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This week we cover a listener submitted story, the haunted Memphis, TN bar, Earnestine and Hazel's. It is the most haunted bar in Tennessee! We also cover the Francis E. Warren Air Force Base, the most haunted active military base in the US! Email us your stories!!! or if you want to sponsor us ;) Email - mysteriesmythslegends@gmail.com ESTY: https://www.etsy.com/shop/LuxieandLuna?ref=simple-shop-header-name&listing_id=826447453 We post pictures of our stories every week on instagram!!!! FOLLOW US ON SOCIALS: Tiktok: @myths_podcast Instagram: @myths_podcast Twitter: @myths_podcast Taylor's Instagram: @teeelive Taylor's Twitter: @teeelive Savannah's Instagram: @kavannahaha Savannah's Twitter: @sanna_sunshine --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mysteriesmythsandlegends/support
JESUSgirl.ENT Podcast presents Sis. Mai!!! Sis. MaiTai overcame and is overcoming the loss of a mother and elder sister only about a year span apart… Her mother, who was adopted, loved her children unconditonally. Sis. Mai for a season had to be the strength for her younger siblings as well as nieces with little to no community help… You will be amazed at what all this young lady has endured but GOD! She finds strength in JESUS and the community she has today! With a heart to keep moving forward despite all trials she shares her story to encourage others to keep moving forward as well! Featured poet at the end, a mother to her now,Sis. Earnestine. She is sharing a production poetic piece. Streaming this Saturday at 7pm CST on the JESUSgirl.ENT Podcast!!!! #JESUS #jesus #jesusgirl #jesusgirlent #fyp #foru #foryoupage #viral #viralvideos
The question tonight is, can our community be saved? Don't ask me you may not like my answer. Thank you to my guest to me she is the voice that the streets listen to. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mstia/message
Earnestine & Hazel's has been a staple in the Memphis music scene for decades! It has survived a long history of ups and downs and is still an awesome dive bar to have a burger in and get a drink…. But it is also one of the most haunted bars in the United States! Let's check it out! Sponsor Claritin D – Claritin.com *USE ONLY AS DIRECTED* Check out our sources below for more info and to continue learning! Please Rate & Review us wherever you get your Podcasts! Mail us something: GYT Podcast PO Box 542762 Grand Prairie, TX 75054 Leave us a Voicemail or shoot us a text! 430-558-1304 Our Website WWW.GraveYardPodcast.com Patreon https://www.patreon.com/GraveYardTales Youtube: Youtube.com/c/GraveYardTales Rumble – GraveYard Tales Podcast Do you want GraveYard Merch?!?! Go to https://www.teepublic.com/stores/graveyard-tales?ref_id=22286 to get you some! Visit Podbelly.comto find more shows like us and to get information you might need if you're starting your own podcast. Thank You Darron for our Logo!! You can get in touch with Darron for artwork by searching Darron DuBose on Facebook or Emailing him at art_injector@yahoo.com Thank you to Brandon Adams for our music tracks!! If you want to hear more from Brandon check him out at: Soundcloud.com/brandonadamsj Youtube.com/brandonadams93 Or to get in touch with him for compositions email him at Brandon_adams@earthlink.net Our Contacts WWW.GraveYardPodcast.com Email us at: GraveYardTalesPodcast@gmail.com Find us on social media: Twitter: @GrveYrdPodcast Facebook: @GraveYardTalesPodcast Instagram: @GraveYardTalesPodcast Sources https://www.vice.com/en/article/vvxnmb/this-is-what-its-like-to-work-at-the-most-haunted-bar-in-america https://www.earnestineandhazel.com/history https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/earnestine-hazels https://www.thrillist.com/eat/memphis/earnestine-and-hazels-memphis-burger-dive-bar https://www.memphistravel.com/music-nightlife/earnestine-hazels#:~:text=Earnestine%20%26%20Hazel's%20is%20a%20quintessential,Hazel's%20is%20a%2021%2B%20joint. https://www.publicbooks.org/earnestine-hazels-in-memphis-a-place-known-for-its-dead/ https://tennesseeencyclopedia.net/entries/abe-plough/#:~:text=Using%20dishpans%20for%20mixing%20the,drug%20stores%20and%20country%20merchants. https://www.smartcitymemphis.com/2024/02/memphis-losing-population-is-nothing-new/#:~:text=It%20was%20a%20massive%2C%20historic,of%20the%20city's%20public%20services. https://www.vice.com/en/article/vvxnmb/this-is-what-its-like-to-work-at-the-most-haunted-bar-in-america https://usghostadventures.com/haunted-stories/31-days-of-halloween/earnestine-and-hazels/ https://houseofgeekery.com/2020/12/24/creepy-mysteries-ghosts-of-earnestine-and-hazels/ https://www.memphisflyer.com/russell-george-owner-of-earnestine-and-hazels-found-dead https://www.commercialappeal.com/story/news/breaking/2019/07/18/bones-found-earnestine-and-hazels-bar-memphis/1766422001/ http://souledoutblog.com/a-weekend-in-americas-most-haunted-bar/
Without an ounce of fear, Earnestine Black's lead singer Sarah Long Talks about processing the grief, her own UFO experience, and how she's used music to find her way back to happiness.
Join me The Pumpkin Queen as we travel down the rabbit hole of the hauntings of Earnestine & Hazel'sLinktr.ee https://linktr.ee/AFTERTHE3VERPODCAST Instagram: https://instagram.com/afterthe3ver?igshid= Contact Me or send in your stories to: pumkinqueen@afterthe3ver.com Warnings: Spooky Content Sourced Information for this episode:https://www.earnestineandhazel.com/history https://usghostadventures.com/haunted-stories/31-days-of-halloween/earnestine-and-hazels/ https://www.vice.com/en/article/vvxnmb/this-is-what-its-like-to-work-at-the-most-haunted-bar-in-america Show Credits: Logo Photography & Content Reviews:The WOLFMAN Music for the show “Afterthe3ver”Wrote/Produced by Douglas Shimmin
“Like the endurance of the metal itself, contemporary Black artists sustain the historic and symbolic significance of working with iron that began with ancient practices of blacksmithing in Africa,” Dr. Earnestine Jenkins. Dr. Earnestine Jenkins, visual culture historian and professor at the University of Memphis, and host Mark Fleischer discuss From Artisans to Artists: African American Metal Workers in Memphis, a new exhibit curated by Dr. Jenkins at the Metal Museum. Through its celebration of artisans and artists from West and Central African through to modern-day Memphis, this exhibit examines the role of the blacksmith in diverse African contexts and how that artisan identity and associated blacksmithing practices changed in America due to slavery. Among those metal workers featured are the enslaved blacksmiths of two local plantation sites, the Hunt Phelan House and the Hilderbrand Plantation; blacksmiths and entrepreneurs Blair Hunt and David Carnes; and contemporary artists Richard Hunt, Lorenzo Scruggs, Hawkins Bolden, and Desmond Lewis. From Artisans to Artists draws on the knowledge and research of guest curator Dr. Earnestine Jenkins, who utilizes surviving artifacts and primary source documents from both sides of the Atlantic Ocean to bring to the forefront a crucial part of Memphis's artistic history. From Artisans to Artists: African American Metal Workers in Memphis is open now through September 11, 2022, at the Metal Museum.
The girls cover spooky stories in this week's episode. Sheena covers Earnestine & Hazel's, a haunted dive bar in Memphis; Lori covers the murder and ghosts of Goat Castle; and Hannah covers the Iguala mass kidnapping.
In their heyday, Earnestine Mitchell and Hazel Jones rubbed elbows with some of the biggest names in rock and soul history. Their juke joint was the go-to hangout for the after-show party crowd. After decades of decadence, 13 souls remain at the bar to party for eternity. From a haunted jukebox to a fire-haired phantom to a cheeseburger that'll make you wanna slap your, mama, Earnestine and Hazel's has got it all. Source material:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Johnsonhttps://memphisrap.com/news/memphis-bar-owner-russell-george-found-dead-of-suicide-in-earnestine-hazels/https://www.thrillist.com/eat/memphis/earnestine-and-hazels-memphis-burger-dive-barhttps://houseofgeekery.com/2020/12/24/creepy-mysteries-ghosts-of-earnestine-and-hazels/https://www.commercialappeal.com/story/news/breaking/2019/07/18/bones-found-earnestine-and-hazels-bar-memphis/1766422001/https://www.southernspiritguide.org/the-haunted-jukebox-and-associates-earnestine-and-hazels-memphis/http://souledoutblog.com/a-weekend-in-americas-most-haunted-bar/https://www.actionnews5.com/2019/07/18/bones-found-wall-earnestine-hazels/https://www.canalefuneraldirectors.com/obituaries/Russell-George-33378/https://www.bizjournals.com/memphis/blog/morning_call/2013/09/ernestine-and-hazels-owner-found-dead.htmlhttps://ilovememphisblog.com/earnestineandhazels
Earnestine Dumas, 69, departed this life Sunday, Oct. 24, 2021. Earnestine was born Nov. 14, 1951 to the parentage of the late Christine Davis and Elmore Gamble. She confessed to Christ at an early age and joined New Hope No.1 Baptist Church in Thomasville. Earnestine united in marriage with James Dumas, who preceded her in death. She joined Antioch Missionary Baptist Church in Nicholsville, where she was a very active member. She would later go on to move her membership to Antioch AME Church in Gainestown, where she remained a very active member until her untimely death. She leaves to...Article Link
The spot that is now occupied by Earnestine and Hazel’s at 531 South Main St was once the exact opposite of what it was to become in the future. In the late 1800s, it was built as a church, complete with fancy doors and a steeple. The area that the corner building occupies was considered “South Memphis”. It was a residential area that remained so until the early 1900s, when the railroad was built. South Memphis opened two new train stations and 50 passenger cars would come through every day. At that point, the area became able to support businesses. Sadly, the church burned down some time in the early 1900s. I couldn’t find an exact date, but the assessor's office lists the current building’s date as 1918. That year, a new building was erected, the same one you see today, and it was purchased by Abe Plough and turned into one of his Pantaze Drugstores. Abe Plough is a name synonymous with Memphis. In 1908, he borrowed $125 from his father and started his own business, Plough Chemical Company. He pedaled his “antiseptic healing oil”, that he created in a room above his father’s shop, to the drug stores in and around Memphis. His patent medicine took off and within a couple of years he doubled his profits. Side note: patent medicines are basically ones that marketed as medicines, but have no proven effectiveness. They are protected by trademarks but their ingredients are generally not completely disclosed. You’ll often hear them referred to as “tonics” or “elixirs”. With his additional money, Plough found his way into the cosmetics and sunscreen business and eventually acquired St. Joseph’s Aspirin brand. Over the next 100 years, Plough Inc became a multi-million dollar company, partnering with Schering Company. Schering Plough and the Plough Foundation became a major philanthropic entity in Memphis. But let’s rewind. Plough opened Pantaze Drugstores in the 1930s. Apparently Pantaze were the Walgreens of its day. There were 7 Pantaze drug stores on Main St and in the downtown area. It was during his time owning Pantaze that Plough started to expand his brand and continued on to find his fame. Now in the building on S. Main, Plough only used the bottom floor of the building for his pharmacy/sundry store, so he rented the upstairs to two beauticians, Earnestine Mitchell and Hazel Jones. Side note: a sundry is basically a general store that sells miscellaneous items One of the products that Plough had made was a hair straightening product and it worked quite well. Not only did the ladies use it in their salon, it was also being used all over the eastern part of the country. With Plough’s success and new found fortune, he gave (or I've also heard sold for a very inexpensive price) the building to Earnestine and Hazel. This transaction occurred some time in the 1950s, from what I can tell. Having no interest in running a sundry, the ladies decided to turn the downstairs area into a jazz cafe. Earnestine’s husband, Andrew, who went by the name of Sunbeam, opened a venue nearby for musicians, called Club Paradise. This was not the first business venture of Sunbeam Mitchell though. Throughout his years as a promoter, Mitchell had opened several music venues, a restaurant, and even a hotel for African Americans, which were scarce in those times. Earnestine kept the books and ran the hotel. The Mitchells and Plough were not strangers to each other either. One of Sunbeam’s music venues (Club Handy) and the Mitchell hotel were on the second and third floors of the Pantaze Drugs, which again was owned by Plough, on Beale St. (Wet Willie’s currently occupies this building.) Club Paradise was the largest and most prestigious nightclub in Memphis. It could hold up to 3200 people. Numerous acts such as locals Bobby Blue Bland, BB King, Howlin Wolf, and Muddy Waters played there, as well as big named acts Ike & Tina Turner, Aretha Franklin, Ray Charles, Chuck Berry, Bo Diddly, & Sam Cook.
PTCT, we had the hood politician on tonight Ms, Earnestine young. Thank you everyone hope this inspire u to live your best life, That's or purpose for this earth,think about it. Cash app $ptct03 please donate to the show. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/mstia/message
PTCT, man this was a great show tonight please listen, Earnestein Young thank you so much you always there when we need you Welcome to the trap house!!!! lol --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/mstia/message
Guest staring Earnestine and Chioce
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This is our Social Media Poll episode! Y'all voted, we researched, and we're talking haunted bars! Vanessa discusses the haunted Earnestine and Hazel's and also discovers it might be the best place to find a burger in Tennessee! While Bailie travels across the pond and discusses the Ye Olde Salutation Inn in Nottingham. We are sipping on an Amaretto Sour! To make on for yourself you will need 1 1⁄2 oz Amaretto liqueur, 3⁄4 oz bourbon, 1 oz fresh lemon juice, 1 tsp simple syrup, 1⁄2 oz egg white, beaten. Add all ingredients into a shaker and dry-shake (no ice). Add ice and shake again until chilled. Strain into a rocks glass over fresh ice. Garnish with a lemon twist and 2 skewered brandied cherries and Enjoy! Our Promo this week is Cage's Kiss Podcast Find more wonderfully strange podcasts like ours at StraightUpStrange.com
In episode 5 Keisha tells us the story of a haunted dive bar in Memphis Tn, called Earnestine & Hazel's Wes Tells us about Jesse Tafero A man who was Executed for a crime he didn't commit
Sometimes you wanna ghost WHERE EVERYBODY KNOWS YOUR GRAVE.... (bum, bum bum!). Sometimes you just want to slip into a topic that feels familiar, and that's why we went back to the haunts that keep on possessing us: Bars! Hear about The Red Lion in Chicago that Tami thiiiiiiiiinks she went to once (who can tell; that period of her life is a blur), and hear a first-hand account of a kind spirit encounter from a long-time bartender at Earnestine and Hazel’s in Memphis. Plus a fun and extremely altered Up Ghost and Personal from Tami's very own brother, Andy Hillberry! It's one for the ages: call us, Ted Danson! . Engineer: Nathan G. . Theme Music: Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ . Artwork: Laura de Mooij www.instagram.com/disneybabydoll/
In this episode of Memphis Type History: The Podcast, Rebecca and Caitlin visit Memphis' favorite historical dive bar, Earnestine and Hazel's. They pull up a stool and hear what soul burger cooker and bartender Clarence has to tell about E&H. They also take a tour of the bar and then wrap up by dancing the morning away with sounds of a haunted jukebox. Earnestine & Hazel's began it's life as a church in the late 1800s. However, the building at 351 South Main Street in downtown Memphis then became a dry goods store. And then it was a pharmacy owned by Abe Plough of Coppertone fame. He became a multi-millionaire so he sold the business to the two sisters who ran a hair salon upstairs (while also living there): Earnestine Mitchell and Hazel Jones. Upstairs the hair salon remained, with additional rooms being rented out to ladies of the night. The downstairs flipped over to a jazz night club run by Earnestine's husband, Sunbeam. He was a local music producer and promoted, and had opened Club Paradise over near Stax Records – so he knew a lot of famous musicians – and they would often come down to his wife's café for general frolicking late into the night. Ray Charles was apparently a regular. But by the end of the '70s, Stax was gone and with it, Club Paradise. The whole brothel aspect limited the café's customer base. By the '90s, Earnestine and Hazel were looking for a way out. As a ten-year-old, Russell George competed in the James Brown Dance Contest at the Mid-South Coliseum. Brown himself awarded this only white boy in the competition first prize. Five years later, George was running an illegal bar out of his apartment called Jefferson in the Rear. As a young man, he played a part in making Murphy’s Oyster Bar happen and became The Memphis Icebreaks' band manage (and also was one of their dancers). In 1992, he bought the brothel, invented the Soul Burger, and the rest, shall we say, is Memphis dive bar history. Russell George tragically died in 2013 of a self-inflicted gunshot wound after battling cancer and depression. At 62, he was the thirteenth person to move into the next world at E&H. His Soul Burger has fed the souls of so many throughout the years, and Clarence continues to serve them up from the same griddle Earnestine and Hazel used back in the combo café/brothel days. On a hot day in June, Rebecca and Caitlin sat down to chat with Clarence about the history of E&H. You can follow along with the full show notes at memphistypehistory.com/eh
Memphis, Tennessee is home to the Blues and it is only fitting that it is full of bars and juke joints where one can hear live music or spin a record on a jukebox. Earnestine & Hazel's Juke Joint is one such establishment. It is said to be the best dive in Memphis and maybe even in Tennessee. The bar was once a place to buy dry goods before transitioning to a cafe and then the current bar. For part of its history, the second floor served as a bordello. The dive has been featured in multiple movies, been written about in Esquire and Playboy Magazines and hosted celebrities. Music itself has an enduring history at this little establishment and something else that endures here, are spirits. There seem to be several that manifest on occasion in various ways. Join us as we explore the history and hauntings of Earnestine & Hazel's Juke Joint! The Moment in Oddity features New Jersey's Clinton Road and This Month in History features Lindbergh & Earhart crossing the Atlantic. Our location was suggested by listener Ivy Johnson. Check out the website: http://historygoesbump.com Show notes can be found here: http://historygoesbump.blogspot.com/2017/05/hgb-ep-204-earnestine-hazels-juke-joint.html Become an Executive Producer: http://patreon.com/historygoesbump Music: Vanishing from http://purple-planet.com (Moment in Oddity) In Your Arms by Kevin MacLeod http://incompetech.com (This Month in History) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Carol Jenkins sat down with Amirah Vann who plays Earnestine on Underground to discuss the show's success and her career.
Classical music composer Earnestine Rodgers Robinson will discuss her memoir, Driven by Faith and her career as a classical music composer. With no formal training whatsoever in music, Earnestine persevered through countless obstacles including racism and poverty in the segregated South to become a successful classical music composer who has traveled and presented her music all over the world, including a world premiere at Carnegie Hall. Earnestine's inspirational journey shows that with perseverance and faith, it is possible for those who are struggling to find their way.
Classical music composer Earnestine Rodgers Robinson discusses her memoir, Driven by Faith and her career as a classical music composer. With no formal training whatsoever in music, Earnestine persevered through countless obstacles including racism and poverty in the segregated South to become a successful classical music composer who has traveled and presented her music all over the world, including a world premiere at Carnegie Hall. Earnestine’s inspirational journey shows that with perseverance and faith, it is possible for those who are struggling to find their way. This interview originally aired on Empower Radio. Earnestine Rodgers Robinson is a renowned classical music composer. Robinson’s story is the subject of the 1995 PBS documentary “A Woman and Her Music.” “The Crucifixion” received its world premiere at Carnegie Hall in 1997. Her second oratorio, “The Nativity” also had its world premiere at Carnegie Hall in 2001. Robinson is the subject of the documentary “Sounds of a Miracle,” directed and produced by her eldest son Todd Robinson, MD, phD, which has been screened at the Palm Beach International Film Festival and Nashville Film Festival. Find out more at earnestinerobinson.com.
Todd Robinson is a surgeon in Memphis, TN, who was inspired to document his mother’s "miracle" with his first forays into filmmaking, the feature-length Hidden Treasure and the short Sounds of A Miracle, both based on his mother’s story. His mother, Earnestine Rodgers Robinson, received no formal music training, and with her faith and family, she rose from humble southern roots to become composer of sacred classical music that took her all the way to Carnegie Hall and to a world premiere in Prague.