Well. The day has finally arrived. Started having surreal feelings again immediately when I woke up. I knew the day would be very bittersweet because it was our last day on the trip. I really did not want to go home, I wanted the day to go as slowly as possible.
After breakfast and packing up the van (for the 14,000th time) we headed north. Elvis Presley Boulevard is VERY hard to miss due to the sign...
| Easy to find |
| Wish I could describe the feeling I got when I first saw them |
| My first view of Graceland. The top two right windows are Elvis' bedroom. |
| Stained glass above the front door |
My first sight was up the beautiful staircase towards the second floor landing. For those that aren't so knowledgeable about Elvis, I should give a short background on the significance of the second floor. Elvis had very little privacy, so this part of his home was always his way to get away from the fans and the cameras. Elvis died on August 16, 1977 in Graceland on the second floor in his bathroom. From what I've heard, only a VERY few are allowed upstairs. Also from what I've heard, nothing has been moved or touched since that day. I can completely understand the family's wishes though. Just to look up those stairs and know what happened up there is intense. I've seen the home movies with Elvis and Priscilla as well, and to see that staircase was quite a beginning experience.
| The stairs to the second floor |
| One hell of a couch... |
| The peacock windows |
| Very purpley... |
We circled back around the main stair case to the dining room, and I was also getting this feeling of being "watched" lol mostly because of the mirrored walls. They were almost everywhere. Through the dining room was the kitchen, which I had always heard was the main hub of the house. Kind of underwhelming, but I guess for a house that was originally built in 1939, it was good enough. I should also mention that, even as much as I love Elvis, and Graceland itself, it's quite tacky. We all know Elvis was rather eccentric, and this place was decorated in the 60s and 70s, so this kind of thing is to be expected. There was also another staircase headed up off the kitchen, which, of course, was blocked off.
| Reminds me a lot of how the kitchen in my parents' house used to look |
| I did like the vintage oven |
| Yeaaaaah.... |
Downstairs, we saw first the TV room. Technologically speaking, it was all rather antiquated, but at that time, it was pretty advanced. The story goes that Elvis had heard about President Nixon having 3 televisions to watch at the same time, so he had to have the same. The yellow and blue were....yeah. Loved the monkey figurine though.
We turned back and went across the hall to the billiard room. I'd always heard about the room with the fabric on the walls and ceiling, but the feeling one gets when walking into this room is incredibly claustrophobic. I know Elvis needed his privacy, but to me, the house was beginning to feel VERY closed in.
We turned to the stairs to go back up to the main floor and all I saw was green shag. It was time to ascend into the famous "Jungle Room."
| Hard to describe the feeling this causes (sorry its sideways) |
The Jungle Room. Just...wow. Another room I'd always heard about, and its hard to believe until you are there to see it yourself. The fountain was neat though. The "fur" on the chairs (I say "fur" because I sincerely hope it wasn't real fur) was a little bit much though. I understand that this room was turned into a studio towards the end of Elvis' life, and that's where he recorded his last music.
This is where the tour of the main house ended. I know there were more rooms on the main floor, but I think (may be mistaken on this) that the other rooms were the bedrooms where the "Memphis Mafia" (his so-called friends, who did little more than live off his fame and money, while giving him whatever he wanted...okay sorry, sensitive subject with me) lived. We headed outside, to the out buildings, the first being his father Vernon's office.
(By the way, I know I'm going crazy with the pics, but I had to take so many cause there was so much to see. If you are tired of them, there's always that little red x in the top right hand corner of this window and you can stop reading :) ) We walked around through the backyard, where I got a few pics of the back of the house.
Next was the building with ALL the gold records Elvis made, plus movie memorabilia. Then we made our way to what was formerly the racquetball building, where Elvis had played early that morning before his death. The court is no longer there, and its now full of more records, and some of his jumpsuits. We also passed by the pool.
Just past the pool is the Meditation Garden, quite a fitting way to end the tour. I noticed the group we were touring with that had been pretty talkative during the tour, had grown very quiet. I'm sure most know that the Meditation Garden is where Elvis, his mother, his father, and grandmother are all buried. It was a very emotional moment for me (not outwardly) to be there. I think lots of people don't realize just how relatively young Elvis was when he died at 42. It's stories like his that are so tragic, to explode on to the music scene and not be able to properly handle it. I did have to fight back the tears a bit. Call me silly, I don't really care. I've always loved and listened to Elvis and being at Graceland has always been a dream of mine.
I could continue to write about the cars, the movie stuff, the jumpsuits, etc. To be honest, in writing this post, I'm back in Memphis right now. Which saddens me. Because I actually want to be back there. I'll write one more post, possibly this weekend, to summarize and close out my blues trip experience. I appreciate you reading this.


