[dropcap]O[/dropcap]n Dec. 19, 1952, Warren Stark, the proprietor of the Skyline Club in Austin, Texas, paced the floor of his nightclub. The biggest name in country music was scheduled to appear that night. But given Hank Williams' reputation for showing up dead drunk to his shows, Stark was understandably tense. Stark had personally driven Hank from Dallas to Austin to make sure the singer showed up at all.
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The Skyline Club, which was located at 11306 North Lamar Blvd., opened in 1946. The historic venue hosted Webb Pierce, Marty Robbins, Hank Snow and Bob Wills, among many others. Elvis Presley even played the club in 1955.
But the Dec. 19 show at the Skyline was one for the record books. Over 800 people crowded into the venue to watch Williams deliver a fiery three-hour set. A child prodigy by the name of Doug Sahm, who later rose to fame for his "Tex-Mex" music and work in the Sir Douglas Quintet, joined Hank onstage. Williams, while not completely sober, was at his best. But the crowd had no idea they were witnessing the icon's final show.
Just days later, Williams was riding in the back of a baby-blue Cadillac driven by college freshman Charles Carr. He was on his way to a show in Canton, Ohio but he never made it. Somewhere along the dark, winding Appalachian roads between Tennessee and Virginia, Hank Williams died of heart failure. Williams was pronounced dead on Jan. 1, 1953. He was 29 years old.
Music historians and Hank lovers of all ages obsess about that fateful night, fixating on everything from what he was wearing (a blue overcoat, a white fedora and white cowboy boots, according to Carr) to whether he was really found with a pint of vodka and an unfinished song at the time of his death. The Skyline Club was forever embedded in country music lore -- one piece in the tragic story of Luke the Drifter.
But the club turns up in another story of country music fatality: the death of rockabilly honky-tonker Johnny Horton. And the eerie similarities between Horton and Williams' fates makes the Skyline even more foreboding.
