TN -- Memphis -- Graceland:
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- Specific picture descriptions: Photos above with "i" icons next to the bracketed sequence numbers (e.g. "[1] ") are described as follows:
- GRACE_971108_20.JPG: Graceland; Meditation Garden; Visitors
Here are some of the visitors to Graceland. You can tell it was a slow day when I went. They say that there are 700,000 visitors a year here.
There are actually four bronze markers there, not just his. They include one for his mother (Gladys) and one for his father (Vernon). There's also a marker but not one of the bronze stones for his stillborn twin (Jessie Garon); Elvis grew up an only child. Frankly, I don't remember who the fourth one was for. His dad (Vernon) remarried in July 1960; maybe it's his wife?
There wasn't anything for Colonel Parker, the promoter who took half of everything Elvis made, prevented him from touring abroad (except for five Canadian performances in 1957 in Toronto, Ottawa, and Vancouver) because of secret questionable citizenship problems for Parker, and prevented him from performing before people like the President because the White House wasn't going to pay Parker's standard performance fee. Parker was signed as his manager on August 15 1955 and, despite many poor business decisions, was never replaced. Of course Parker had done well for the King, signing the agreement with RCA on November 20 1955 for the then unprecedented amount of $40,000.
Elvis' first gold record, "Heartbreak Hotel", would be recorded for RCA on January 10 1956 and be released on January 27. By the end of 1956, Elvis memorobilia has grossed $22 million in sales. In March 1957, Elvis bought Graceland for himself, his parents, and paternal grandmother. They moved in in April.
Gladys Presley died in August 1958, him coming back on emergency leave from the army because of her worsening condition. Elvis met 14-year-old Priscilla in Germany in November 1959 and married her in May 1967. Lisa Marie Presley was born nine months to the day of their marriage. Priscilla and Elvis separated in 1971 and Priscilla moved away with Lisa Marie in 1972. They formally divorced in 1973.
Parker and Elvis sold their rights to the existing RCA catalog in 1973. Elvis continued to tour through much of the 1970's, setting a single-performance record of 62,500 people in Pontiac Michigan in 1975.
- GRACE_971108_22.JPG: Graceland; Meditation Garden; Elvis Grave
Another view of his grave. Of course it was drizzling when I was in Memphis. Things like the two white teddy bears in the front of the shot must have been soaked.
- GRACE_971108_23.JPG: Graceland; Meditation Garden; Monument
Here's the Presley family... um, thing, at the Meditation Garden at Graceland.
The mansion itself is 15,000 square feet in size but it doesn't really look that large. The front yard, behind the fancy stone wall, is huge but the back yard is relatively small and you can see neighboring houses over the wall.
- GRACE_971108_24.JPG: Graceland; Meditation Garden; Elvis Grave
Here's a close-up of Elvis' grave at Graceland. Behind all the tacky religious stuff is an eternal flame and then the pool which was the centerpiece of the Meditation Garden. Most of the flowers seem to be real.
Originally buried in a regular cemetery after he died of self-abuse in 1977, his body was moved here in part for security reasons.
- GRACE_971108_32.JPG: Graceland; Front
Here's the front of the Graceland mansion
- GRACE_971108_34.JPG: Graceland; Graffiti & House
Here's the view of Graceland from the street. It's surprisingly close to the public. The neat thing about this is the graffiti on the wall. You can tell it's been cleaned off regularly but it's all Elvis-oriented and everything that I saw was affectionate toward him.
- AAA "Gem": AAA considers this location to be a "must see" point of interest. To see pictures of other areas that AAA considers to be Gems, click here.
- Wikipedia Description: Graceland
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Graceland is the name of the large white-columned estate that once belonged to Elvis Presley, located at 3734 Elvis Presley Boulevard in Memphis, Tennessee, USA. It currently serves as a museum that was opened to the public in 1982, and was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on November 7, 1991.
On March 27, 2006, Gale Norton, United States Secretary of the Interior, designated Graceland a National Historic Landmark—joining the White House, the Alamo, Pearl Harbor Naval Base, Dealey Plaza, and Mount Vernon. However, as there are almost 2,500 sites in the United States sharing this designation, the elevation, according to John Harris, "falls slightly short", as such legendary sites also include "the Frederick Bagg Bonanza Farm in North Dakota and Kentucky's Louisville Water Company Pumping Station."
Presley and his family at Graceland:
Presley purchased Graceland in early 1957 after moving out of a Memphis house located at 1034 Audubon Drive because of privacy and security concerns. He lived there for some time together with his father Vernon Presley and his mother Gladys. After his mother died in 1958, and Vernon married Dee Stanley in 1960, the couple lived there for a time. Wife-to-be Priscilla Beaulieu also lived at Graceland for five years before she and Elvis married. Presley had brought Priscilla, then a teen who had stayed for some time in Germany as the stepdaughter of a United States Air Force officer, back to the United States to live at Graceland, "ostensibly under the chaperoning protection of his father Vernon and his new wife Dee." After their marriage in Las Vegas on February 1, 1967, Priscilla lived in Graceland five more years until she separated from Elvis in late 1972.
According to Mark Crispin Miller, Graceland became for Elvis "the home of the organization that was himself, was tended by a large vague clan of Presleys and deputy Presleys, each squandering the vast gratuities which Elvis used to keep his whole world smiling." The author adds that Presley's father Vernon "had a swimming pool in his bedroom", that there "was a jukebox next to the swimming pool, containing Elvis's favorite records" and that the singer himself "would spend hours in his bedroom, watching his property on a closed-circuit television."
There was some discord between Elvis and his stepmother Dee at Graceland, however, and Elaine Dundy said "that Vernon had settled down with Dee where Gladys had once reigned, while Dee herself - when Elvis was away - had taken over the role of mistress of Graceland so thoroughly as to rearrange the furniture and replace the very curtains that Gladys had approved of." This was too much for the singer who still loved his deceased mother. One afternoon, "a van arrived ... and all Dee's household's goods, clothes, 'improvements,' and her own menagerie of pets, were loaded on ... while Vernon, Dee and her three children went by car to a nearby house on Hermitage until they finally settled into a house on Dolan Drive which ran alongside Elvis's estate."
According to the singer's cousin Billy Smith, Elvis got into bed with Smith and his wife Jo "many times at Graceland when we would spend the night there in Lisa's room, ... and at the trailer on the property at Graceland. ... we were all three there talking for hours about everything in the world! Sometimes he would have a bad dream and come looking for me to talk to, and he would actually fall asleep in our bed with us. That happened a lot of times, and we thought nothing of it."
On August 16, 1977, Elvis died on the toilet of his bathroom at Graceland allegedly of a heart attack. However, there are conflicting reports as to the cause of his death. According to Peter Guralnick, "drug use was heavily implicated in this unanticipated death of a middle-aged man with no known history of heart disease...no one ruled out the possibility of anaphylactic shock brought on by the codeine pills he had gotten from his dentist."
After initially being buried at Forrest Hill Cemetery, and following an attempt to rob his grave, Presley´s remains were moved to Graceland. The estate has become a pilgrimage for Elvis fans across the world.
Songs and movies about Graceland:
Paul Simon's 1986 song "Graceland" (see Graceland (song)) presents Graceland as a holy place. Movies such as "Finding Graceland" have Presley as the central character and bear spiritual messages. There are over a thousand tribute songs to Elvis written prior and after his death. Walking In Memphis features Graceland quite prominently.
The moneymaking museum:
After Elvis Presley's death in 1977, Priscilla Presley served as executor of his estate. Graceland itself cost $500,000 a year in upkeep, and expenses had dwindled Elvis and Priscilla's daughter Lisa Marie's inheritance to $5 million. Priscilla examined other famous house/museums, and hired a CEO to turn Graceland into a moneymaker. She became the chairwoman and president of Elvis Presley Enterprises. After Graceland opened to the public in 1982, the enterprise's fortunes soared and eventually the trust grew to be worth over $100 million.
An annual procession through the estate and past Elvis's grave is held on the anniversary of his death. The largest gathering assembled on the twenty-fifth anniversary in 2002. One estimate was of 40,000 people in attendance, despite the heavy rain.
The Graceland grounds include a museum containing many Elvis artifacts, like some of his famous Vegas jumpsuits, awards, gold records, the Lisa Marie jetliner, and Elvis's extensive auto collection. Recently Sirius Satellite Radio installed an all-Elvis Presley channel on the grounds. The service's subscribers all over North America can hear Presley's music from Graceland around the clock. Two new attractions have been added, Elvis Presley After Dark and Elvis 56; these can be found on the plaza.
Tourist destination:
In early August 2005, Lisa Marie Presley sold 85% of the business side of her father's estate. She kept the Graceland property itself, as well as the bulk of the possessions found therein, and she turned over the management of Graceland to CKX, Inc., an entertainment company that also owns 19 Entertainment, creator of the American Idol TV show.
In February 2006, CKX Chairman Bob Sillerman announced plans to turn Graceland into an international tourist destination on par with the Disney or Universal theme parks, sprucing up the area mansion and double the 600,000 annual visitors. Sillerman’s goal is to enhance the "total fan experience" at Graceland to compel visitors to spend more time and money. The company is working with the Bob Weis Design Island Associates, based in Orlando, Florida, to improve the tourist area around Graceland, which is located in an economically-depressed area of Memphis, while keeping intact the historic home.
Sillerman, who has been speaking with investors and developers, said he will ask local governments to help improve some of the public spaces around Graceland. He wants to expand the visitor center and exhibit space to showcase thousands of pieces of Elvis memorabilia that have never been seen. A new hotel is a possibility, or an expansion to the nearby Heartbreak Hotel.
On June 30, 2006, when US President George W. Bush hosted Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi for a tour of the mansion, it became the only residence on American soil other than an Embassy, the White House, or any of the other Presidential retreats to have hosted a joint-visit by a sitting US president and a head of a foreign government. (Koizumi, who is the longest-lasting Prime Minister in Japanese history, is an avid Elvis Presley fan and even shares Presley's January 8 birthday.)
Tours:
Tours of the museums at Graceland are available, though no flash photography or video cameras are allowed inside. The tour of the Graceland mansion is an audio tour, and the upper floor is not open to visitors. The upper floor, which contains Elvis' bedroom, has been untouched since the day Elvis died. The tour enters through the front door, and living areas and the kitchen are first on the tour. The tour continues through the basement, where Elvis's media room with its three televisions can be viewed. A bar and billiards room can also be found. The tour continues back upstairs, through the famous Jungle Room, then outside to Elvis's grave.
A separate building houses a car collection and not far away his two planes Lisa Marie (a Convair 880) and Hound Dog II (a Lockheed JetStar) are on display.
One of the most impressive displays is the trophy room off the main house, displaying Elvis's huge collection of gold and platinum records and other awards, stage costumes, photographs and more.
Graceland is the second most visited private residence in the United States, behind the White House.
Trivia:
In 1957, Presley invited Richard Williams and Buzz Cason to visit Whitehaven (later known as Graceland). They went there in Chester Power's '55 Chevy "to get a close look at this mansion Elvis had told us about. ... We proceeded to clown around on the front porch, striking our best rock 'n' roll poses and snapping pictures with the little camera. We peeked in the not-yet-curtained windows and got a kick out of the pastel colored walls in the front rooms with shades of bright reds and purples that Elvis most certainly had picked out."
"In the late 50s, Elvis was fond of claiming that the US government had mooted a visit to Graceland by Nikita Khrushchev, 'to see how in America a fellow can start out with nothing and, you know, make good'. Had the old Cold Warrior taken the trip and then lived to see the King's demise, he might have allowed himself a very Soviet laugh at that." (John Harris)
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