#059 Jackson State Sonic Boom (by John Shaw)
The Jackson State Sonic Boom of the South marches out of Veterans Memorial Stadium in Jackson MS, 9/22/12
#059 Jackson State Sonic Boom (by John Shaw)
The Jackson State Sonic Boom of the South marches out of Veterans Memorial Stadium in Jackson MS, 9/22/12
#058 Southern University Funk Factory (by John Shaw)
The Funk Factory plays a cadence to march Southern University’s Human Jukebox out of the stadium to their buses, Jackson MS, 9/22/12
The Southern University Human Jukebox marches through the crowd on their way back to their section after halftime, Jackson MS, 9/22/12
The Booker T. Washington Warriors square off against the Douglass Red Devils at the Fairgrounds, Memphis TN, 9/21/12
The Memphis band Frankie Hollie and the Noise was the opening act for the @coltford show in Jackson, TN, and they were the main act for the after-party as well. You can keep up with their future performances at http://www.reverbnation.com/frankiehollieandthenoise, or like them on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/pages/Frankie-Hollie-and-The-Noise/390783202036.Â
Frankie Holly & The Noise live at Carl Perkins Civic Center, Jackson, TN 9/20/12 (Taken with Instagram at Carl Perkins Civic Center)
Tailgating at the Southern Heritage Classic at Tiger Lane, Memphis TN, 9/8/12
The Star Steppers Marching Majorettes and Drummers march in the Southern Heritage Classic Parade, Orange Mound, Memphis TN, 9/8/12
Memphis’ Booker T. Washington High School began its life in the late nineteenth century as Kortrecht High School in the former Peabody School building in South Memphis between two rail yards (the current Peabody School in Cooper-Young was built to replace the one which became Kortrecht). The principal of Kortrecht was Green Polonius Hamilton, for whom Hamilton High School is named. Hamilton was one of a number of African-Americans in Memphis calling for a new and better school building, as Kortrecht’s location in the rail yards led to considerable noise and smoke. Memphis eventually agreed to build a new school, but the city’s intent to name it the Memphis Negro Industrial High School led to city-wide complaints. Black citizens asked that the school be named for G.P. Hamilton, but the city cited a policy that forbid schools from being named for living people. Ultimately the school was named for Booker T. Washington, a Black educator who met with the approval of Southern whites for advocating industrial and agricultural education, and for counseling African-Americans in the South to refrain from attempting to vote or to agitate for equal rights. The new Booker T. Washington High School opened in 1927, and notably chose the same school colors (green and gold) and mascot (Warriors) as the white Central High School. Like Manassas, BTW produced a number of great musicians over the years (most of the original Bar-Kays were alumni). Here the BTW band and drumline march down Park Avenue in Orange Mound during the Southern Heritage Classic Parade, 9/8/12
Beautiful parade weather, Orange Mound, Memphis TN, 9/8/12