CLARKSDALE, Miss. - They are rickety "shotgun"
shacks with paint peeling from the cypress walls. The stale, musty
scent of worn bed linen, dusty Oriental rugs and a 19th-century
Washburn piano greet guests.
The circa-1970 televisions are programmed to get one station --
an all-blues music channel spinning tunes by such artists as Bessie
Smith and Billie Holiday.
Although there is indoor plumbing, an outhouse sits just outside
the back door.
Welcome to the Shack Up Inn. The Ritz it ain't, but this hideaway
in the heart of the Mississippi Delta may be just the place if
you're looking for some authentic blues inspiration.
The row of six authentic sharecropper homes sits on the
4,000-acre Hopson Plantation, just four miles south of the
crossroads of U.S. 49 and U.S. 61, where legend has it bluesman
Robert Johnson sold his soul to the devil.
None of the shacks comes from Hopson Plantation, but were found
in other areas of the Delta.
(They are called shotgun shacks because all three rooms are lined
up one behind the other, so if you fired a shotgun through the front
door, the shot would go out the back.)
The tin-roofed structures are popular lodging for international
tourists and musicians searching for a musical muse. For just a few
days, they can live in the style of such blues greats as W.C. Handy
and Muddy Waters, Sam Cooke and Howlin' Wolf, Robert Johnson and
Charlie Patton, to name a few..
In the farm commissary-turned-dance hall a few feet away from the
shacks, the jukebox plays an Aretha Franklin love song and owner
James Butler tries to pinpoint the appeal of his blues-themed
hideaway.
"It's different. It's a blast from the past. It's a vibe this
place gives off and people just want it," Butler says.
Keith Oliver, a salesman from Long Beach, Calif., and a group of
his friends recently celebrated his 40th birthday at the Shack Up
Inn.
"It was fantastic. They had barbecue waiting for us," Oliver
says. "The people there are so friendly...and the price is right. It
is what it is. It's not the Four Seasons, but that's not what you're
looking for."
The Shack Up Inn evolved from the mind of songwriters. Butler
says his cousin, Nashville songwriter Tommy Polk, was host of a
writers' retreat in 1998.
"They kept saying, `We want a shack.' We finally found one and
fixed it up. The whole idea was to find a place for songwriters to
be creative," says Butler, a music fan who is Clarksdale's public
works director. His wife's family has owned and farmed the Hopson
land since 1852.
Butler, Polk and Bill Talbot bought the first two shacks in 1998
and put them on the plantation next to a cotton gin and
outbuildings.
The group got two more investors and bought more shacks. Four are
available for rent. Two are undergoing minor renovations that
include installing a bathroom, kitchen, air conditioning and
heat.
Two of the shacks have full kitchens. The others have microwave
ovens, coffee makers and refrigerators. All have one full bed, and
some have fold-out couches.
The Robert Clay Shack bears the name of the man who lived in it
as late as 1998. He raised seven sons in the three-room dwelling
without the amenities of running water or electricity. There are few
real reminders of Clay's life there. Only his ironing board and a
dresser drawer remain.
Butler says the shacks, which rent for $40 to $60 a night, aren't
an attempt to cash in on the plight of the poor.
"I hate to think people would think we're doing that," Butler
says. "We feel like we're honoring this guy (Clay). We have his
picture in there."
There's a funky feel to the Fullilove Shack, named for the
plantation from where it came. Purple, yellow and cherry colored
plastic ashtrays decorate the ceiling in the bathroom and
kitchenette. License plates cover the holes in the walls. This is
where former Mississippi Gov. Kirk Fordice and his wife, Ann, spent
New Year's Eve.
"The crowning achievement of the visit is...you know how a real
classy hotel puts a mint on your pillow? At the Shack Up Inn, you
get a moon pie on your pillow," Fordice says. "The next time I'm up
that way I'd love to stay again."
While the shacks conjure visions of the days when sharecroppers
worked the steamy Delta's endless rows of white-tipped cotton,
Butler says each shack represents an investment of up to $17,000.
That includes the cost of relocating the structure to Hopson,
pressure-cleaning it and making minor renovations.
"We cut down on costs by doing our own maid service," says Guy
Malvezzi, one of Butler's partners who owns a chain of shoe
stores.
Tad Pierson of Memphis, Tenn., says the Shack Up Inn is a
favorite stop on his American Dream Safari Tour. He says many of his
tourists are Australian, Japanese and British.
"We overnight at the Shack Up Inn and hit some of the juke
joints," Pierson says. "The blues lover gets a sense like this is
the real thing."
Visitors to the Shack Up Inn can find blues-themed entertainment
all over Clarksdale, a cotton farming town with a population of
about 20,000.
About 100 feet from the shacks is the music hall. Blues and rock
'n' roll bands play there on weekends. Barbecue is served every
Thursday.
Near downtown, the Delta Blues Museum houses exhibits about the
region's poverty and the music form born out of it. Actor Morgan
Freeman's upscale restaurant, Madidi, and his blues nightclub,
Ground Zero, are also popular.
Kappi Allen, manager of Clarksdale's Chamber of Commerce, says
the shacks have given the town worldwide publicity.
"They are one of Clarksdale's biggest hits," Allen says. "People
have come and written stories and taken pictures back to their
states. Hopson is a huge part of the tourism package for
Clarksdale."
GOING TO THE SHACK UP INN
The mailing address of the Shack Up Inn is 001 Commissary Circle,
Clarksdale, Miss. 38614. For reservations call (662) 624-8329 or, if
busy, (615) 385-4345. The Web site is http://www.shackupinn.com/.
The Coahoma County Tourism Commission can be found on the Web at
http://www.clarksdale-ms.com/
or at (800) 626-3764.
-- The Associated
Press