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“Bite-Size Bits of Local, National, and Global History”
Winstonville in Bolivar County, Mississippi — The American South (East South Central)
 

Harlem Inn

 
 
Harlem Inn Marker Side 1 image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Tim Fillmon, November 19, 2020
1. Harlem Inn Marker Side 1
Inscription. The Harlem Inn, known as “The Showplace of the South,” was once the Delta’s most important venue for touring national blues performers. B. B. King, Little Milton, Bobby “Blue” Bland, Howlin’ Wolf, Tyrone Davis, and T-Bone Walker were among the many stars who appeared, and Ike Turner and his Kings of Rhythm from Clarksdale gave some of their earliest performances here. The Harlem Inn stood at this site until it burned down in 1989, just prior to its 50th anniversary.

The Harlem Inn was built in 1939 by a local African American farmer, Hezekiah Patton, Sr., who launched his nightclub operation with twenty-five dollars provided by an uncle, according to Patton family lore. The uncle, James Patton (1898-1955), was already a successful club owner in Shelby. Hezekiah (1910-1968) first opened a smaller club across the railroad tracks in Winstonville (also formerly known as Chambers and Wyandotte) just west of here, and bought property to build a larger venue at this site after a new Highway 61 route was designated to run parallel to Old Highway 61 in the late 1930s. Business boomed at the Harlem Inn in the 1940s and ‘50s, and according to Hezekiah’s son, Robert Patton, patrons from towns throughout the Delta would take the train to Winstonville for the big Saturday night shows, stay overnight, and return home by rail the next day.
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The Harlem Inn was one of the state’s premier nightclubs, part of an elite circuit that included the Blue Room in Vicksburg, Stevens Rose Room in Jackson, Club Ebony in Indianola, the Harlem Nightingale in McComb, New Club Desire in Canton, and several black Elks (I.B.P.O.E.W.) and V.F.W. halls. Named in honor of the famed African American district of New York City, Patton’s club apparently had no connection to the many similarly named Harlem inns, clubs, and theaters in other Mississippi towns.

Patton, who continued to farm as well as operate the club, booked many of the biggest names in blues and rhythm & blues at the Harlem Inn, including Ray Charles, Little Willie John, Percy Mayfield, B. B. King, Bobby “Blue” Bland, Ivory Joe Hunter, T-Bone Walker, Howlin’ Wolf, and Big Joe Turner. Ike Turner and Little Milton began playing the Harlem Inn when both were local acts in the early ‘50s; in the 1960s Turner returned to the club leading the Ike & Tina Turner Revue.

After Patton’s death, a family friend, Lamar Crowder, rented the club for a few years, and in the early 1970s Patton’s sons, Robert, Charles, and Hezekiah, Jr., took over, assisted by their mother, Ruby. They maintained the tradition of top-flight entertainment, often drawing packed houses to see Bland, Little Milton, and Tyrone Davis. Jackie Wilson held an audience spellbound here on one of the many nights

Harlem Inn Marker Side 2 image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Tim Fillmon, November 19, 2020
2. Harlem Inn Marker Side 2
when the club’s audience of five to six hundred outnumbered the population of Winstonville. The Impressions, Bobby Rush, Joe Poonanny, and others also appeared, as did Delta locals including Little Wynn, the White Family, and T. J. and the Hurricanes. After a fire destroyed the club in May of 1989, Robert Patton recalled that Little Milton, who played at the club over a period of thirty-five years, said, “Your daddy put a blues monument here in Winstonville, and Winstonville will never be the same.”
 
Erected 2009 by Mississippi Blues Commission. (Marker Number 96.)
 
Topics. This historical marker is listed in these topic lists: African AmericansArts, Letters, MusicEntertainment. A significant historical year for this entry is 1939.
 
Location. 33° 54.743′ N, 90° 45.04′ W. Marker is in Winstonville, Mississippi, in Bolivar County. Marker is at the intersection of Martin Luther King Memorial Drive (State Highway 161) and Mixson Street, on the right when traveling north on Martin Luther King Memorial Drive. Marker is on old US 61. Touch for map. Marker is in this post office area: Winstonville MS 38781, United States of America. Touch for directions.
 
Other nearby markers. At least 8 other markers are within 3 miles of this marker, measured as the crow flies. AKA Mobile Health Project (approx. 2.3 miles away); Delta Health Center (approx. 2.4 miles away); a different
Harlem Inn Marker looking north image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Tim Fillmon, November 19, 2020
3. Harlem Inn Marker looking north
marker also named AKA Mobile Health Project (approx. 2.4 miles away); T.R.M. Howard (approx. 2.6 miles away); Friendship Clinic (approx. 2.6 miles away); Site of Mound Bayou Oil Mill & Manufacturing Company (approx. 2.6 miles away); Mound Bayou (approx. 2.6 miles away); Taborian Hospital (approx. 2.6 miles away).
 
Also see . . .  Harlem Inn. (Submitted on April 8, 2021, by Tim Fillmon of Webster, Florida.)
 
Harlem Inn Marker detail side 2 image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Tim Fillmon, November 19, 2020
4. Harlem Inn Marker detail side 2
Harlem Inn Marker detail side 2 image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Tim Fillmon, November 19, 2020
5. Harlem Inn Marker detail side 2
 
 
Credits. This page was last revised on June 2, 2021. It was originally submitted on April 8, 2021, by Tim Fillmon of Webster, Florida. This page has been viewed 188 times since then and 41 times this year. Photos:   1, 2, 3, 4, 5. submitted on April 8, 2021, by Tim Fillmon of Webster, Florida.

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Apr. 29, 2024