December 19, 1952

HANK WILLIAMS
Skyline Club
Austin, TX
USA

Doug Sahm performs onstage with Hank Williams.

"In December 1952, on stage at Austin's Skyline Club, 11-year-old “Little Doug” Sahm sat on Hank Williams' knee."
(Hip-O Select)

A December, 1952, Austin Newspaper Ad for Hank Williams Sr.'s Appearance at the Skyline Club

comment:

In the forties and fifties North Lamar – which was not yet a part of Austin and was still known as the Dallas Highway -- was a well-known roadway lit up by nightclubs. The Skyline Club was a large club that opened on the Dallas Highway in 1948. It was was later given the address of 11306 North Lamar Boulevard, which is approximately the location of the Eckerd Drugs at North Lamar and Braker today (Page 24, The Austin American-Statesman, 09-07-2000). ). Probably the most interesting and most well-known event regarding the Skyline Club concerns the strange confluence of events that formed the destiny of two well-known western musicians -- Hank Williams and Johnny Horton -- and one unfortunate widow. Hank Williams, among the most beloved of western singers and songwriters was a tragic figure. Hank Williams married Billie Jean Jones after a failed first marriage. In December of 1952 Hank played at a gig at the Skyline Club; it was to be his last. On his way to his next gig in Canton, Ohio, Hank died on January 1, 1953 while sleeping in the back of a car at the age of 29.

A December, 1952, Austin Newspaper Page Displaying Music Events at the Skyline Club and at Dessau Hall

Johnny Horton, while still almost an unknown, had met and befriended Hank Williams. In 1960 Johnny Horton, now famous for such songs as “Battle of New Orleans” and “Sinking of the Bismarck” had – according to members of his band--been having premonitions of death. He had claimed that he felt he was going to be killed by a drunkard. On Friday night, November 4, Johnny Horton had a gig at the Skyline Club on Dallas Highway. He avoided the bar, because of his stated premonition that he was going to die in that very place. After the gig the band loaded their equipment into Horton's white Cadillac and left the Skyline. It seemed that Horton's premonition was not fulfilled.

Horton was driving toward Shreveport, where he had just purchased a house. At the town of Milano, east of Austin. Horton's Cadillac approached a bridge over a train trestle, a truck coming from the other direction hit one side of the bridge, then the other side, then it struck Horton's car. The driver was found to be drunk and had liquor in the truck cab: Horton was indeed killed by a drunk. Like Hank Williams, a gig at the Skyline had been his last, and like Hank Williams, Horton left behind a grieveing widow named Billie Jean. Horton had married Billie Jean Jones, the same woman who had been widowed by Hank Williams. Source:
Article by Michael Corcoran, Page 24, The Austin American-Statesman , 09-07-2000

The Skyline Club, a 1950s Landmark

In the 1950s, the roadway known today as North Lamar was a very loud and colorful place, at least it was on weekends. At 11306 North Lamar, where CVS Drugs is today, stood the Skyline Club . The Skyline Club opened in 1948. It was a very large and well-known landmark with room for approximately 500 people. The Skyline Club was often a crowded place: on the Wednesday or Thursday "Nickel Beer Night" the cars visiting the Skyline Club would park not only near the Skyline Club, but also on the east side of the roadway where Albertson's grocery is today. "Sometimes you could hardly get through there because of the cars" said Clyde N., a North Lamar resident from 1948.

This is the Eckerd Drugs built at Braker and North Lamar in the late 1990s (photo taken 4/27/01). This is the previous location of the Skyline Club.

 

This is a sketch of the Skyline Club. The Skyline Club was located where the Eckerd Drugs at Braker and North Lamar is located today.

 

sources:
http://members.tripod.com/fryr/cfhistnlamar.html
http://fryr.tripod.com/cfhisthankandjohnny.html
http://www.rockabillyhall.com/HankWilliams1.html