‘Angels on the Bluff’ tickets selling quickly
Published 12:00 am Tuesday, October 16, 2001
Tuesday, October 16, 2001
The Natchez Democrat
NATCHEZ – Tickets for the Natchez City Cemetery’s &uot;Angels
on the Bluff&uot; are moving fast, said Karlyn Ritchie, supervisor
of the Natchez Visitors Reception Center, where tickets are on
sale daily.
By early Monday afternoon, more than 900 tickets had been sold,
Ritchie said. &uot;And mind you, we’re not even in the heavy
selling period now. The biggest sales will come within the last
three days before the event.&uot;
Ritchie said 1,200 tickets were sold for the October 2000 &uot;Angels
on the Bluff,&uot; the first time the Friends of the Cemetery
organized the tours.
This year’s event, beginning at 6 p.m. each day, Oct. 26-28,
includes an additional evening because of the response last year,
she said.
Tickets are $10 each for Saturday and Sunday tours and $25
each on Friday, when the tours will end with a reception with
music and refreshments at Weymouth Hall, across Cemetery Road
from the cemetery.
&uot;Angels on the Bluff&uot; is a guided tour of small groups,
who take a pre-planned route through the historic cemetery and
stop at grave sites where costumed actors take the parts of famous
or interesting people buried at the sites.
Some of the characters to be portrayed this year – all different
from the ones presented last year – are Gen. Charles Dahlgren,
builder of Dunleith; Roan Adams Byrnes, who spearheaded efforts
to get the Natchez Trace funded in the 1930s; and Prince Ibrahima,
an African prince who was sold into slavery and brought to Natchez.
In addition to the historical characters on the program, musicians
will perform, including a quartet from the Alcorn State University
Concert Choir, who will sing near the site where victims of the
1940 Rhythm Night Club fire are buried.
Don Estes, cemetery superintendent, said response to the event
has amazed organizers. &uot;Last year I thought we might have
from about 300 to maybe 500; we had 1,200,&uot; he said. &uot;This
year, I thought, well, maybe we’ll have 1,500 people; but it looks
like it might be 2,000.&uot;
Cemetery volunteers are prepared for the crowds, he said. Tours
are planned for departure from the starting point every 10 minutes.
&uot;And one of the best things is that we’re not having any
parking at the cemetery this year.&uot;
Ritchie said the Visitors Reception Center will provide all
transportation, with shuttles running frequently from the visitors
center.
&uot;There should be only very short waits, if any, after
people park and board the shuttles.&uot;
Estes said guides aboard the buses will provide some commentary
along the short drive down Canal Street and out Linton Avenue
to Cemetery Road.
&uot;When the bus gets to the cemetery, the guide will explain
to the group what to do and what to expect; so the cemetery guide
can just turn on the flashlight and take the group right on the
tour.&uot;
Along with brisk ticket sales, a T-shirt designed for the event
also has been a good seller, Estes said.
The shirt, with drawings front and back by Natchez artist Pat
McRaney Hootsell of the &uot;turning angel&uot; statue at the
cemetery, are $15 each.
&uot;The first order has sold out,&uot; Estes said. &uot;But
we’ve reordered.&uot;