BANGOR CAVE CASINO

Alabama Heritage, Summer 2006 by Jones, Pam

TO FIND BANGOR CAVE today, you must know where to look in the deep piney woods of Central Alabama. That was not always the case. For a short but exciting time in the late 1930s, Bangor Cave was one of America's most exotic nightspots. A special spur to the cave, built by the Louisville & Nashville Railroad, brought thousands of elegantly dressed southerners to the cave's bungalow entrance. There, they waited outside for the chance to enter an underground Shangri-La. And a lucky few, usually with bulging wallets, were allowed into the private casino hidden behind a heavily bolted door.

Today there are only a few physical reminders of the cave's glory days-the outline of a fieldstone bar where a jar of thousand-dollar bills once sat on display, the concave area that served as an orchestra pit for swing bands and vocalists. But on the spot where diners once enjoyed $1.10 price-fixed meals and dancers swayed on tile-covered floors under a cathedral ceiling painted to resemble a night sky, only copperheads, spiders, and other creatures take advantage of the once-magnificent room. A sense of eeriness permeates the cavern's damp walls-a sense of stories never to be told, mysteries never to be solved.

"Hitting with a bang that reverberated over the entire state, our new sheriff, Ed Miller, raided Bangor Gave on Saturday night just after the clock had passed the midnight hour and made a haul not only in gaming tables, but in arrests and drinks that make wild men wilder," was how a Blount County newspaper reported an August 1937 raid on the county's infamous speakeasy. The August raid was neither the first nor the last on the Bangor Cave Club during its short existence.

During the last half of the nineteenth century, picnickers would ride in wagons or horse-drawn carriages down the dirt-packed roads that led from Blount Springs' resort hotel to Bangor Cave for picnics and romantic escapades. The cave had been discovered earlier in the century by state geologist Walter B. Jones and was a popular spot for local political rallies and Fourth of July celebrations. Concerts held within the cavern required members of the audiences to use candles and lanterns for light. But after the hotel burned in the early years of the twentieth century, the cave no longer attracted much attention and soon became little more than a local legend.

Nearly a quarter of a century later, while the country was in the midst of the Great Depression, J. Breck Musgrove, the owner of the cave and its surrounding property, decided to take advantage of the cave's spectacular beauty and isolation. He and a group of investors oversaw the transformation of the former picnic area into an unforgettable nightspot.

Throughout the months preceding the club's opening, Birmingham and area newspapers fueled widespread interest in the club by keeping their readers abreast of the latest additions to the no-expense-spared accoutrements. As the Birmingham News reported in a May 9,1937, article:

America's only underground nightclub is rapidly approaching completion at Bangor Cave, noted throughout the South as a natural formation of wonder and beauty. After months of delay, the pioneers in this unique development have outmaneuvered nature to convert the recesses of Bangor Cave into a place of comfort, charm and beauty.

One of the more dramatic changes to the cave's character was the dynamiting of a new entrance. The new opening, conveniently situated only yards away from the L & N spur, was more conducive to foot traffic than the natural opening located higher up the mountain's face.

Musgrove and his fellow investors spent a reported seventy thousand dollars preparing the cave for its conversion from a family-oriented destination into a subterranean dining and dance club. There are no estimates on the cost of fitting out the private and highly illegal mini-casino hidden behind a padlocked door at the end of a narrow passageway lined with armed guards in one of the cave's upper rooms.

Bangor Cave was actually a series of seven caverns, but Musgrove only used the front caverns for the club. The largest of these rooms was some 350 feet in length and 57 feet in width. The cavern's floor was covered in concrete, which was then topped by interlocking green and red tiles. Strings of rainbow-hued lights were wrapped around the column-like stalactites and inside the room's recessed areas.

An orchestra pit carved out of an enormous boulder could seat thirty musicians and vocalists, while a mammoth ledge acted as an overhang above the dance floor. A fieldstone bar backed by mirrors lined another wall. According to newspaper reports of the time, a jar filled with thousand-dollar bills was placed prominently on the bar. Individual tables lined one side of the cavernous room so diners could enjoy the dancing and floorshows. Artificial grass and flowers, something of a rarity in Depression-era Alabama, added to the club's ambience of elegance. The club also featured several anterooms and a kitchen. The small gaming room upstairs included a wall lined with slot machines and craps tables, roulette wheels, blackjack tables, and other gambling equipment.

 

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