TimManBlog

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Archive for the tag “Buddy Holly”

Clovis, New Mexico

January 27, 2024
(Photos and memories of January 2007, 2011, and 2016)
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I’ve been to Curry County, New Mexico, thrice in the past 20 years, each time in January. Since I’m currently living in cold and snowy Colorado, a road trip down to the plains of eastern New Mexico offers a chance for some (relative) warmth and sunshine.

A quiet Main Street Sunday morning in Clovis, New Mexico, with the old Hotel Clovis in the background.

Although the street in the photo above looks rather deserted, Clovis is a relatively large town, having a population of 38,500. This is one of the largest towns in eastern New Mexico, a land of vast grasslands and ranches beyond the western border of the Texas Panhandle. Clovis is home to Cannon Air Force Base (a special operations base), a major BNSF Railway terminal, and the Southwest Cheese Company — the largest cheddar cheese producer in America. Only the larger town of Roswell (known best for its UFO encounters) rivals Clovis for eastern New Mexico supremacy.

Curry County within the state of New Mexico

The “western” culture is strong here.

A large cowboy boot advertises boot & shoe repair on Main Street in Clovis.

Small-town photographers often show off their best photos in Main Street display windows. Their images provide a view into the local culture, which always interests me. Below is the work of Bob Morgan Photography in Clovis: guitars, rifles, pickup trucks, Airmen in uniform, and weddings on horse ranches. I love it; it’s classic New Mexico.

The Curry County Courthouse is further up Main Street. Its art deco features suggest that it was built in the 1930s, perhaps funded by the Depression-era Works Progress Administration (W.P.A.). The W.P.A. built dozens of rural courthouses throughout the U.S.

The Curry County Courthouse in Clovis, New Mexico.

Here are three interesting photos found inside the courthouse highlighting significant events in the county’s 100-year history:
 (left) Massive snowfall in 1911.
 (middle) A 1934 dust storm during the Dust Bowl era.
 (right) A 1957 visit from President Dwight Eisenhower to inspect regional drought conditions.

Buddy Holly’s Connection to Clovis, New Mexico

Rock and Roll legend Buddy Holly was born in 1936 in Lubbock, Texas, 100 miles southeast of Clovis. (See my January 2012 post about Buddy Holly and Lubbock, “A Big and Notable Place — Lubbock, Texas“)

After souring on his first record deal with Nashville’s Decca Records, Holly reached out to record producer and Clovis native Norman Petty. In 1957, Buddy Holly recorded the hit single “That’ll Be the Day” in Norman Petty’s Clovis recording studio. It was Buddy Holly’s first hit single, reaching number 1 on the U.S. and U.K. charts. Later that same year, Holly recorded another hit single, “Peggy Sue,” at the Norman Petty Studios in Clovis. “Peggy Sue” reached number 3 on the U.S. charts and number 6 on the U.K. charts.

As they say, the rest is history. Here is where history was made.

The story of Norman Petty and Norman Petty Studios in Clovis.
Norman Petty Recording Studio on 7th Street in Clovis. (His parents owned the gas station next door.)
The Norman & Vi Petty Rock & Roll Museum in Clovis, New Mexico. Open Monday through Friday.

The museum was opened in 2008. It boasts Clovis as “The Biggest Little Music City in the World!” Do check it out when you’re out on a wander in January.

Since we’re reminiscing about the 1950s, I thought this last photo would be an appropriate ending to this post. It’s a mural from a brick wall in downtown Clovis. Notice the roadrunner is in the bottom left corner, but the coyote is nowhere to be found.


A list of all photo posts from the American County Seats series in TimManBlog can be found here.

All photos were taken by the author on January 30, 2007, January 22, 2011, or January 21, 2016.

My lifetime hobby is traveling to all of America’s county courthouses, and each month, I post about a visit to a scenic or exciting county seat. It’s a hobby, and donations are greatly appreciated to help cover my costs.
Thanks,
Tim

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A Big and Notable Place — Lubbock, Texas

Tuesday, January 10, 2012. Downtown Lubbock, Texas.

I drove down the busy red brick pavement of Buddy Holly Avenue, past the county courthouse, and down to the old Depot District near the intersection with 19th Street to the Buddy and Elena Holly Plaza.

The Depot District, Lubbock, Texas

Completed just last year, the memorial block features a tall black statue of Buddy in his familiar pose, playing the guitar and singing.  An adjacent grassy lawn is available for summer concerts and other public uses.

Across the street is the Buddy Holly Center. There I saw Buddy’s famous horned-rim glasses displayed under glass. These were the very glasses discovered among the plane wreckage in Iowa that winter morning two generations ago. At the Center, I also saw Buddy’s Fender and Gibson guitars, his high school written exams, his Cub Scout uniform, and even the .22 rifle he shot as a boy. (No photography was allowed in the museum.)

I then watched a short film in which Paul McCartney, Keith Richard, and Bob Dylan explained how influential Buddy had been in their own music. McCartney even admitted that he and John Lennon deliberately mimicked Holly’s chords and riffs in most of the early Beatles songs.

The Buddy Holly Center

This was a cool day. I thanked the museum staff for staying a few minutes after 5:00 to allow me extra time in the museum.

Lubbock is fairly well spread out. This is to be expected in a West Texas city where land is flat and cheap and seems to go on forever. There are a few retail stores clustered around Broadway and Texas Avenue — but the town’s two large (15 stories) buildings are 6 blocks away with little in between. So much driving — it’s an eco-freak’s nightmare.

Downtown Lubbock
Lubbock County in the state of Texas

Lubbock was built on the surrounding cotton crop. Cotton was first planted here in the early 1900s, and by the 1920s cotton was big business in West Texas. Texas Tech University was founded here in 1923 in part to support agri-business. The 7-story Lubbock County Courthouse was built in 1950 when Lubbock’s population was only 70,000.  There are some art deco features in the structure but the biggest impression it gives is its bigness itself. Seven stories are huge for this part of the country. Yet their foresight proved correct and the building has even been expanded over the years.

Lubbock County Courthouse

Buddy Holly’s parents arrived in Lubbock in the 1930s, coming from East Texas looking for better work. Buddy was born here in 1936. He died in an Iowa cornfield, an international star, and a newlywed, 22 years later.

Lubbock knew long ago it was going to be a big place and a notable place. And so it is.

Statue of Buddy Holly, Lubbock, Texas

A list of all photo posts from the American County Seats series in TimManBlog can be found here.

I’m trying to travel to all of America’s county courthouses, and each month a post about my visit to the most interesting county seats. It’s only a hobby — but donations are greatly appreciated to help defer my costs.
Thanks,
Tim

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