Fame-Nashville

And that was Nashville friends, at least for this trip. There was so much more to see and next time I will see it all..I hope!

Have you ever been to Nashville? What were your favorite places?

Liz

The Vintage Inn Travels-Memphis & Nashville Part 1

Happy New Year Everyone!! I hope you had a super duper fantastic, totally amazing New Years Eve! Mine was pretty darn good as I was in Memphis and Nashville,Tennessee visiting a friend of my husband and I’s. It was a glorious trip filled with as much food, beer and music we could devour and most times all at once. lol! So lets what fun I got myself into shall we?

Part 1 of my blog posts: Memphis, Tennessee the home of the King of Rock N’ Roll, Sun Records Studio, Beale Street, the Peabody Ducks and of course MLK.

Part 2 is HERE (Nashville).

Greetings from Memphis postcard image
Source: Retro America

The Vintage Inn Blog Travels to Memphis

I have visited Memphis once before and on that visit we went to Graceland, Sun Records Studio and the Lorraine Motel, so this time our trip was more focused on the music and kind of just hanging out in the city. On our first day there we stopped by the very gorgeous “Peabody Hotel” for the famous “March of the Peabody Ducks” from the main lobbies fountain to their home upstairs on the roof.

Peabody Hotel Memphis
On the Roof of the Peabody
The Peabody Hotel Memphis Fountain
In front of the ducks fountain home

The unique tradition started in 1932, when the general manager of the time, Frank Schutt, had just returned from a weekend hunting trip in Arkansas. He and his friends thought it would be amusing to leave three of their live English Call Duck decoys in the hotel fountain. The ducks became immediately popular with hotel guests, and since then, five Mallard ducks (one male and four females) have played in the fountain every day (Source).

Peabody Ducks at Memphis Hotel
The Ducks before the big move

In 1940, a Bellman by the name of Edward Pembroke volunteered to care for the ducks. Pembroke was a circus animal trainer and he taught the ducks to march into the hotel lobby, which started the famous Peabody Duck March. He served as the “Duckmaster” until his retirement in 1991.

The ducks, themselves, have been rotated over the years. In fact, each team of five ducks only work for three months before they are replaced by another set. The ducks are raised by a local farmer and are returned to the farm when they retire.

The custom of keeping ducks in the lobby fountain may date back even further than the 1930s. Researchers found a pre-1915 postcard that highlights the ducks playing in the fountain, and one source claims the custom goes back to the hotel’s opening in 1869 (Source).

The Peabody Ducks at the Peabody Hotel Memphis
Source: Amusing Planet

It was so cute with the Duckmaster in his dapper red jacket and the kids cheering with delight as the ducks made their move. They even had a march theme play while they walked down the red carpet right into the elevators. Ahhhhh fun!

After the ducks we walked across the street to this bar that is known for their $3 Martini Mondays and proceeded to drink for around 3 hours, some of the yummiest martinis I have ever had. My 2 favorites was the “Elvis” which tasted like a peanut butter and banana sandwich AND the “Bathtub” which had a rubber ducky in it (I’m keeping with the duck theme, can’t you tell?).

martini drink with a rubber duck in it.
Bathtub Martini

The next day we were up nice and early and ready to wander the city. I really wanted to visit Beale St. during the day so I could visit the famous A. Schwabs and Lanksys which I missed my last trip.

A. Schwab Memphis Sign-Vintage Sign
About to enter A.Schwab

The store which has been around since 1876 has a bunch of general merchandise, but the  2 best parts of the store was firstly the museum on the 2nd floor, which held some cool past merchandise. Like this goody from the late 1930s, early 1940s….

1930s / 1940s Vintage Bra as seen in A. Schwab Memphis. Surrealist late 30s to early 40s black lace over nude mesh bra with black silk satin
"hands" on cups.
Surrealist late 1930s to early 1940s black lace over nude mesh bra with black silk satin
“hands” on cups.

And the second cool part of the store was the Soda Bar!

A.Schwab Soda Bar Memphis
Soda Bar Choices

They had so many different choices, so we settled in and decided to try the sampler because we wanted them all and this was a pretty close way to do that.

Homemade Soda from A.Schwaub Memphis
Which one to try first?

My favorite was the Sour Cherry and my husbands was the real Ginger Ale.

P.S. Can you spot the Flamingo Brooch? I just got it from TinselTownAccessorie and I LOVE IT!!

A.Schwab Soda Bar Memphis
Mandatory Selfie with the Soda

After that we stopped in at the famous “Lansky Brothers“-The Clothier to the King..yes the King himself, Elvis so that I could touch and ogle all the fantastic clothes. Gosh their stuff was NICE! oh so nice. I could see why Elvis was drawn to them.

Lansky Brothers Memphis
The sign says it all!

Friends! When in Memphis I really suggest that you make sure you stop into their store on Beale St. Not only are the clothes fantastic but the store is filled with lots of cool memorabilia of Elvis and many other famous people who have come to Lanskys. A must see in my books.

Lansky Brothers Memphis the clothier to the King-Elvis presley
The King is in the House!

After the ogling and the wishing I was rich so I could outfit my husband head to toe like young 1950s Elvis, we jetted off to a few other stops before hitting up Beale St. again at night for some Blues at the always popular “Rum Boogie Cafe“.

Rum Boogie Memphis
Awesome night of Blues

On New Years Eve we hit up my first ever live Basketball game-Memphis Tigers! It was a blast and they won!

Memphis Tigers

Then we made one last stop before beginning our festivities, Joe’s Liquor store where I stumbled upon the coolest sign..ever! A Vintage “Roto-Sphere” created and produced by Warren Milks and on site since 1962 (with a full restoration happening in 1999 by the store).

It was seriously super cool and the “Sputnik” even rotated! Awesome!

Vintage Sign Memphis-Roto-Sphere. Mid Century Sign featuring a Sputnik
Roto-Sphere

New Years Day we decided to walk off our mini “champagne” headaches by heading to “Overton Park” to hit up the dog park. While the dog was being run around, I decided to slip away from the husband and our friend to explore some statues I could see in the distance.

Well the statues turned out to be a Veterans memorial park and it was very moving and well done but there was one particular statue that actually made me happy to see (as opposed to solemn and sad). The statue of the famous “Memphis Belle“.

Memphis Belle Statue in Overton Park
The Memphis Belle with their Good luck charm Scottie Dog-Stuka

The aircraft was one of the first B-17 United States Army Air Corps heavy bombers to complete 25 combat missions with her crew intact (Source). The name “Memphis Belle” was actually the namesake of pilot Robert K. Morgan’s sweetheart, Margaret Polk, a resident of Memphis and now forever immortalized in this statue.

Memphis Belle statue Memphis
Me and Margaret Polk

And that famous Pinup girl on the side of the plane…That was a George Petty drawing which he took from a drawing he did in the 1941 Esquire magazine.

Such a cool find!

Memphis Belle featuring famous Pinup girl on the side of the plane...That was a George Petty drawing which he took from a drawing he did in the 1941 Esquire magazine.
Source: Ken Mist

That night it was a trip to the historic and newly restored Layayette’s Music Room for some Blues, Beer and dancing. A great way to end part 1 of our journey in Memphis, indeed.

Lafayette's Music Room Memphis
Great Night of Music

Take a look at my Nashville trip HERE

Question time: Have you ever been to Memphis? Did you like it? What did you do? Please share because I intend on going back.

Liz 🙂