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Graceland Too

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Graceland Too

Address
  
200 E Gholson Ave, Holly Springs, MS 38635, USA

Similar
  
Graceland, Elvis Presley Birthplac, Walter Place, Humes High School, Sun Studio

Graceland too 2004 short documentary


Graceland Too was Paul MacLeod's two-story home and shrine to Elvis Presley in Holly Springs, Mississippi. It was open to the public twenty-four hours a day, every day, all year. The house was crammed with Elvis paraphernalia to the point of being a fire hazard.

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MacLeod was renowned for his eccentricity, based upon his reverence for Elvis, and his claim to drink at least two dozen cans of soda per day. The town's assistant director of tourism, Suzann William, claims MacLeod is Holly Springs' number one tourism attraction. The house was originally painted pink, then white, and in 2012 it became a vivid, Mediterranean blue with American Flags and painted navy blue pine trees.

On July 15, 2014, a man named Dwight David Taylor Jr. was shot by MacLeod just inside of the front door of the house. According to police, Taylor banged on the door of the house around 11 p.m. asking for money. He tried to force his way into the home and broke the glass on the front door. After Taylor refused to leave, MacLeod shot him. Taylor died from a gunshot wound to the chest. MacLeod cooperated with police and was released. No charges were filed.

On July 17, 2014, MacLeod was found dead on the porch by someone driving by the house around 7 a.m. MacLeod's attorney, Phillip K. Knecht, said in a statement that MacLeod had been "battling ill health for some time”. He added, “We can't be sure of anything right now, but nothing points to suicide or foul play. We await an official autopsy, but his ill health, combined with the stress from Monday's tragedy, leads me to believe it was a very unfortunate natural occurrence”.

The contents of Graceland Too went up for auction on January 31, 2015. Well over 100 people showed up for the auction on the Graceland Too site, many having travelled hundreds of miles in the hope of buying an Elvis treasure or a memory of Graceland Too. Many in the crowd were disappointed and dispirited when the entire lot of items was sold for a reported $54,500 to an anonymous buyer from Georgia.

Shortly after MacLeod's death, it was revealed that documentary filmmakers had been working for five years on a film about MacLeod and Graceland Too. The same week as the auction an art photography book, Graceland Too Revisited, was published by authors/photographers Darrin Devault and Tom Graves.

Because of a problem with the online bidding company during the first auction, the original $54,000 online bid for the contents of Graceland Too was negated, requiring a new auction. That auction was held on May 2, 2015. The vast majority of Graceland Too's property was sold at that auction, including hundreds of Elvis Presley memorabilia that MacLeod had collected over the years.

A group called the Friends of Graceland Too were responsible for saving many of the most iconic artifacts from Graceland Too, and plan to donate these artifacts to the local Marshall County Historical Museum for permanent display. In addition, the Friends of Graceland Too will be collecting and preserving a Graceland Too Archive, consisting of thousands of books, documents and various other items associated with Graceland Too, Paul MacLeod and the thousands of people who visited Graceland Too.

Graceland too


References

Graceland Too Wikipedia