OBITUARIES           
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Johnny Carroll
(John Lewis Carrell)

The man whose far-seeing vision of
an enterainmentformat ideal for the
artist resulted in the fifteen year
existence,of the most imitated night
club in the world.


From 1955 through 1959, before the
Cellar, Johnny Carroll recorded
several top-10 hits on the Decca
record label, was the starring male
lead in the 1956 R&R movie
"Rock, Baby Rock It" and played U.S.
concert tours with Gene Vincent.
From 1959-1974, He was muscal

director for the Cellar,  during
which time he also served in the
Naval reserve and received a pilot license.

After the Cellar, in 1976,
Johnny Carroll returned to his
rockabilly roots and HEADLINED 11
successful  concert tours of  England
and the European continent.
Of all Cellar entertainers, only

George Carlin and ZZ Top can claim
more entertainment success than the
rightfully legendary Johnny Carroll.

John Lewis Carrell aka Johnny Carroll Arthur Leslie
"Tudy" Taddi
Arthur Leslie "TUDY" Taddi
wpe10E.jpg (15415 bytes)
obitjc1.jpg (22922 bytes) CHUCK EVANS
Chuck's good humor and
good personality will be
sorely missed. A good man
and true, Chuck is a perfect
example of a tough man who
didn't need to act tough.
He was one of the friendliest
men I ever knew
, but if tough
was needed, Chuck was there
Chuck was there like a bear.
He rode for the brand.
"Big Chuck" Evans
Pat   Kirkwood



Pat Kirwood
Majority Owner and sometimes
manager
of the entire  chain of Cellar nightclubs. Though a very
genuine and thoughtful person at heart, Pat Kirk wood
could be tough as nails and mean as the devil if given
offense.
Son of notorious Fort Worth gambler W.C. "Pappy"
Kirkwood, Pat drove a race car named "#13" in the
earliest days of NASCAR and later became
a licensed pilot, owned his own airplane and, in later
years, is rumored to have flown undercover missions
in Mexico for the DEA.
Pat Kirkwood is survived by his wife, Kerry and son, Cody.
ROCKY HILL
John Rockford Hill - Dec. 1, 1946 - April 10, 2009.
A great guitarist and a Cellar classic, survived by his
wife, Joy, and his brother, Dusty Hill of ZZ Top.

Rocky Hill
Garland Tiger
Native American musician, played tenor sax until his horn was stolen, then he taught himself guitar and quickly became the hottest jazz
guitarist around, but he preferred the Cellar and he preferred playing bass because, he said, "nobody would tell me to turn it down."

TIGER
Cecil "Doc" Nottingham
obitdocnot.gif (60791 bytes)
courtesy Linda Vonk
Adrian Watts:

Johnny Carroll's main drummer
in the Cellar, Adrian was also,
along with Johnny Carroll, a
manager and part owner of the
Houston Cellar in 1973-74.
Before his passing, Adrian had retired to a place on
lake Whitney with no phone.
Adrian was an amateur radio
operator and used radio
communications only.
Death was from natural causes;
date currently unknown.
Chester Freeman

Originally a big band jazz drummer in California, Chester played for years with Ray Sharpe in Fort Worth and
came to the Cellar in 1964 where he played with ArvEL & the Knightbeats. Chester died in FW in the early 80's.

Don Armstrong
Leo Stinchfield, aka
"Uncle Leo"

A burly and tough but gentle,
good-hearted man who was one
of the Cellar's earliest regulars and bouncers. 
Leo's specialty was spotting trouble and stopping it before it
got started. He stayed with the Cellar until his health failed him.
Leo died in the mid-90's in Fort Worth.
Darrell "Hatchet" Welch
Darrel Welch aka Hatchet


A fine drummer from Morgan City, La., Hatchet played in the Dallas Cellar with Texas Wildlife and in Houston with
Toby Henderson and others. Outside the Cellar, Hatchet went to Los Angeles with Delbert McClinton and played the original recording
sessions for McClinton's first LP, "Genuine Cowhide", and later played in Austin with Lou Ann Barton and others.
Hatchet died in a car wreck on the way home from a gig in

Louisiana in the 70's.
Dave (Weinstein) Kenlo

Drummer and lead vocalist for the
Cellar band "Time Machine", Dave Kenlo is
survived by wife Shari and two sons.
George Coleman
A talented piano player,
singer and drummer, Mr. Coleman was well known along
the Texas coast as "Bongo Joe" where he was a street
performer in the spring and summer months. From 1960
through 1964 he performed during winter months in the
Fort Worth Cellar where he was dubbed "King George
Cannibal Jones" by Pat Kirkwood.
Though George could play a standard drumset very well,

in his act he played one or two 55-gallon oil drums, tuned
with a tire hammer and a crowbar. As he played he would
whistle and interject bits of sage wisdom.
After 1964, George moved to San Antonio, Texas, establishing

himself as a street performer there. On Pearl Harbor Day, 1968,
Chris Strachwitz brought portable recording gear to George's
street location and an LP titled "George Coleman - Bongo Joe"
resulted and was subsequently released on the Arhoolie record
label. (ST1040)
At the Cellar, sometimes George would sit at the piano alone

and play and sing wonderful old blues songs, all in the key of F#.
George was a good friend. He
was a unique human being and he is missed.
 

George Coleman aka Bongo Joe aka Cannibal Jones

TOBIAS "TOBY" HENDERSON
Toby Henderson
Toby had a great blues voice and led a band called Childhood's End in the Houston Cellar in 1967. He later moved to Los Angeles where he lived, played, wrote and recorded several good blues records until his untimely death in August, 2009.
FLETCHER HURST
Fletcher Hurst

Fletcher was born on August 16, 1949 in a little town near Kerrville and grew up in Kerrville as the oldest of 4 children until he moved to Buckner Children's Home with his mother, sister and two brothers. He says he thought his name was Damnit Fletcher until he was 11.

While at Buckner Fletcher got a barber's license and an FCC license, and he worked at the barber shop and at the campus radio station, KNER-FM.

 

After Buckner, he worked as a carpenter in Dallas, and then moved to Houston where he studied real estate and then worked as a plumber. He got his Master Plumber's License in the early 80's and worked on the Alaska pipeline and monitored pipe inspection in Houston.

He loved the guitar and took lessons from Milton Hopkins, Lightning Hopkins cousin. He once said that "playing guitar an hour a day makes up for the other 23 hours that suck."

Fletcher was a voracious reader and wrote a list of Fletcherisms before he died. He said that everything he says he heard from Richard Nixon in a vision.

He came down with colon cancer in 2002 and died from renal failure and organ shutdown on Thanksgiving Day, November 23, 2006.

Jerry Lynn Williams, 57;
Wrote Hit Songs for Eric Clapton,
Bonnie Raitt, B.B. King    From a Times Staff Writer

Jerry Lynn Williams, the little-known writer of such songs as Eric Clapton's "Running on Faith," Bonnie Raitt's "Real Man" and B.B. King's "Standing on the Edge of Love," has died. He was 57.

Williams died Nov. 25 of kidney and liver failure on St. Martin in the French West Indies, where he had lived for the last two years, said his son, Chebon Williams of Malibu.
A familiar name only in the music industry, Williams was probably the most successful unknown songwriter in rock and rhythm and blues.
In 1989, five of his songs — "Pretending," "Anything for Your Love," "Running on Faith," "No Alibis" and "Breaking Point" — were included on Clapton's "Journeyman" album. The same year, his "Real Man" and "I Will Not Be Denied" were on Raitt's "Nick of Time," which won three Grammy Awards.
Williams also contributed five songs to King's 1992 album, "King of the Blues," and wrote Clint Black's "The Hard Way" and Delbert McClinton's signature song, "Givin' It Up for Your Love."
He helped Stevie Ray and Jimmie Vaughan write the song "Tick Tock."
 
Williams made four blues-rock albums of his own, but none of them sold well.
Born in Dallas, he grew up in Fort Worth and learned music in church. A pastor's wife taught him to play piano, but at the age of 11, he got his first guitar and focused on playing like Jimmy Reed.

By 14, Williams had dropped out of school and was working Texas roadhouses with his own band, the Epics.
He toured with Little Richard's band until authorities discovered Williams' age and sent him home.
A maverick, Williams spent nearly four decades bouncing between Los Angeles, where he wrote, recorded and performed, and Texas and Oklahoma, where he ranched.
On one drive west, he stopped to look at the Grand Canyon and was inspired to write "Standing on the Edge of Love."
The songwriter was recommended to Clapton in 1984 when the singer needed material for what is regarded as his comeback album, "Behind the Sun." Williams wrote the album's "See What Love Can Do," "Something's Happening" and "Forever Man."
Williams was the father of Chris Williams, the Backbone69 rock band leader and songwriter who died in 2001 at the age of 31 when the car he was driving plunged off a Malibu cliff.
The senior Williams was estranged from his family, according to his son, Chebon. Information on other survivors was unavailable.
Bob Crump
Bob Crump
Died of throat cancer about 1988.
Bob was manager of the Houston Cellar from its opening
until a couple of years later when he and Kirkwood had a falling-out over Bob's compensation as manager.
One night in the Houston Cellar, Bob was struck across the head from behind with a full bottle of whiskey. Bob fell to his knees and then, with one ear almost cut off and dangling by a shred, Bob turned on the Burly hard-hat worker who had
hit him and literally THREW the man through the street door,
knocking him senseless in the process, then proceeded to
do the same with the guy's two buddies who also wanted to fight!
Bob was not known for starting fights, but he sure could END one in a hurry.
John Hardesty
John Hardesty

Born July 11, 1938. Died of complications arising from cancer on July 31st 2007.  Coming first  to the Cellar in San Antonio in 1962, John worked in the Ft Worth Cellar until 1967 and was the definitive Cellar bouncer. Intelligent, witty, never lost his temper and never lost a fight.   Maintained his good humor even when whaling the daylights out of someone. A good man to have on your side in any situation.
Mr. Hardesty is survived by his wife, Judy, and a son, John F. Hardesty, whereabouts currently unknown.
GATEMOUTH BROWN
never worked at the Cellar but He sure
deserves to be remembered for the 50 years
of fine blues recordings that he left us.
Mr. Brown died while fleeing hurricane Katrina.
Gatemouth Brown
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