Hometown History

Memphis: The City That Blues Built


Listen Later

Memphis has always marched to its own beat. From enslaved people forging freedom passes to escape north, to the birthplace of the blues on Beale Street, to becoming ground zero for the civil rights movement—this Tennessee river city built its identity on independence, creativity, and an unwillingness to ask permission. Historian Wayne Dowdy takes us through centuries of Memphis history, from its 1819 founding to the tragedy that changed everything.

Memphis wasn't supposed to survive. The 1878 yellow fever epidemic killed 5,000 residents. The 1866 Memphis Massacre saw white mobs murder 45 Black citizens in three days. But the city's unequal cooperation between Black and white populations—where Black men voted and held office decades before most Southern cities—created a unique tension that eventually exploded in 1968. When sanitation workers struck for basic safety after two men were crushed to death, Mayor Henry Loeb refused to negotiate. Martin Luther King Jr. came to help. Six days later, he was assassinated on a motel balcony.

The murder devastated Memphis's reputation and economy for decades. But true to form, Memphis refused to stay down. Today, the city that gave us W.C. Handy, Piggly Wiggly, and a thousand other innovations channels that same creative independence. As Wayne puts it: "In Memphis, you don't ask permission—you just do it."

Subscribe to Hometown History for forgotten American stories every week. New episodes release Tuesdays.

Show Notes: In This Episode:

  • How enslaved Memphian Thomas Blant forged a freedom pass and escaped to Canada
  • Why Black men in Memphis could vote when most Southern cities stripped that right
  • The 1905 case of Mary Morrison—Memphis's Rosa Parks, 50 years earlier
  • What really happened during the 1968 sanitation strike that brought MLK to Memphis
  • How Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination changed Memphis's trajectory for decades
  • Why Memphis became "the Sun Belt's dark spot" after 1968
  • How the city rebuilt its identity through creativity and adaptive reuse
  • The story of Piggly Wiggly—America's first self-service grocery store, invented in Memphis
  • What makes Memphis culture different: "You don't ask permission, you just do it"


Key Figures:

  • Wayne Dowdy - Senior Manager, Memphis Public Library History Department & Author
  • Thomas Blant - Enslaved man who forged freedom pass and escaped to Canada
  • Mary Morrison - Challenged streetcar segregation in 1905, 50 years before Rosa Parks
  • W.C. Handy - "Father of the Blues," lived and worked on Beale Street
  • Echol Cole & Robert Walker - Sanitation workers killed in 1968, sparking strike
  • Martin Luther King Jr. - Assassinated in Memphis on April 4, 1968
  • Henry Loeb - Memphis mayor who refused to negotiate with striking workers
  • Clarence Saunders - Founder of Piggly Wiggly, first self-service grocery store


Timeline:

  • 1819: Memphis founded on Mississippi River as small river town
  • 1866: Memphis Massacre—45 Black residents murdered over three days
  • 1878: Yellow fever epidemic kills 5,000, nearly destroys the city
  • 1905: Mary Morrison challenges streetcar segregation, fights to Tennessee Supreme Court
  • 1920s: W.C. Handy writes Beale Street Blues and other foundational blues music
  • February 1968: Echol Cole and Robert Walker killed by faulty trash compactor
  • April 3, 1968: Martin Luther King Jr. delivers "I've Been to the Mountaintop" speech
  • April 4, 1968: King assassinated at Lorraine Motel
  • 1970s-1990s: Memphis struggles with reputation damage, economic decline
  • 2000s-Present: Memphis renaissance through adaptive reuse and creative culture


Tags: Memphis Tennessee history, W.C. Handy, Beale Street, Martin Luther King assassination, 1968 sanitation strike, Memphis civil rights, Memphis music history, Southern history, American history, local history, true story, Blues music history, Memphis massacre 1866, yellow fever epidemic 1878, Rosa Parks Memphis, Lorraine Motel, Henry Loeb, Piggly Wiggly history, Memphis culture, Tennessee history, civil rights movement, forgotten history

Category: History

Chapter Markers: 0:00 - Introduction: If Beale Street Could Talk 2:00 - The Blues and W.C. Handy's Memphis 4:30 - Founded on Independence: Early Memphis (1819) 7:00 - Slavery and Resistance: Thomas Blant's Escape 9:30 - The Memphis Massacre of 1866 11:00 - Unequal Cooperation: Black Voting Rights in Tennessee 13:30 - Mary Morrison: Memphis's Rosa Parks (1905) 16:00 - The 1968 Sanitation Strike Begins 18:30 - Martin Luther King Jr. Comes to Memphis 20:00 - April 4, 1968: The Assassination 22:00 - "Decaying River Town": Memphis After King's Death 25:00 - The Sun Belt's Dark Spot: Economic Decline 27:00 - Memphis Renaissance: Creativity and Independence 29:00 - Piggly Wiggly and the Memphis Spirit 31:00 - Conclusion: Next Episode Preview (Sun Studio)



Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands

Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Hometown HistoryBy Shane Waters

  • 4.5
  • 4.5
  • 4.5
  • 4.5
  • 4.5

4.5

138 ratings


More shows like Hometown History

View all
Generation Why: True Crime by Audible

Generation Why: True Crime

17,323 Listeners

Most Notorious! A True Crime History Podcast by Blue Ewe Media

Most Notorious! A True Crime History Podcast

2,793 Listeners

48 Hours by CBS News

48 Hours

11,010 Listeners

Foul Play: A Historical True Crime Podcast by Shane L. Waters, Wendy Cee, Gemma Hoskins

Foul Play: A Historical True Crime Podcast

958 Listeners

The Secret Room | True Stories by Ben Hamm

The Secret Room | True Stories

2,827 Listeners

Obscura: A True Crime Podcast by Justin Drown

Obscura: A True Crime Podcast

2,865 Listeners

Southern Mysteries Podcast by Shannon Ballard

Southern Mysteries Podcast

1,014 Listeners

What Was That Like - True Stories. Real People. by Scott Johnson & Glassbox Media.

What Was That Like - True Stories. Real People.

1,918 Listeners

American Scandal by Audible

American Scandal

19,127 Listeners

Dateline NBC by NBC News

Dateline NBC

47,592 Listeners

The Asian Madness Podcast by Jessica

The Asian Madness Podcast

375 Listeners

Park Predators by Audiochuck

Park Predators

17,931 Listeners

Chameleon by Audiochuck | Campside Media

Chameleon

8,020 Listeners

Crimes of the Centuries by Amber Hunt and Audioboom

Crimes of the Centuries

3,979 Listeners

The Opportunist by PodcastOne

The Opportunist

10,360 Listeners

Disaster by Justin Drown

Disaster

75 Listeners

Rotten to the Core by Joshua Waters

Rotten to the Core

61 Listeners

The Haunted Bunker: Paranormal Mysteries & the Unexplained by Shane L. Waters, Joshua Waters, Kim Morrow

The Haunted Bunker: Paranormal Mysteries & the Unexplained

136 Listeners

American Criminal by Airship

American Criminal

370 Listeners

The Unforgotten by Free Range Productions

The Unforgotten

898 Listeners

Decoding the Zodiac Killer by Shane Waters

Decoding the Zodiac Killer

8 Listeners

The Redhead Murders by Shane Waters

The Redhead Murders

3 Listeners

Who Killed Sister Cathy? by Shane Waters, Gemma Hoskins

Who Killed Sister Cathy?

11 Listeners

Conspiracy Theories, Cults, & Crimes by Crime House

Conspiracy Theories, Cults, & Crimes

347 Listeners