Thursday, June 26, 2008

Olden Times

I was reading the obits this morning, which is something I sometimes do. Not to see if anyone I know has died so much as to just acknowledge people's lives and passing and this morning I noticed that a woman had died whom I did not know, but I had known her father and reading her obituary brought back memories of him.
His name was McKinley Smith, Sr., although we all knew him as Smitty.
Smitty was a older black gentlemen who had a jook joint out in what used to be the boonies but which is now a high-dollar area of North Leon County, out on Bannerman Road. This was in the early 1970's and I'm not sure how Smitty and the local hippies formed an alliance but they did. One of the things about "those days" that I still don't quite understand is how all of a sudden (it seemed to me, anyway) black folks and white folks were interacting in ways that had previously been unheard of and by God, I'm claiming some of that action to be due to the hippies and our hippie ways. If there was anything hippies stood for besides good music and the right to go barefoot and smoke dope, it was that all the old societal rules should be kicked to the curb until further notice. And this included any bullshit about separation of the races. This probably had a lot to do with the fact that we were the first generation of kids who'd gone to integrated schools. Maybe it had something to do with all those rock bands playing old blues tunes and bringing the blues masters to the public eye. B.B. King, in his amazing autobiography which should be required reading in American high schools, gave credit to the hippies for making his career explode. Which goes back to kicking all the rules to the curb. Music was being made that had its roots everywhere and anywhere and there was an audience for it. Country, blues, folk, opera, soul- all these genres and more were mined and refined into newly minted music and along with all of that, I think people started paying attention and realizing that there was a lot of respect due where none had been given before and that differences were more interesting than something to fear.
Or something like that. I might be talking through my hat.
Anyway, Smitty had that jook joint out on Bannerman and he gladly let the local musicians make his club their home. There was even a band formed called Smitty's Band and I truly wish I could remember who all made it up.
The club itself was mostly one big room built on to a smaller section where Smitty himself lived and there was a kitchen in the back. There was a bar and there was a stage and there were tables. There was also a big wooden dance floor where hippies and hippie kids and black folks would dance but my favorite dancer was Smitty himself who would get his thin old bones in his neat buttoned-up shirt and his khaki pants out on the floor and do a sort of closed-eye shuffle that somehow hypnotized me. He loved the music. I don't know if he loved the hippies, but he tolerated us and we knew that if people were smoking dope in the parking lot, no one was going to call the cops.
The people who were developing Killearn at one point offered Smitty a million dollars to sell them his land. Now back in the seventies, a million dollars was an awful lot of money but he refused their offer.
"Where would I feed my pigs?" I distinctly remember him saying.
Nah. Smitty had everything he wanted. He had acres of beautiful land where his pigs could graze (and where several hippie weddings were performed) and he had his small, comfortable living quarters and he had his own club where bands would play music so he could dance. He always seemed to have a "niece" from up north living with him, too, and he seemed like a reasonably happy man to me.
My ex-husband and I used to drive out to see Smitty on Sunday's sometime. We'd buy a beer and sit and talk to him. Sometimes he'd get a watermelon out of the cooler and cut it up and we'd all sit around and eat that sweet cold fruit. I remember once we went out when our oldest was a little over a year old and he told us not to wait too long to have another. I forget what his reasoning was, but we must have listened to him because our next baby came along before the oldest was two.
I don't know if Smitty was wise or if he was just someone we thought was wise because he was old and black and had turned down an offer for a million dollars in order to maintain a relatively simple lifestyle that suited him but we respected him and he didn't treat hippies like they were second-class citizens, but just real people, like him, and it felt like we had a lot in common, despite all the glaring differences between us.
I remember when Smitty died. I went to his funeral, as many other hippies did. It was my first country funeral in a black church and there were indeed electric guitars and a lot of ladies in hats fanning themselves. I cried and a young man in a suit standing next to me handed me a starched white handkerchief and I'll never forget that.
They buried Smitty in the front yard of his club and the last time I was out that way, I stopped. The place had turned into some sort of restaurant and there was a little fence around Smitty's grave but no marker that I could see and that made me sad.
Thinking about a lot of things from those old days make me sad. We had such hope that things would change. Things like transcending differences between people based on race and age and upbringing and culture. Things like Smitty's club.
Maybe we're about to get our first black president and the ways of this world will take another halting jolt forward. God, I hope so. I wish Smitty were still around to see this possibility. I think he'd be proud.
I think he would have been proud of his daughter, too. She was too young to die- only 57- but I see by her obit that she'd done more than well by herself. She got a Master's Degree from FSU and was the budget director for the Department of Education Division of Vocational Rehabilitation.
My ex husband and I actually lived on Bannerman road for one long, hot summer before we ever had any children and Smitty's sister had a little jook of her own, two doors down from the house we rented and we used to go in there for fried chicken sandwiches. She was a sweet woman and I used to visit her now and then but I haven't for a long, long time. Still, the last time I went, it had been twenty years since I'd lived there and she knew who I was. She recognized me and hugged me hard. Other people in the club recognized me too. "You that white girl, used to be married to Jerry," they said.
Yep. That's me.
I'm that white girl, used to be married to Jerry. Used to dance at Smitty's Club. Used to think things were changing.
Maybe I still do. Not the way I used to when it seemed like all kinds of changes were happening overnight. Wars ending, presidents getting kicked out of office. Stuff like that.
Stuff that ought to be happening now, but isn't.
Anyway, I just wanted to say all of that. Pay a little tribute to people who have gone on, and to hippie ways and hippie hope and places like Smitty's club where people came together to make music and dance and laugh, despite differences.
Yeah. I just wanted to say that.
I wish I had a picture of Smitty or even his club to put here, but I don't. So this post is going pictureless. Just close your eyes and imagine a hot, small, smoky club, lit only by Christmas lights and neon beer signs, a thin old black man holding a beer, dancing with his eyes closed, little kids and their parents dancing around him, all sorts of folks sitting together at tables, drinking a little beer, getting a little buzz, happy to be alive in such good, colorful, musical, hopeful times while outside the crickets are buzzing and the moon is rising over fields where pigs are grazing, everyone happy.
Try to imagine that.
If you want to. If you can.

19 comments:

  1. I do. and. I can...almost. I can almost see it and hear it through your words. Even the little unmarked grave. The passing of a life deserves notice. Deserves tribute. But rarely receives such.
    I'm sure Smitty would be honored by your memory of him.
    Peace to you today.

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  2. p.s. the obit reading? I do that too. And I like to walk in cemetaries...which creeps people out. But I love reading the stories, the lives I find there.
    :)

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  3. Yep. I love cemeteries too. There's a tiny and very old one where I walk and I frequently step off the path to meander a bit, reading headstones, wondering what those lives were like.

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  4. Well said White Girl, well said.

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  5. Every so often something in an obit or death notice jumps out at me - like yesterday, I saw one for a 22 year old, which included a picture, that didn't mention the cause of death. A reasonably good looking young man - why him? Why not someone older?
    I never read lists of names of people who died in plane crashes either (these used to be published by newspapers, whenever there was a crash of a plane that took off from or crashed near the city that published the paper). The one time I did read such a list (1970's) sure enough, there was someone I had known who died in the crash...also at a ridiculously young age.

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  6. Thank-you, Juanch. That means a lot to me.
    MOB- obits AND cemeteries offer some details but leave a lot to wonder about.

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  7. Haven't gotten to read your posts yet and will probably do so having downloaded the page, but then retired to my apartment (ie off the sidewalk) to read them where I cannot comment for lack of wifi.

    So just wanted to say hi while I had the chance!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    :D

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  8. Ahh what a great story. Where did all those hippies go? Did we do a good job with our hippy children, do they understand? I like to thing that they are now the folks working on global warming and green sustainable living.

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  9. Oh, Sally. We're all still here. The lucky ones that didn't check out early, anyway. We got busy raising our hippie babies and paying mortgages on our hippie homes. Something like that.
    And our hippie babies are grown up, some of them hippies themselves, others not, all of them being interesting, living their lives.
    I hope they can figure some of this stuff out that we never did.
    I truly do.

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  10. Sister Moon! That may be one of the best posts ever. I never played there (how can that be possible?) but I wandered in there on a sunday in the late eigthies.....It's just like you described it.
    Nice work. I could smell the grass...both kinds.

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  11. Plenty of grass for pigs and people. A few mushrooms too.
    Ah...good times.
    Anyway, Bro WB, I think you're not old enough to have played at Smitty's. It was mostly a seventies time and you were probably still in short pants then.

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  12. OMG, I don't remember a Jenny (I thought you were Bill Ritchersons wife until late in your blog), but we sure do know each other. I'm Terry, posting on Robin's account, he's here too, and we were just 10 minutes ago in his basement listening to a reel-to-reel tape I made of Smitty's Band in Smitty's Club. Yes, I was the guy who started bringing live music in the club (after doing Wed. nite "record hops" for a few months) and Robin was the bass player for Smitty's Band, which included Jon, Floyd, Ed and sometimes Teri. And sometimes Smitty singing GoodNightIrene! It's funny, I've been trying to convince Robin to start a blog, and just wanted to show him one, ANY one using google, to see how they work, and since we've been reminising about the club, just put that in the search and WOW! BTW, I gave the eulogy at his funeral, and I really knew I didn't have the rhythm when I said something about Smitty and I heard "Tell it" "Halelujia"... Anyway, back to your point of how the blacks and us hippies and college students mixed, it was that all of a sudden, on one random night, 100 cars were parked on Bannerman and the local blacks HAD to check out what was goin' on the club that had always been THEIR low key juke joint, and all of a sudden they were dancing with the college girls/guys and hippies. It was quite a moment, and indeed, as Obama was "called" (winning the election) on TV I thought how much Smitty would have been super happy. In his bedroom, he had representations of M.L.King, George Washington Carver, Frederick Douglass... Robin and I were discussing earlier tonight about making a youtube piece of recordings, words from those of us still around (Jon and Floyd, the two guitar players, passed long ago)pics of all the silkscreened posters I made, and of course, pics of Smitty.

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  13. Terry? Cori? Wait. I am so confused.

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  14. What a great blog.

    I was there! Once or twice. Once, at night, to hear some music, and one afternoon with my friend Mac Jones, who I think was Smitty's uncle, to just visit.

    That old man was real pleasant and low-key, and we had a nice conversation. I was a young white boy with long hair, and Mac had an afro, if memory serves, but Smitty treated us with friendly respect that was a bit rare in those days. All I remember at this late date is that for a while we talked about cars.

    I knew Floyd Pasco casually, who played in Smitty's Band. I attended Floyd's funeeral. Such a long time ago...

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  15. Anonymous- Well then, we have probably met. I was at Floyd's funeral too. Thanks for stopping by. Come by any time, us being old aquaintances and such.

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  16. Het, Ms. Moon. I'm only anonymous because I don't have a google account. Mike Walston's the name, and in 1976 I lived at the Heartbreak Hotel on Colloeg Ave and hung out at Tommy's bar a lot (didn't get up to Smitty's too much because I didn't have a car).

    I remember there were some great bands in Tallahassee at the time.
    Tallahasse Band, Wakulla, LaBamba Brothers, McKenzie Brothers, and Michaelangelo were particular favorites of mine.

    Them was the good old days...

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  17. Hey Mike- I'm sure we must have met at some point. How funny that you've found me. Tommy's- oh yeah. Wonder what ever happened to him? I loved Michaelangelo and one of the women who played in Wakulla Band is my dog groomer now.
    Small world. Be well.

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