Tuesday, July 19, 2011

More History of The Palladium / St Louis Club Plantation

This post continues with the history of the Palladium Building/Club Plantation, and reveals the ownership and managers behind the famous St Louis nightclub. Like the stories and musicians in the book,

Devil At The Confluence, this information has never been published before. Currently, the Palladium building may be sold and demolished like so many other lost historic landmarks, so this series of stories are being gathered and posted as quickly as possible so the important history of this legendary nightspot is available while the structure still stands. The inadequate historical record and disinterest for preservation of cultural landmarks by the alderman and governance of the city of St Louis does not reflect the pride that the citizens have of their city. But there is a new attitude of appreciation and preservation in the citizenry and it outnumbers the old. Even though the current office holders do not reflect that yet.



Al Capone may be one of America's most well-known gangsters and a symbol of lawlessness in Chicago, yet his crimes are proudly exhibited in Chicago's History Museum. There is no museum in St. Louis for the prohibition era gangsters of the city. While that may be due to, well let's just say, an overly-sensitive inhibition concerning all facets of its history, the true fact why the Mob bosses in the Lou aren't well known is a testament to how much better they were than Capone. Afterall, surely the main job of a good Mob boss is to keep everyone in the city from knowing you're the Mob boss.


The St. Louis gangster, Tony Scarpelli owned the Club Plantation. The club operated as a set-ups nightclub, meaning they sold food and provided ice, soft drinks, and glasses and the customers brought their own liquor. This way they could stay open later than the 1 o'clock curfew for taverns. A liquor law work-around.


St. Louis has a long-held distaste for liquor laws. First, because beer and wine are a part of the traditions and culture for the St Louis German, Irish and Italian immigrants, and second, because of the great brewing industry that employed many of the citizens. There's also a long tradition of organized crime in St. Louis as well, including mobsters Dinty Colbeck and Buster Wortman, whose careers were also principally, well let's just say, in the liquor and spirits trade. So St Louis had Jazz Age prohibition entertainment and nightlife as vibrant as Chicago, Los Angeles or Las Vegas, and they also had the same kind of prohibition trouble.


But the Club Plantation's Tony Scarpelli was, it appears, nothing more than a minor hood with only minor liquor law violations on his record. But dig a bit deeper and you might find that his rap sheet included armed robbery and a file with the FBI. Most of the people in the city probably didn't know about that. Sure, there was talk around but that was just rumor. Now Tony's younger brother Jimmy's rap sheet included bootlegging, robbery, gambling and a murder charge, so his involvement with the nightclub was kept on the QT. There was a lot about the Club Plantation that was on the QT. So maybe Tony was just good at, well let's just say, keeping his nose clean.

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

More history of the Palladium Building, St Louis, Missouri


The book, Devil At The Confluence, proves that St. Louis was a more important center for American music than has traditionally been thought. One of the reasons that history disregards St. Louis' influence is because the many stories about the city had not been preserved or celebrated. Likewise, the stories and the importance of the historic Club Plantation has nearly been forgotten as well, and the building is now in danger of being demolished. Since the purpose of creating the book was an effort to establish the stories before they were lost forever, it feels like a responsibility now to post the stories of the Club Plantation for the same reasons.

This story is a great example of St Louis' influence and inspiration to American cultural history. Traditional music history has long assumed that the Mississippi river was responsible for the city's reputation as a cultural center, but it's the people and the local culture - not the river, roads or train tracks that make St. Louis a great city.

In 1946, songwriter Bobby Troup left Pennslyvania on a road trip on US Highway 40 to come to the St. Louis Club Plantation where Louis Armstrong was performing to a SRO sellout crowd. Traveling with his wife, he planned his roadtrip to eventually get to Los Angeles. Enthused partly about the new post-War freedom of auto and cross-country travel and partly to get to St. Louie to see the great Satchmo, Troup was inspired enroute to write the song he is most famous for: "(Get Your Kicks On) Route 66."

Next: Stories of the gangsters who were behind the historic Club Plantation.

Monday, May 23, 2011

The Palladium Building, St Louis, Missouri


The Palladium Building on Enright Avenue just west of Grand is for sale. The building was built in 1914 as a rollerskating rink and ballroom. The Palladium was not the fanciest of the legendary St Louis dancehalls, but it was home for some of the greatest music in the city.


From the earliest days of the jazz age, the Palladium was a unique spot for entertainment. Gene Rodemich's St Louis jazz orchestra played a dance there in 1914 for the Sunshine Society's Benefit Ball. In the book, Devil At The Confluence, Rodemich's outfit is noted as the first recorded jazz group from St Louis. During World War II and just into the 1950s, the building was the famous Club Plantation, home of the very popular Jeter-Pillars recording orchestra.


The importance of this structure to St Louis music history is significant for the great local and national musicians who played there and the generations of people for whom this was the place to be on a Saturday night.


So we started discussing an effort to save this building and raise awarness of the important cultural history that St Lous has and how very few of the heirlooms remain. This video was created as an introduction to the discussion and to demonstrate what is already lost. Not regret nor complaint, but to create appreciation for St Louis historical treasures.


The Palladium Amusement Company built the building at 3618 Enright in 1914 and had a roller skating rink there until 1941. The Enright address is the skating rink’s front doors, on the north side of the building. The south side of the building, the 3600 block of Delmar, had no storefronts listed until 1940 when a warehouse for Dupont Paints was listed. The Club Plantation opened on Vandeventer and was there for about five years until it moved to the Palladium Building. The Vandeventer location soon became the site of a very popular and important music spot known as the West End Waiter’s club, just down the block from the West End Hotel. From 1947 to 1952, the Club Plantation is listed at 3617 Delmar, and 911 N. Vandeventer is the West End Waiters club.


At the Club Plantation, two extraordinary young musicians joined the Jeter-Pillars Orchestra, bassist Jimmy Blanton and guitarist Charlie Christian. Blanton was playing with the Jeter-Pillars Orchestra at the Club Plantation when Duke Ellington first heard him in 1939. After joining Ellington, Blanton, more than anyone else in jazz, made the string bass a solo instrument. In September of 1939, record producer John Hammond heard Christian playing with the Jeter-Pillars band and recommended him to Benny Goodman. The Jeter-Pillars Orchestra also saw in its ranks, Jimmy Forrest who recorded the hit single, "Night Train." By 1942, the Jeter-Pillars Orchestra became the most popular band in St. Louis and besides local radio shows on WIL and KMOX, the band was featured on the national radio program, The Fitch Bandwagon. Jeter and Pillars disbanded their orchestra in 1947.


Popular St. Louis bandleader, Eddie Johnson talked about his memories of the Club Plantation, “I had a band that was twelve pieces. I had a chance to work with all these top bands in the country, like McKinney’s Cotton Pickers, Fate Marable, Duke Ellington they would come here, to the Club Plantation, at 911 North Vandeventer. I opened the Plantation Club back in 1931, that's when I had a fellow called Tab Smith in my band.” Johnson also spoke of the Palladium building “And when the Plantation closed on Vandeventer, they moved up there and called it the Plantation.” And he recalled that he worked with the Mills Brothers there. In the interview, Johnson named a number of other St. Louis clubs from the 1930s, such as the Dance Box, the Chauffers' Club, the Finance Building. but none of those locations remain.


The Jeter-Pillars Orchestra backed many popular national talents when they came to town including Louis Jordan. The biographies of Dizzy Gillespie and Miles Davis talk of the Club Plantation and the St. Louis jazz bands of George Hudson and the visiting orchestra of Billy Eckstein’s. Davis was eighteen years old and sat in with Eckstein and local trumpet man Clark Terry was in Hudson’s band. Terry remembered the Plantation orchestras as having the best local talent and being known by the national superstars for their excellent musicianship.

We played the Club Plantation and all the acts from Nat King Cole To Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan, the Nicholas Brothers – all acts came to the Club Plantation because it was a very, very popular place. They brought their music and we would play their music better than anybody ever played it.” “They would hear the music played like they’d never heard it played before. They would go all over the country, “Man, you got to go out to St. Louis and have that George Hudson band play your music. You’ll never ever hear it played like that.” So that’s how the band got their reputation. It was a great band.


Memphis Travel and Tourism Bureau runs ads in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch that bills Memphis as the “Birthplace of Rock n' Roll.” Their preservation of Sun Records studio is commendable and Graceland draws tourists from all over the world of course, but it’s deplorable that they were permitted to run a false claim like that in Chuck Berry’s hometown paper. Not only did the father of rock n’ roll invent it in his home in St. Louis, but every good Memphis musician besides Elvis Presley, such as Ike Turner, Albert King, and Little Milton, left there to come here. A strong claim to the birth of rock and roll could be made for the Cosmopolitan Club in East St. Louis, but the Cosmopolitan is now gone. And rock-solid claims could be made about St. Louis’ contributions to America’s cultural legacy from ragtime to jazz through blues, rock n’ roll, swing, alternative and other trends of music.


Many of St. Louis’ cultural landmarks are gone. And these now-gone St. Louis landmarks were not of minor importance to American cultural history. These local sites were simply forgotten or unnoticed by the city. This is an unfortunate habit of St. Louis, and a bad habit not shared by other cities. And most assuredly, the value and benefits of such claims to historical treasures are not unnoticed by cities like Memphis or Chicago – who has capitalized on other treasures and honors neglected by St. Louis. The Bandstand is gone. The Jazzland, the Rosebud, the Arcadia, the West End Waiters club, the Elks Club and Club Riviera are gone. And now the Palladium is in danger of becoming a parking lot. The building is not in a questionable area, in fact it is comfortably in one of the most vibrant areas for entertainment in the city. It could easily be a gem of cultural history and a proud local treasure, a worthy landmark, and one of few remaining.


Another interesting fact about the block of Grand Blvd across from the Palladium and the old Club Plantation: In 1959, Chuck Berry opened a club called The Bandstand across Grand Blvd from the Palladium at 814 N. Grand Blvd between Delmar and Enright in the old Latin Quarters nightclub underneath the Chuck Wagon diner. So it can be added to the Palladium building’s history that it saw the transition from the swing music of the World War years to rhythm and blues to rock and roll and the greatest musicians of those decades.


The Palladium Building should be saved from becoming just another parking lot. It should be preserved as an heirloom for future generations to know the long and great legacy that they are a part of. A legacy that has come very, very close to being lost. It’s something very similar to an inferiority complex that St. Louis has that keeps her from bragging about her cultural importance and keeps her from defending her qualities and successes. She makes no argument when other cities make claims to her treasures and historic landmarks. Maybe it’s because she doesn’t realize how important these historical artifacts are. Maybe knowing the history and realizing the value will stop this downward spiral of low self-esteem and cultural neglect.





Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Review in the American Library Association's magazine, College & Research Libraries News.

George M. Eberhart, senior editor of American Libraries and editor of AL Direct, wrote to say that Devil At The Confluence was "an excellent contribution to St. Louis history." Then in his review of the book in the December 2010 issue of College & Research Libraries News from the American Library Association, Eberhardt says that the book, "sets the record straight with a wealth of primary research."

"Belford, a professional illustrator, started out to make a series of portraits in honor of St. Louis blues and jazz musicians prior to World War II. When he found out how little research had been done on them compared to blues musicians further south, he launched a massive project to reestablish the city’s musical heritage. Here he sets the record straight with a wealth of primary research, noting that what became ragtime music was played in the city as early as 1888, and quoting St. Louis piano bluesman Stump Johnson on blues origins: 'St. Louis had some of the best blues singers that ever there was in the history of the blues. The levee at St. Louis was known throughout the country as the origination of blues.'”

Monday, December 6, 2010

Left Bank Books picks the Devil as favorite local book.

STLTODAY's Book Blog asked local booksellers to pick their favorite books of 2010. 
Thanks LEFT BANK BOOKS for picking Devil At The Confluence!
(But Left Bank's pick was dismissed because Devil At The Confluence was published in 2009.)
And then at the end the article laments why there are no favorite books that have appeal lasting beyond one season... (sigh.)

Please support St Louis' independent bookstores! 
Left Bank Books, in the Central West End and Downtown St Louis.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Spanish Blues Music fans give the Devil a Shout out.


There have been a number of requests for copies of the book, Devil At The Confluence, from Europe and other countries outside of the USA, and it has been proven to be difficult to fulfill many of those requests. But American music devotees overseas have managed to secure copies and the reviews have been overwhelmingly favorable. The book of St Louis' music history went to Spain and got a nice mention on the website, La Taberna del Blues, saying, "...ese libro mola, con sus ilustraciones antiguas y las fotos."

Some of the known locations where Devil At The Confluence is available are: 

St Louis, Central West End:
LEFT BANK BOOKS - 399 N Euclid Ave, St. Louis, MO 63108
THE MISSOURI HISTORY MUSEUM - 5700 Lindell Blvd, St. Louis, MO 63112

St Louis, Delmar Loop:
SUBTERRANEAN BOOKS - 6275 Delmar Blvd, St Louis, MO 63130

St Louis, Webster Groves:
PUDDN'HEAD BOOKS - 37 S Old Orchard Ave, Webster Groves, MO 63119

St Louis, Crestwood:
THE ILLUSTRATED ART MUSEUM / CRESTWOOD ARTSPACE, www.stlciam.org

St Louis, Cherokee Street:
THE ARCHIVE - 3215 Cherokee St, St Louis, MO

Downtown St Louis:
BB'S JAZZ BLUES AND SOUPS - 700 S Broadway, St Louis, MO 63102
THE ST LOUIS BLUES SOCIETY, www.stlouisbluessociety.org

St Louis, Chesterfield:
CHESTERFIELD ARTS - 444 Chesterfield Center, Chesterfield, MO

New Orleans, Louisiana:
EUCLID RECORDS NOLA - 3401 Chartres St., New Orleans LA

Via the Web:
VIRGINIA PUBLISHING, www.stl-books.com
AMAZON.COM
and BORDERS BOOKS


Saturday, October 30, 2010

St Louis folklore and ghosts from the research of Devil At The Confluence for Halloween.

This week of Halloween there has been a story each day from the leftover research of the book. These are rewritten from reports made by witnesses. There are some very popular and often repeated unexplained incidents from St Louis' history, but these are the less well-known stories.

THE MCDOWELL MEDICAL COLLEGE

The old McDowell Medical College at Eighth and Gratiot was a large brick structure with two wings and an octagonal tower, three stories tall with sixteen foot ceilings. Joseph McDowell was an eccentric doctor* who built the college in 1847. Many in the city said that he was mad and there were many stories that seem to prove that he was. 

It was true that he had cannons pointing out of the windows of the college. And it's likely true that the anatomical lab and the dissection room had human bodies preserved in alcohol-filled copper tanks. The autopsy and amputation procedures of a working hospital surely explain why body parts were found in waste pits and why several wagon loads of human bones were hauled out of the building. And lastly, it seems that it was true that when his 14 year old daughter died, he had her cadaver stored in a cask in a cave in Hannibal, Missouri.** 

Those facts are certainly creepy and probably true, but up to where he pickled his daughter, it all seems perfectly logical for a doctor and a medical facility. So yes, he was unhinged and there were skeletons in his closet. But it's kind of hard to separate facts from superstitious fervor in the historical record of the McDowell Medical College because much of what was written about Dr. McDowell and the facility came out after the town had turned against him and his school. Sure, the neighbors seemed fine with cannons pointed at their houses and piles of bones and viscera filling the potholes around the block, but when accusations arose of body snatchings of the recently deceased from St. Louis cemeteries, well, then that crosses a line.



The questionable story that spurred the town into mob action in the later 1800s concerned a young waif who died of unknown causes and whose corpse was taken from the grave by McDowell and some students. It's said that a mob stormed the citadel but didn't find the doctor or the girl's body. They said that the old doctor was warned of the coming rabble by the ghost of his mother who told him where to hide himself and the frail corpse. 
See there? All of the accounts of this St Louis legend seem like gossipy rhetoric with a touch of Mary Shelley, but then so do the facts. Nonetheless, fear and outrage swept the neighborhood. 

Oddly, (if that still has any meaning here) there seems to have been little mention in the media and no official action by the city authorities, so the accuracy of the resurrectionist charges appear flimsy and could be discounted - except for a short paragraph in the school's 1868 catalog that was intended as a boast of the quality of the school's educational materials:

(Nice. Our great-great relatives' corporeal remains were "cheap and abundant.")

Furthermore, a convincing piece of evidence was found in the newspaper in 1895. It was decades later when a well-respected senior medical doctor confessed to the methods used by the McDowell medical school. He revealed that in the early 1850s stealthy disinterment and burking were indeed the Victorian ways of gathering school supplies in St Louis. 

"There were some such laws but the supply of bodies for dissection was always short. And it was filled by private enterprise" he stated bluntly. "There was a great deal of grave-robbing in St Louis."

When old Doctor McDowell died in 1868, the building lay vacant for many years and wouldn't you know it, the townspeople living nearby Castle Private Enterprise began to say the old place was haunted. Well then the newspaper ran a series of outlandish articles that told of sensational hauntings in the Goth tower. Civic responsibility was one thing, but yellow journalism was a circulation booster. The first article of five described a midnight drama of sound effects in the tower beginning with a scream, then the trampling of many feet, the sound of "a soft body" being dragged and the slamming of a heavy chest lid. An explanatory narrative was supplied that told the tale of beautiful young Dora Wescott who died a pauper and her body was obtained by the college for dissection. As students were carving through the pallid corpse, the poor maiden awoke from her trance. She did not speak, only gasped and rose to a sitting position on the table. The article series included walk-ons by the local professional spiritualists and necromancers and each night the mob got bigger at the intersection near where Purina stands today.

The McDowell Medical school and tower was demolished within two years after the tabloid stories and when a reader wrote to ask if the stories were true, the paper's reply was, "We can only say in all truthfulness that the Dora Wescott yarn is as worthy of credibility as any story of the kind that has been published this year - Editor."


* I'm not making this up - Dr. McDowell got his medical degree from Transylvania University in Kentucky.

** Mark Twain wrote about the Hannibal cave with the girl's corpse.


Devil At The Confluence is available at LEFT BANK BOOKS, SUBTERRANEAN BOOKS, BORDERS, THE ILLUSTRATED ART MUSEUM / CRESTWOOD ARTSPACE, THE ARCHIVE- CHEROKEE, CHESTERFIELD ARTS, THE MISSOURI HISTORY MUSEUM, BB'S JAZZ BLUES AND SOUPS, VIRGINIA PUBLISHING and Amazon.