Headstone Dedication of Blind Roosevelt Graves

In conjunction with the Ground Zero Blues Bar of Biloxi, the Mt. Zion Memorial Fund will dedicate a memorial to Blind Roosevelt Graves in Old Mississippi City Cemetery in Biloxi, MS at 5pm on January 6, 2024.
Immediately following the dedication ceremony, we will have live music, drinks, and food at the reception at Ground Zero Biloxi–814 Howard Ave, Biloxi, MS 39530.

https://www.groundzerobiloxi.com/

Thanks to MZMF Secretary Emily Hilliard, who recently visited the Gulf Coast and reached out to Daniel Givens, the Operations Manager at Ground Zero Blues Bar in Biloxi, MS. In 2018, the Mt. Zion Memorial Fund raised over $1,000 to memorialize Roosevelt Graves, but the onset of the Covid19 pandemic delayed the project.
This article contains newly discovered documents about his life and death.
The Gulfport Herald, 1960
The Gulfport Herald, 1960

Blind Roosevelt Graves

Mississippi City Cemetery in Gulfport, MS

Memorializing Blind Roosevelt Graves

Lee Moise Roosevelt Graves was a recording artist and guitarist who mixed secular and sacred material during his career. He is credited with making some of the earliest rock and roll recordings in 1936 in Hattiesburg. Born in Jones County near Laurel, Mississippi, he and his brother Uaroy began playing juke joints in the early 1920s, and in 1929 they cut a number of ‘rocking and reeling’ spirituals for Paramount, all of which feature pianist Will Ezell.

The Graves brothers often performed on Front Street in Laurel, and the duo proved so popular that the audience at times blocked the road. Most of the time the brothers posted up in front of Lott’s Furniture Store, one of several similar stores in cities all across south Mississippi. The owner was Reuben Lott, a native of southwest Alabama who attended college at North Manchester, Indiana. He enjoyed the large crowds that gathered to hear the musicians, because larger numbers of people in front of the store often translated into large numbers of people who entered the store and bought furniture. The performances of the Graves brothers in front of Lott’s sometimes attracted the attention of the local police, who might either intervene and break up the crowd, or put some money in the tin cup and listen a while. By the end of the day, however, the brothers had usually filled the cup full of coins and dumped it out many times.

Memorializing Blind Roosevelt Graves
Memorializing Blind Roosevelt Graves

In 1936 Paramount Records talent scout and Jackson furniture store owner H C Speir, who had been responsible for their 1929 recordings, located the Graves Brothers performing in a church in McComb, Mississippi, and arranged for them to do a second recording session in Hattiesburg at the Hattiesburg Hotel. To play piano in the session, Speir chose Cooney Vaughn, an influential live performer in Hattiesburg. They called the new combo the MISSISSIPPI JOOK BAND. The combination of Vaughn’s uninhibited piano style with the religious feeling and musical versatility of the Graves Brothers resulted in what was described as the beginnings of a new type of music, rock and roll. With Roosevelt Graves singing vocals and playing guitar, brother Uaroy Graves on tambourine and kazoo, and Vaughn on piano they recorded a number of songs, amongst which were the notable, “Barbecue Bust” and “Dangerous Woman” both featuring fully formed rock and roll guitar riffs and a stomping rock and roll beat. The Mississippi Jook Band continued to perform for while during the late 1930’s but then broke up. Piano player Cooney Vaughn performed weekly on radio station WCOC in Meridian prior to World War II.

In 1937, Roosevelt Graves married a woman named Mary, who subsequently relocated her husband to West Memphis, Arkansas, specifically the small community of Hulbert near the Mighty Mississippi River. He stayed in the Memphis area for a couple of years, but he and his wife moved to 730 West Natchez Street in Jackson, MS in 1939. In 1941, however, he lived at 719 West Natchez Avenue with his brother (who is listed as Evan Graves—both are “musician”) but Mary lived way over at 711 South Jefferson Street. Alex van der Tuuk suggests that Graves may have performed with two horn players, a guitarist and a bassist in the early 1940s.
Memorializing Blind Roosevelt Graves
1951 directory (2)

Sometime in the 1940s, he moved back to Laurel with Mary. She died in the early 1950s, and Uaroy died in the late 1950s. 

The Marriage Certificate of Roosevelt Graves & Elizabeth Woods

After the death of his wife Mary and brother Uaroy, Roosevelt Graves wound up in Hattiesburg, where he met a woman named Elizabeth Woods. She took him home to Gulfport, where they got married on December 9, 1960. In his last years, he joined the Baptist Church and sang in a male quartet. Someone even saw him perform in Chicago around 1962 at Maxwell Street Market. 

The Death Certificate of Roosevelt Graves

He lived in Gulfport on 1503 21st Street, however, on December 15, when he suffered a heart attack. A doctor attended to his needs for the next fifteen days until he died on December 30. The doctor noted that diabetes contributed to his death. On January 6, 1963, Lockett Mortuary of Gulfport buried his remains in Mississippi City Cemetery. 

Gulfport attorney and MZMF consultant Jonathun Hilbun discovered his obituary in 2018.

Hilbun also discovered the obituary of his wife, Elizabeth Woods, who died in 1970.

Old Palestine Cemetery

Gitano, Jones County, Mississippi

Several members of the extended Graves family were buried in Old Palestine Cemetery. No readable marker exists for musician Uaroy Graves.

Samuel C. Graves

Samuel C. Graves

L.V. Graves

L.V. Graves

Age 83

P. Graves

Age 83
Woodrow Graves

Woodrow Graves

Rev. Robert Graves

Rev. Robert Graves

Annie Graves

Annie Graves

Bertha L. Graves

Bertha L. Graves

Curtis Graves

Curtis Graves