The Bossier Strip

The Bossier Strip is the name for an entertainment district in Bossier City, Louisiana, that is widely known for its nightclubs, bars, strip joints, restaurants, gambling, prostitution, and live music.[1]

The "Strip," as called by the locals, begins at the eastern terminus of the Texas Street Bridge which connects Shreveport and Bossier City (the bridge was completed in the 1930s by then Governor O.K. Allen). The Strip was most popular as an entertainment destination between the 1940s and the 1970s.[2] The Strip begins at the foot of the Texas Street Bridge and extends East to Louisiana Downs racetrack near Red Chute Bayou. The heart of the Strip, where the majority of clubs were located at the height of its popularity, was from the Texas Street Bridge to Swan Lake Road. Gambling was legalized in the state in 1990[3] leading to the development of casinos along the Red River and the eventual decline of the Bossier Strip as a focus for entertainment.[1]

The Strip has been the home of bars and brothels almost since the incorporation of the city in 1907. From about 1930 through the late 1940s the Bossier Strip was as popular an entertainment destination as Las Vegas, having been around for many years prior to the establishment of Las Vegas as a gambling mecca.[4]The Strip, it may be argued, continued with some interruptions east of Bossier City along U.S. Highway 80 to the Bossier-Webster Parish line.

The Strip has been the object of political disputes too. In 1972, then Mayor George Nattin fired Police Chief Bobby Joe Almond over what Almond claimed was a dispute over enforcement of after-hours policies for nightclubs on The Strip.[5]In 1975, The Shreveport Times published a picture by its chief photographer, H. Langston McEachern, showing Nattin's successor as mayor, James L. Cathey, Jr., destroying a pinball machine confiscated from the Turf Lounge, one of the nightclubs of The Strip,[6] which was known for its Country and western music.[1]

The Bossier Strip is also located at the center of what musicians once called the Magic Circle,[7] an area extending from Tyler, Texas, to Monroe, Louisiana, and from Hope, Arkansas, to Natchitoches, Louisiana. This area has produced an inordinate number of musical performers that have attained high acclaim for their music. The list of performers who were either born in the area, or who got their start in music in the area, includes such notables as James Burton, Lead Belly, Slim Whitman, Van Cliburn, Tillman Franks, Webb Pierce, Faron Young, Hank Williams, Hank Williams Jr., Johnny Horton, Elvis Presley, John Campbell, Dale Hawkins, Merle Kilgore, and Johnny Cash.[8][9]

See also

  • List of people from Shreveport

References

  1. Kip Lornell and Tracey E. W. Laird, eds. Shreveport Sounds in Black and White. pp. 288. ISBN 9781934110416. Retrieved January 20, 2015.CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link)
  2. Bossier Parish, (Images of America: Louisiana) by Clifton D. Cardin (Jul 17, 1999)
  3. State of Louisiana Office of Addictive Disorders, 2002 Louisiana Study of Problem Gambling, P1,
  4. Las Vegas Casinos and Past Mob Ties
  5. "Dismissed Police Chief Plans Fight". Monroe News-Star. September 5, 1972. p. 2. Retrieved January 20, 2015.
  6. The Shreveport Times, January 7, 1975
  7. The Legendary Tillman Franks Archived 2011-09-27 at the Wayback Machine
  8. The Legendary Tillman Franks Archived 2011-09-27 at the Wayback Machine
  9. Ron Stern Travel Journalist, Shreveport Bossier City
  • Bossier Parish, (Images of America: Louisiana) by Clifton D. Cardin (Jul 17, 1999)
  • Shreveport Sounds in Black and White, (American Made Music) by Kip Lornell and Tracey E. W. Laird (Feb 1, 2008)
  • Roy Buchanan: American axe, By Phil Carson,
  • The Legendary Tillman Franks,
  • Ron Stern Travel Journalist, Shreveport Bossier City,
  • My Bossier, Blog


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