Bessie Smith, Empress of the Blues.
On September 26, 1937 Bessie Smith, the Empress of the Blues, was critically
injured in an auto accident on a
dark highway between Memphis, Tennessee and Clarksdale,
Mississippi. She died of her injuries hours later at a segregated
hospital in Clarksdale for Blacks
only.
Most people take as gospel the story that she died because
she was refused admission to a
hospital for Whites only. But it turns out not to be true, at least in the form that has
assumed the status of legend.
The story seems to have originated
with John Hammond, the legendary record producer, critic, and talent scout
who was instrumental in promoting
careers of luminaries from Benny
Goodman and Billie Holiday,
through Pete Seeger and Bob Dylan to Lenard Cohn, and Bruce
Springsteen. Hammond’s career was undoubtedly impressive, in no small measure because Hammond promoted himself as diligently as he
did his protégés. In doing so absolute truth was sometimes a casualty.
Hammond had recorded Bessie’s last secessions
in 1933 for Columbia Records’ Okeh label. At this point Smith’s career was struggling. The Depression
and the explosion of radio had
nearly wiped out record sales. Despite recording hit after hit in the ‘20’s
for Columbia’s A label, her contract
had lapsed and she had not recorded
in some years. The dawning of the Swing Era also signaled a shift in public taste in both the Black
and White communities away from her raw barrel
house style to a jazzier sound. Talking
pictures were also killing vaudeville,
where Smith had made a good living
appearing with an elaborate act.
Smith was always shrewd about her business. She insisted that
instead of a stripped down Blues combo,
a small jazz band back her on these
sessions. In the band were notables
trombonist Jack Teagarden, trumpeter
Frankie Newton, and tenor
saxophonist Chu Berry. Benny
Goodman even sat it for at least one number. It was a more contemporary sound for Smith. The records were a moderate success, but did not match the sales for classic blues
from the ‘20’s.
Hammond, who was a traditionalist and had hoped to capture
that earlier sound, was disappointed
and did not sign Smith for more sessions.
She never recorded again.
After Smith died Hammond wrote about
her. He claimed that he had rescued her from obscurity and life as a hostess
in a speakeasy. Not true.
Smith was still touring at the time and still had a dedicated audience, particularly in the South. As the Depression deepened and venues closed,
Smith later was forced to take work as a hostess, but that was not until the
months before she died. And then she
abandoned that after a short while when new opportunities to play the Southern circuit arose. In fact Hammond had not seen Smith since the
1933 sessions.
Whether because he was confused about accounts of the accident
or just to embellish a good story, Hammond wrote in a 1937
article in Downbeat magazine that an ambulance
had delivered Smith to the White hospital only to be turned away.
Soon the story became part of music legend and culture. In 1959 Edward Albee made it the basis of his play The Death of Bessie Smith.
Here is what really happened.
Shortly after midnight Smith was in
the front passenger seat and her longtime lover/partner Richard Morgan was driving her Packard. Morgan evidently drowsed and woke up to find himself in the wrong lane with a car approaching.
He tried to steer left, but
the car sideswiped the Packard, nearly severing the arm that Smith had resting in
the window.
Shortly afterwards a Memphis surgeon
Dr. Hugh Smith and his fishing buddy came upon the accident
and offered assistance. He found Smith lying in the road
semi-conscious. She had a minor wound to her head, but was bleeding badly from the nearly severed arm. He worked on stopping the blood flow
with his handkerchief. He later said
that neither apparent wound would have been
fatal, but that Smith had probably suffered massive internal injuries and bleeding
from the collision. Meanwhile Dr.
Smith’s friend went to a nearby house
and phoned for an ambulance.
After more than half an hour, as
Bessie slipped into shock and the
ambulance had still not arrived Dr. Smith decided to try to take her to the
hospital in his own car. As he was
clearing the back seat, another car approached at high speed. Dr. Smith flashed his lights in warning, but
the car plowed into his car, caromed
into the Packard, and narrowly missed Bessie still lying on the shoulder of the
road.
A passing motorist, seeing this accident but not the first, called
for another ambulance. Two
ambulances—one from the Black hospital
called by Dr. Smith, and one from the White hospital called by the passing
motorist—responded to the scene. The
Black ambulance took Bessie and the White ambulance took the two lightly
injured occupants of the second car.
There was no thought of delivering Bessie to a White hospital. Not in the South. Not in Mississippi. Certainly not in 1937.
Bessie was taken to Clarksdale’s Afro-American Hospital. It is undoubtedly true that the two facilities were not “separate but equal.” Black hospitals struggled and often did not have the most up-to-date equipment. It might be possible that Bessie could have gotten better care in a White hospital. And in that sense she was certainly the victim of racism and segregation.
But as Dr. Smith observed, she was
bleeding internally. Given the state of
medicine at the time, it is doubtful that even the most ultra-modern hospital staffed by the greatest surgeons could have saved her. Her Black doctors did everything they
could. They amputated her arm, controlled
the bleeding they could see, and
made her as comfortable as possible. Still she was dead within hours.
Bessie’s body was taken to Philadelphia where she and Richard Morgan had made a home.
As word spread through the Black community, the wake had to be moved from a small local funeral home to an Elks
Lodge where more than 10,000 admirers came to pay their last respects and view the body. She was laid to rest in Mount Lawn Cemetery.
Twice money was raised for a
suitable monument for Bessie’s grave and twice her long estranged husband Jack
Gee made off with the money. Her grave remained unmarked until 1970 when another blues singer Janis Joplin paid for a tombstone
which was installed on August 7,
just three months before Joplin’s own death.
The former Afro-American Hospital is
now the Riverside Hotel. It has a marker honoring Smith’s death there
and is a stop on the Mississippi Blues
Trail.
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