Last Home of Sleepy John Estes

You are standing on the porch of the last home of “Sleepy” John Estes. He is one of the most important musicians who developed blues music in the south. However, for most of his life, “Sleepy” John lived in poverty. You can see here what life was like for his last years. The outside walls of his house are made from overlapping boards of irregular width. Their white paint is greying with age. On either side of the front door, boards jut out at an angle to hold up a small roof of corrugated metal. The small boxy house used to be one room and the front and back door were opposite. It was called a shotgun house because someone could fire a shotgun through the front door and it would go right out the backdoor without hitting any walls.

 

“Sleepy” John Estes grew up here in Brownsville. By nineteen, he was playing guitar and singing professionally. In 1971, “Sleepy” John told Downbeat Magazine that he got his nickname because he was still working as a farmer: “Every night I was going somewhere. I'd work all day, play all night and get back home about sunrise. I'd get the mule and get right on going. I went to sleep once in the shed. I used to go to sleep so much when we were playing, they called me “Sleepy”. But I never missed a note.” He wrote lyrics based on life in his hometown and sang with a unique “crying” style. In the 1920s and 30s, he made recordings in Chicago and toured around the United States. 

 

In 1941, he came back to Brownsville and began farming. When “Sleepy” John Estes lost his sight, it stopped him from farming. He tried recording more music, but nothing paid off. Because of this period of inactivity, the public believed he was deceased.

 After twenty years had passed,  people took a new interest in blues music. In 1962, David Blumenthal was making a documentary and rediscovered “Sleepy” John. Immediately, he brought “Sleepy” John back into the public music scene. “Sleepy” John Estes made more recordings, and even toured outside the United States. In 1977, he was here preparing for another European tour when he suffered a stroke and passed away. He is buried in the Elam Baptist Church Cemetery about 15 miles from here. In 1991, “Sleepy” John Estes was posthumously inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame.

A Peoples' History of the Hill
  1. The Hill Intro
  2. Long Wharf
  3. Directions to Jackson Newspaper Protest Site
  4. Jackson Newspaper Protest
  5. Directions to Trowbridge Square Park
  6. Trowbridge Square Park
  7. Directions to Evergreen Cemetery
  8. Evergreen Cemetery
  9. Directions to Lee High School
  10. Lee High School
  11. Directions to Oak Street Connector
  12. Oak Street Connector
  13. Directions to Temple Street Congregational Church
  14. Temple Street Congregational Church
  15. Directions to the Green (Columbus Day Protests)
  16. Columbus Day Protests
  17. UPDATE: Columbus Protest Victories
  18. Directions to the Green (Occupy Movement)
  19. Occupy Wall Street Movement
  20. Directions to the Green (CT Students for a Dream)
  21. C4D Dream Summit on the Green
  22. Directions to Amistad Memorial
  23. Amistad Memorial
  24. Directions to City Hall
  25. City Hall - Elm City Resident Card
  26. Directions to New Guinea
  27. New Guinea
  28. Directions to Superior Courthouse
  29. Superior Courthouse - Black Panther Trials
  30. Stay at the Courthouse
  31. Superior Courthouse - Support for Corey Menafee
  32. Directions Back to Trowbridge Square Park or Long Wharf
  33. End of the Hill Tour