Saturday, November 01, 2025


 Chukker Meet-UP 2025


John Earl's essay on the 2025 Chukker MeetUp Top: The Chukker in the 1970s. Bottom: The Chukker under Ludo Goubet’s ownership,
painted with “Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité.”

Chukker Meetup 2025
John Earl and ChatGPT

Preface
In the Republic of Memory, every dive bar is a nation, and every regular a founding
father.
Twenty-two years after the death of the Chukker—a Tuscaloosa watering hole that hosted
the lost, the loud, and the lovely—a few hundred of its exiles gathered again, outdoors,
under a harmless Southern sky. They came to drink to the ghost of a place that had once
been their home, their church, their asylum from America’s better manners.
What follows is not a history, nor a eulogy. It is a report from the frontier of
nostalgia—where the past is too alive to bury, and too unruly to forgive.
I. The Ghost Bar in Broad Daylight
The air had that lazy Alabama thickness to it—too soft, too bright, like a preacher’s smile
concealing a con.
Facebook said the Chukker Meetup 2025 would be outdoors. That made the decision
easier. I’ve avoided crowds since Covid came down like a biblical curse. But the word
Chukker has a magnetic pull; it conjures the smell of beer, the echo of laughter pitched
just shy of violence, the sound of someone confessing their sins in public and meaning it.
And so I went. Not to drink—I’ve never been much for the bottle—but to see the last
survivors of that strange tribe who once ruled the night at 2121 Sixth Street.
The Chukker was gone, buried beneath what the city fathers call Government Plaza,
which sounds like something built to keep memory out. But the crowd that gathered that
day—gray hair, denim jackets, voices made of gravel—proved that the Chukker, in spirit,
still had squatters’ rights in the heart of Tuscaloosa.

II. The Descent of the Proper Bar
In the beginning, the Chukker had manners. White tablecloths, clean restrooms, jazz you
could take your mother to. It was a proper place for men who worked, ate steaks, and
didn’t yet know the world was about to fall apart.
By the late ’60s, the Chukker had gone to hell—plumbing shot, food service dead, the
clientele shifting from businessmen to bikers, drunks, artists, gays, and the city’s other
holy undesirables. A microcosm of the republic itself: every class, color, and creed,
colliding under one roof, sustained by beer and a fragile code of tolerance.
It was not utopia, but it was honest. And honesty, by the Seventies, had become the last
refuge of the damned.
III. The Brothers, the Camera, and the Knife
I came to the Chukker with a camera. That was my religion—capturing the cracked faces
of America’s underbelly before the daylight washed them out. The bar was owned then
by Bob Callahan and Lewis Fitts, men who understood that rebellion was not a posture
but a necessity.
One afternoon I photographed Callahan and the Brothers Motorcycle Club. They stood in
front of the bar like a mural come to life—leather vests, cigarettes, a faint suggestion of
anarchy. Rick, one of them, kept a hand buried in his vest. “Why?” I asked. “Because
that’s where I keep my knife,” he said, with the calm certainty of a man who’s thought
through every contingency.
Later, I brought several of the Brothers—and one of their hogs—into my father’s
photography studio. I shot portraits of Rick, Teddy, Goat, Indian, Rocky, and Big D, each
in their club colors. Two of them began French kissing mid-shoot, spilling beer, while oil
from the Harley soaked into the carpet. I spent hours cleaning the mess. But I’ve never
taken more honest photographs. They were beautiful, dangerous, and free—America’s
fallen angels posing for posterity.
IV. The Nation That Drank Together
The Chukker wasn’t just a bar; it was an ecosystem, a petri dish of madness and art.
People talked about Chukker Nation—not as a joke, but as a kind of sovereignty. The

Alta Apartments next door were its housing projects. Patrons could slide down a fire
escape and enter the back door like refugees of a better world.
By the time Ludo—Ludovic Goubet—arrived in 1991, the Chukker had entered its
mythic phase. A Frenchman running a dive bar in Alabama was absurd enough to work.
He painted Liberté, égalité, fraternité on the outside wall in florid script and flanked it
with satyrs. Across the street stood Municipal Traffic Court—bureaucracy facing
Bacchus, God and Goat locked in eternal duel.
Inside, Ludo brought jazz, blues, and madness. Sun Ra, McCoy Tyner, Larry
Coryell—the names came like incantations. I photographed them all, black-and-white
film under the faint hum of neon. Ludo was a true believer. He thought art could save us.
Maybe it did, for a little while.
V. McCoy Tyner and the Last Ride of Sun Ra
December 1992: McCoy Tyner dropped by the Chukker after a university gig. He needed
a ride to his hotel, and somehow I became the designated driver. It was a quiet night, the
kind of December evening when the air carries more memory than oxygen.
As we drove, he talked about wanting to get back to New York for Christmas shopping.
That was the moment that killed me—the great McCoy Tyner, once Coltrane’s pianist,
worried about gifts like any other mortal. The myth peeled away, and I saw the man
beneath it—and he was magnificent in his simplicity.
That same year, Sun Ra returned to Earth, at least for one night, playing under the
Chukker’s cracked ceiling. I had seen him last in 1977 at the Five Spot in New York.
Now he was back in Alabama, leading his Arkestra through chaos and cosmos. If God
ever came to Tuscaloosa, it was that night—and He was wearing a sequined cape.
VI. Death of a Bar, Birth of a Legend
The Chukker closed on Halloween, 2003. A fitting date for a resurrection that never
came. The building smelled of its own obituary—beer, smoke, old leather, and the sweat
of the living. The city would eventually tear it down, pour concrete, and plant grass. The
bureaucrats call it progress.

But every so often, the ghosts gather. Like now. The Chukker Meetup 2025. The gray-
haired faithful, the poets, the wreckage of the sixties still humming in their veins. They
speak of the old nights as if describing a religion that the young will never understand.
They’re right. The Chukker was a cathedral of the outlaw spirit. And in a nation that
worships conformity, that makes it sacred.
VII. Epilogue: The Church of the Lost Cause
Now a green lawn sits where the Chukker once stood, manicured and bland. Government
Plaza, they call it. You could lay a saint’s bones under that grass and the city would still
issue parking tickets across the street.
But here’s the truth: the Chukker never died. It just moved inward—into the bloodstream
of everyone who ever drank there, played there, loved there, or tried to photograph the
soul of it before it disappeared.
America keeps trying to bury its rebels. It forgets that they make the best fertilizer.
And somewhere beneath that grass, the Chukker still breathes—laughing, cursing,
bleeding, and alive.







Friday, October 31, 2025

 Halloween 2025














Thursday, October 30, 2025



1983
1999





from the October 18, 1974 Birmingham News

WRITTEN IN 1854

Penciled Message adds to lore of Gaineswood

By Lib Bird, News Correspondent

 DEMOPOLIS Contractors working on the restoration of Gaineswood have uncovered a bit of history penciled by its builder in 1854. This week's finding will be added to the vast amount of history and archaeological research information already compiled for the Alabama Historical Commission, which now owns the ante-bellum mansion. Lewis Mayson, II, of Contractors, South Mobile, explained that in order to replace a beam in the hallway ceiling they removed the cap of one of the columns and discovered the message. 

PENCILED ON THE solid log column was the message, "This cap was made by Gen.Nathan B. Whitfield and put together the 9th day of August, 1854, in the 54th year of his age, being born the 19th of Sept. 1799 at Rockford, Lenoir County, North Carolina, and moved to Marengo County, Alabama, in the fall of 1834 and to this place in Feb. 1843." Earlier when replacing the plaster in the library, Lewis Mayson said they discovered a date etched on the original underneath plaster which was "31st August 1849." Just as Whitfield wrote in the house, he was also an avid letter writer. Luckily his descendents and other relatives had saved hundreds of these letters.

Their content helped in dating work on Gaineswood as well as providing a history of the architect and builder, Gen. Whitfield. The father and son, Maysons, are seventh and eighth generation carpenters. The elder Mayson said *'I started as an apprentice boy in 1929. I've been 45 years in carpentry.

I began restoring furniture and went from furniture to shotguns and then to buildings.". Restoration work on state owned Gaineswood should be completed by January 1st, according to Mayson. MAYSON SAID "if we are not through by then, we'll start losing money." With already more than 125 working days on the project, the outside of Gaineswood is showing improvement and changes. The all white color, which most remember, has been changed to a cream which was determined by archaeological research. A screened inside porch was removed and one built to the original dimensions.

All except one of the columns on the porch had to be replaced because of deterioration. The original columns were solid logs, Mayson pointed * out. Gaineswood was transferred to the Alabama Historical Commission in 1971 after having been opened to the public while under the jurisdiction of the parks department of the Conservation Service. A lengthy archaeological and historical research program was launched to determine exactly how the a historic home looked when its builder, General Nathan Bryan Whitfield, completed his construction.

Milo Howard, chairman of the Alabama Historical Commission and director of the Alabama Archives and History department, said "When completed Gaineswood will be one of the most highly authentic restorations attempted in the United States." ** 21. THE PRESENT $357,662 contract with Contractors South will not finalize the authenicated restoration planned as a result of the research. This first phase was both to preserve and restore as far as funds were available. Completed architectual plans even visualize again having a lake in the foreground as shown in Sartain's engraving of Gaineswood in 1860. However, that would have to be in a distant future as Demopolis High School is now located on the site of the lake.

While the restoration on Gaineswood will apparently extend for years, so did the actual construction of the mansion. Gen. Whitfield was his own architect and created his masterpiece by making numerous changes and additions for more than a decade..

Wednesday, October 29, 2025

 



from the July 18, 1964 TUSCALOOSA NEWS



Thornhill Rich In History
by Lib Bird News Correspondent

FORKLAND - A great-great-granddaughter of the original owner of Thornhill is the new owner of the antebellum mansion. Mr. and Mrs. Brockway Jackson acquired the ancestral home Wednesday when the house and furnishings were sold at auction.

Jackson's bid of $162,000 for the mansion and 805 acres of land was the top single bid. Earlier the home and for other parcels of land had been auctioned separately to bring bids totaling $99 933.40.

Thornhill, sitting on top of a hill overlooking miles of rolling green pastures was built in the 1830s by James Innes Thornton of Fredricksburg, Va. who came to Alabama as a young man. After the death of his first wife, Thronton returned to Virginia to marry a childhood sweetheart, Ann Amelia Smith. When their daughter was born they were living in Tuscaloosa where he served as Secretary of State at the state capitol. He built Thornhill on land purchased by the Bragg family in the 1830s.

The auction was held according to the will of the late Mrs. Helen Williams Allison Thornton. Her Husband the late James Innes Thornton, II, a grandson of the builder, had no children, although she was survived by sisters and Allison children.

Jackson's purchase of Thornhill followed by more than seven years of his buying another antebellum mansion, Rosemount, nearby. He later sold that home to Mr. and Mrs. Joe Simpson of Birmingham.

Oddly enough one of his competitive bidders at Rosemount is now Jackson's son-in-law, Watson Jones, of Camden, had not met Ann Jackson then. At the auction, they and little Brockway Jackson Joens were in the background.

At Thornhill hundreds of antique dealers and collectors were present for the auction of the furnishings which followed a barbeque lunch on the lawn. Between the two auctions visitors were invited in to see the beautiful home. Most of the furniture was auctioned from the porch but at the end the auctioneer moved inside for the larger pieces which included a bed selling for $975.

The item arousing the most curiosity at its high bid of $112 was a doll house. Two large printings sold for a total of $600 and the pier mir-(typo)
chases totaling $6,000.

There were 440 items sold for a total of $13,070, according to J.L. Todd Auction Co. A Huntsville resident who was restoring a home made purchases totaling $6000.

Even a kerosene lamp, which would sell in a country store for $1.29 brought $500 in competitive bidding. Everything was sold including mops and brooms. One gun sold for $70.

When the visitors tired of the sale for awhile they strolled about on the beautiful lawn and looking down over the hillside where they could see rolling pastures for miles around.


Betty Woolf Thornton

"This is a photo of them in 1920.  In the background was Betty’s father Judge Woolf who was the probate judge for Marengo County.  He lived at Thornhill in his later years. Betty and he are buried in Dayton, AL."~ Brock Jones

page 97 of STARS FELL ON ALABAMA by Carl Carmer:

Miss Betty said," I brought this old love letter of a planter's son out here for you to see. It doesn't belong to us but I borrowed it because I thought you would be interested. They wrote a different style in those days."














Saturday, October 25, 2025

Last days of warm weather catfish