Clarksdale,
Mississippi has been a center for blues
culture since the 1920s.
Its location as a transportation hub—where Highways 61 and 49
connect,
where the Illinois Central and other railroads maintained depots and
passenger terminals,
and where the Greyhound Bus Company built a
station—made Clarksdale an economic boom town.
Flush times
created audiences
with money to spend for entertainment, and
the blues flourished
in the city. Many now-legendary musical artists
were born and raised in and around Clarksdale: Muddy Waters,
John Lee Hooker,
Son House, Ike Turner, Jackie Brenston, Sam Cooke,
Junior Parker,
and W. C. Handy, among them. Clarksdale was a major
market for the
Delta’s constantly traveling musicians, and the
likes of
Robert Johnson,
Howlin’ Wolf, and Charley Patton are also associated
with the city.
Today, that historic blues culture is preserved for
visitors
while contemporary
musicians carry on the great Delta blues tradition.
To download a color Delta Blues Museum brochure (PDF file), click here
To download a black and white Delta Blues Museum brochure (PDF file), click here
Clarksdale accommodations range from the
colorfully idiosyncratic (which can mean no phones or
Internet connections in the rooms) to the basic chain
motels which may offer swimming pools and cable TV.
• Big Pink Guest House A
former icehouse converted into an elegant, New Orleans-style
accommodation, with a waterfall in the courtyard,
a Victorian parlor, and classy décor in its
two suites. Kitchen available. A short walk from
the Delta Blues Museum. From $100 up. (601) 431-4961/ (601)431-6149;
www.bigpinkguesthouse.com)
• Catalpa House A B & B
that was formerly a house owned by the Wingfields,
known for their collection of glass animals, and
thus an inspiration for Tennessee William’s
play The Glass Menagerie and its central character,
Amanda Wingfield. From $50 nightly, $90 weekly, and
$300 monthly. (662-627-5621) |
|
• Blues Hound Flat Blues Hound Flat is a cool place to stay in Clarksdale, Mississippi. A self-catering apartment located in the heart of downtown Clarksdale, just steps from the Delta Blues Museum, and within easy walking distance to Ground Zero Blues Club, Madidi Restaurant, Cat Head Delta Blues & Folk Art and numerous authentic juke joints. Enjoy 1,500 square ft. of laid-back loft living all to yourself that can sleep up to 4. Blues Hound Flat is available for renting nightly, long-term stays, festivals, and special events. Space is limited. Call or email today for a reservation.
www.blueshoundflat.com
309 Issaquena
Clarksdale, MS 38614
info@blueshoundflat.com
901-272-0230
• The Clark House Originally constructed in 1859 by Clarksdale founder John Clark. It was the first home built in Clarksdale, and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The Clark House has just been extensively refurbished and beautifully redecorated as a residential inn.
The Clark House offers four elegant bedrooms in the main house, and three bedrooms in the cottage, just behind the main home. Each room features a private bath, desk and sitting area. All rooms enjoy the use of the beautiful parlor, library and dining room. A continental breakfast and internet access is included.
The Clark House is located in the historic residential area, just two blocks from Downtown Clarksdale’s government, business and entertainment center.
Rooms are available from $75, and reservations can be made online at www.clarkhouse.info or by calling the Innkeeper at 662-621-1632.
www.clarkhouse.info
• Comfort Inn This basic chain’s
swimming pool offers relief from
Delta heat. From $65. (662-627-5122;
www.comfortinn.com)
• Delta Blues Gateway Hotel Package at the Isle of Capri Casino Entertainment Resort
lula.isleofcapricasinos.com
•
Delta Cotton Company Apartments. Tastefully decorated rooms, complete
with appliances and coffeemakers,
on the
second floor of a former cotton-grading
warehouse, over the Ground Zero Blues
Club. Each room is named after a
different grade of cotton (“Strict
Low Middling,” for example).
You’ll hear the music from
below into the night (“you
should be downstairs partying anyway” suggests
the Web site). Perfect for longer-term
stays and a very short walk from
the Delta Blues Museum as well as
from the lively ground-floor bar-music
scene. $75-$105. (662-645-9366; www.groundzerobluesclub.com)
• Isle of Capri Coahoma County’s
only casino, located between Clarksdale
and Helena Ark. Straightforward casino-style
hotel rooms, with amenities. Downstairs
restaurant offers fine dining (see “Where
to eat”). From $69-109. (800-THE-ISLE)
•
Riverside Hotel. As grittily authentic
as they come, with spare accommodations
(bathrooms are shared) that are drenched
in Delta history. As the G. T. Thomas
Afro-American Hospital, it was the
scene of blues great Bessie Smith’s
death after a nearby car accident
(the room in which she died is for
rent, when available). Converted
to a hotel in 1944, it housed musicians
such as Sonny Boy Wiliamson II, Robert
Nighthawk, and Ike Turner. Now visitors
book its rooms for their ultra-Delta
ambience and to hear the colorful
tales of proprietor Frank “Rat” Ratliff.
From $40. (662-624-9163)
•Shack
Up Inn/Cotton Gin Inn The Shack Up Inn is a half
dozen former sharecropper shacks that have been updated
with indoor plumbing and air conditioning. The Cotton
Gin Inn is just that: ten rooms carved out of a former
cotton gin building. The shacks come with kitchenettes,
porches, crazy-funky décor, and bedrooms that sleep
two to four. The Cotton Gin Inn offers basic motel rooms
with queen-size beds set inside a cotton gin building,
with unique touches (hand-painted bathroom murals). Both
are on the historic Hopson Plantation grounds, ten minutes
south of town. $65 and up. (662-624-8329; www.shackupinn.com)
• Uncle Henry’s Place and Inn
This B & B was formerly one of the South’s most
famous Prohibition-era clubs, the Moon Lake Casino, and
figures large in the writings of Tennessee Williams—it’s
mentioned in several of his plays. (It was owned by his
mother’s first cousin.) There are three rooms over
the restaurant, a separate cottage, and the “Fisherman’s
Shack (“basic but clean”). From $75-85. Located
on Moon Lake, 20 minutes north of town. (662-337-2757;
www.unclehenrysplace.com).
•
Other chain options: Best Western
(662-627-9292); Budget Inn (662-624-6541);
Econolodge (662-621-1110).