Mystery Behind Elvis Presley’s Bicycle Finally Solved

In January 2014, Vanity Fair magazine published an article showing a photo of Elvis presumably taken in downtown Tupelo, Mississippi, in 1947.

The article traces the origin of the photo to a woman who was walking into a drugstore to drop off some film that had one exposure left on the roll. According to the story, she noticed a young Elvis on his bike and asked him to pose, snapping her last frame of him.

The woman later gave the photo to Presley family friend Janelle McComb of Tupelo, who passed along the photo and the story of how she obtained it to Elvis fan and memorabilia collector Wade Jones shortly before her death.

The story behind the photo may have been correct, but the city was wrong.

Tupelo lies in Lee County, which was a dry county in the 1940’s, meaning it was illegal to sell alcohol, yet the background of the photo shows a liquor store. Mississippi didn’t repeal Prohibition until 1966.

The bike in the photo is also familiar.

Elvis received a Firestone Pilot Classic bicycle, most likely for his 13th birthday. In 1993, a photo was found in Gladys’ closet at Graceland of Elvis on a new bike with “age 13” written on the back.

The bike is the same one in the Vanity Fair photo, except for the fenders, which were removed in the later photo.

The Presleys moved to Memphis in November 1948 and lived at 370 Washington before moving just around the corner to a large rooming house at 572 Poplar Avenue in June 1949. They briefly lived there until September, when they moved to Lauderdale Courts.

Elvis’ grandmother, Minnie Mae Presley, continued living at the Poplar address, according to the 1950 Memphis City Directory. City directories list homes and businesses by street throughout the city.

The 1950 directory also shows the S&S Drug Store, Lando Marossi restaurant and Milo’s liquor store that appear in the Vanity Fair photo.

John Sampietro, whose father operated the S&S Drug Store at the corner of Poplar and High Street, remembered his father talking about how a young Elvis would come into the store to play pinball.

Milo Solomito operated the liquor store just across the street from the drug store and his son, Milo Jr., identified the store in the photo as the one his father ran for many years.

To the right of the liquor store was the Marossi restaurant, which was also located across the street from the drug store before moving to a nearby location in 1954, according to Jerry Marossi.

This was Elvis’ neighborhood for almost a year before moving to Lauderdale Courts in the fall of 1949.

Although not taken in Tupelo, the photo is one of the earliest photos of Elvis in Memphis, a city he would call home for the rest of his life.

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IN GOD WE TRUST

Thanks for supporting independent true journalism with a small tip. Dodie & Jack


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8 comments

  1. Elvis’s family sure did move often before settling in Memphis. Judging by this selection of pictures from his short life, he appears to have been a bike enthusiast. Your findings on the location of the picture in question are interesting. 🙂

    Liked by 2 people

  2. Morning Jack n Dodie

    We have a framed picture of Elvis sitting at the lounge in Waikiki Hawaii he posed with my now wife early 60s Martini in one hand cigar in the other also played with Jody & Buffy my wife family moved there in 59 when it became a state I have the first Gold coin of Hawaii state hood

    Liked by 3 people

  3. That’s some pretty fine investigative reporting from one photo! Elvis is so skinny in that, but he’s got that characteristic dropped hand thing going, so you can see it’s him. Memphis sure looks like a small town back then. Didn’t know he liked bikes all his life like that; I thought it was just motorbikes and cars.

    Liked by 2 people

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