A Brief Jimmy
Buffett Biography
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West
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THE OLD ANCHOR INN
"The Snake Pit"
People slept in their cars behind the bar. The restrooms often flooded; you
walked on bricks to keep your shoes dry. Men in clothes swiped from clotheslines
gambled tens and twenties at the pool table. The picket fence lining the
sidewalk was erected to appease the city; there had been too many complaints of
saloon patrons falling out the front door. Murals on the insides of the window
shutters were painted by Monkey Tom, swapped for a "bottomless" bar
tab. Bud
and Dorothy MacArthur's place at 208 Duval always was crowded - but more at
three in the morning that at three in the afternoon. A blue cloud hung low,
directly above the roof.
Many survivors of The Snake Pit recall wee-hours dance marathons and Joe Cocker
singing "She Came in Through the Bathroom Window" 20 or 30 times a
night. Speaking of the subject, there was a fine message crawled on the wall in
the men's room: "Life and ink run out at the same time. - Squid" As we
know the quote found its way to immortality.
There are more Anchor Inn stories that can't be told than ones that will be
told. One evening, in 1972, Jimmy was fortunate to escape the bar's upstairs
apartment and a woman gone crazy on Lower Duval. Curse words, a broken beer
bottle and a hasty exit were reported. Several of Jimmy's most valued
possessions escaped harm and possible theft. Indeed, that's one of the stories
we don't tell.
Read the complete
piece above and more in Jimmy Buffett, The Key West Years
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