The Turf Club
Founding
The Turf Club opened around 1940 at 1125 Springwood Avenue. Its original owners were Robert and Caroll Brown. Ownership was soon transferred to John Moore, who operated the club until 1947.
Leo Karp and Sol Konvitz owned and operated the club at its original location from 1948 to 1955. No records indicate that the club was used as a music venue before 1956.
Music venue
In 1956, Leo Karp moved the club to 1200 Springwood Avenue and changed the name to "Leo's Turf Club". The venue presented musical acts including Illinois Jacquet and Clarence Clemons. Lenny Welch, the Broadways, Dee Holland and others played the club.
Ownership was transferred again to Waylon Goldston in January 1970. Goldston changed the club's name to "Wakie's Show Place." In July of the same year, businesses along Springwood Avenue were damaged or destroyed during the Asbury Park riots, a civil uprising during which Black youth in the area revolted against poor treatment, housing conditions, and an unemployment crisis. The club remained opened and continued to operate.
The club was purchased by Frederick Thorne in 1972 and was renamed "Turf Melody Lounge". It changed hands twice more, becoming “Mae’s Melody Lounge” and then the “Sports Turf Club.”
There was a fire at the club in the late 1990s, after which it changed hands a few more times, with one new owner planning to open a laundromat at the location.
Restoration efforts
In 2020, the Asbury Park African-American Music Project (AP-AMP) announced plans to revitalize The Turf Club. The organization purchased the club in 2022 and, in the same year, received a grant from the National Trust for Historic Preservation's African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund to help cover rehabilitation expenses.
AP-AMP has hosted live music events at the club since 2021.
In 2023, Bruce Springsteen and Patti Scialfa donated $100,000 to restore the venue for live music and performing arts. The AP-AMP recently restored the roof as of late 2023.
See also
- List of New Jersey music venues by capacity
- Music of Asbury Park, describing the history of Black music on the West Side plus music across the whole city.
- Kentucky Avenue, historical Black entertainment district in Atlantic City.
External links
- The Springwood Avenue Rising project by a local nonprofit, Interfaith Neighbors
- Springwood Avenue Harmony: The Unique Musical Legacy of Asbury Park's West Side · (1871-1945) · Volume 1. By Charles & Pamela Horner (2020) (book)
- Paradoxical Paradise: An African American Oral History and Mapping Project on Asbury Park (Monmouth University project)
References
- ^ "Makin Waves with Asbury Park African-American Music Project: Preserving History, Celebrating Community, Cementing Future". NewJerseyStage.com. 2022-05-18. Retrieved 2022-10-06.
- ^ "2022 African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund recipients named". The Architect’s Newspaper. 2022-07-19. Retrieved 2022-10-06.
- ^ "The Turf Club Booklet". Asbury Park African-American Music Project. Retrieved 2022-10-06.
- ^ "People". AP-AMP.
- ^ "Asbury Park Race Riot (1970) •". 2018-07-01. Retrieved 2022-10-10.
- ^ "2022 African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund Grant Recipients | National Trust for Historic Preservation". savingplaces.org. Retrieved 2022-10-06.
- ^ Arts, Monmouth (August 11, 2022). "Bringing Back the Turf Club: Preserving Cultural Heritage in Asbury Park". monmoutharts.
- ^ "Bruce Springsteen donates $100,000 to restoration of historic Turf Club in Asbury Park". Asbury Park Press.
- ^ https://www.tapinto.net/towns/asbury-park/sections/giving-back/articles/bruce-springsteen-donates-100k-to-the-asbury-park-african-american-music-project-to-support-the-revitalization-of-the-historic-turf-club