CHURCH PARK (1899-- )
In 1899, the city of Memphis did not provide recreational facilities
such as parks and playgrounds for its black citizens, nor were there any
suitable places where black theatrical troupes could perform. It was to
meet these needs that Robert R. Church bought a tract of land and built
on it an auditorium with funds he had accumulated since the Civil War.
The park was called "Church's Park and Auditorium" and was located
on a site of over six acres on Beale Street near Fourth and Turley. The
grounds were handsomely and generously landscaped, and the auditorium,
equipped with the best and most modern accommodations of the time, could
seat 2,200 people.
Church's Park and Auditorium was built by Church, owned by Church, and
managed by Church. It was heralded as the only business venture of its
kind in America and represented an unusual business feat for anyone at
any time in history. An article in the September 15, 1906 Planter Journal
noted that the auditorium cost $50,000 and that it was well equipped and
had one of the largest stages in the South, completely furnished with all
modern equipment, including a fire-proof curtain. The Planter's Journal
also pointed out that the park and auditorium were without a doubt
the most beautiful of its kind in the entire country.
Beneath the stage in the auditorium was a large banquet hall and bar,
and a soda fountain was located near the entrance to provide refreshments
for visitors. The fire-proof drop curtain on the stage of the auditorium
was a copy of an oil painting of the burning steamer, Bulletin No. 2,
which hung in the parlor of the Church residence. In addition to the auditorium,
there was a large bandstand where evening band concerts were performed
for the public during the summer months. Bands of fraternal organizations
and other groups played for picnics and various events held in the park.
Also contained in the park was a playground with recreational facilities,
including slides and swings, for the entertainment and pleasure of children.
Among the popular theatrical troupes that toured the country prior to
1920 and performed at the Church Park Auditorium were the Black Patti Troubadours,
with John Rucker (known as "The Alabama Blossom"), Madame Sissieretta
Jones (the famous "Black Patti"), the Smart Set with S. H. Dudley
(advertised as "The Greatest Colored Show On Earth"), and the
Fisk Jubilee Singers.
President Theodore Roosevelt was a guest at a reception given by the
black citizens of Memphis and addressed an estimated audience of over 10,000
citizens there on November 19, 1902. Booker T. Washington and party, who
were touring Tennessee, also were guests there for breakfast in the banquet
hall of the auditorium on November 24, 1909. James Shilliday, Herbert J.
Seligmann, James Weldon Johnson, and Walter White, all officials of the
national office of the NAACP, visited the location.
The Lincoln Republican League, founded and organized by Robert R. Church,
Jr., held its meetings in the auditorium, as did the first Memphis Branch
of the NAACP. The Church of God In Christ, founded by Bishop C. H. Mason,
held its convocations in the Church Park Auditorium before Mason Temple
was built. William C. Handy, the world famous "blues" composer
and musician, was employed to play for dances in Church's Park and Auditorium.
The Cotton Makers' Jubilee, the black arm of the spring Cotton Carnival
festival, was held on the site. World-acclaimed musicians Duke Ellington,
Louis Armstrong, and Cab Calloway all played jazz there. Numerous school
activities, including LeMoyneOwen College athletic games, dances, and other
events were held there.
Much of Memphis' early black history took place on Beale Street in Church's
Park and Auditorium. During the 1940s, a hostile City of Memphis administration
changed the name of the park and auditorium to "Beale Avenue Auditorium."
Some years later, structures on the site were demolished under the government's
urban renewal program. The site was empty and barren until 1987, when the
park was refurbished and landscaped into a tree-shaded grassy area.
In 1993, the park was listed in the National Register of Historic Places
and was made a part of the Beale Street Historic District. In 1994, Roberta
Church, the granddaughter of the founder, gave the park and city a large
22,000-pound white granite and bronze memorial monument, erected in memory
of and dedicated to her father, Robert Church, Jr. The monument features
a bronze bust of Robert R. Church, Sr., and is inscribed with historical
information.
Ronald Walter