Forgotten Winnipeg home once dished up food, music as hub for Black community - Action News
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Manitoba

Forgotten Winnipeg home once dished up food, music as hub for Black community

Tucked in ashort streetwith a handful of homes squeezed onto postage-stamp lotssits one nondescript building that holds,behind its boarded-up windows, a significant history particularly forManitoba's Black community.

Haynes Chicken Shack drew in big-name musicians for late-night jam sessions

The former home and restaurant at 257 Lulu St. has been boarded up since 2012. (Submitted by Christian Cassidy)

Tucked in a short street with a handful of homes squeezed onto postage-stamp lots sits one nondescript building that holds, behind its boarded-up windows, a significant history particularly for Manitoba's Black community.

The structure at 257 Lulu St., next to a parking lot girded by a rusted rail fence,was once Haynes Chicken Shack, a gathering placerenowned for its southern U.S.-style food and live music performances.

It was also home to a barrier-breaking man named Piercy Augustus (Percy) Haynes, whose tenacity led him to multiple athletic titles and to become the first Black man in the modern Royal Canadian Navy.

"Piercy Haynes is one of my favourite Winnipeggers,"said Christian Cassidy, a Winnipeg historian and blogger of West End Dumplings. "He was an amazing man. He was a community builder."

Despite Hayne's accomplishments and the immense popularity ofthe chicken shack,there is nothing to indicate the building's distinctionto anypassersby and itsfuture looks bleak.

"Itwas put up for sale a couple of years backand in the ad itspecified that it must be torn down," said Cassidy. "I think it's really sad that it's in that state and I'm not sure what can be done."

Piercy (Percy) Haynes plays piano in a Winnipeg Tribune photo dated Jan. 5, 1964. (Winnipeg Tribune Collection/University of Manitoba Archives)

Hayneswas born in 1911 in what was then known as British Guiana,now Guyana, andgrew up in the Lulu house after his family moved to Winnipeg in 1912.

He was part of theStella Mission's track team, the Olympics,which won the Dominion teen athletics championship in 1928.He was also a member of the Winnipeg Stellars basketball team that won the 1932 Dominion amateur basketball championship.

He was the city's amateur welterweight boxing champ in 1933 and 1934, andled a number of softball teams to city playoffs and championships as pitcher.

And Haynes was a gifted piano player and vocalist whobecame a fixture inWinnipeg's music scene.

"There was so much of his life that he was out there in the public and made a name for himself in a time where Blacks couldn't make a name for themselves," saidAndre Sheppard, a member of the Black History Manitoba Celebration Committee.

"He had that drive to get out there and break down those barriers."

The 1932 Stellars basketball team, with Haynes front and centre, won a national championship. (Basketball Manitoba)

In 1932, Haynes met jazz singer Zena Bradshaw, who had recently moved to Winnipeg from Edmonton with her young son. Theybecame a performing duo andlived at the Lulu address beforethe Second World War called toHaynes.

He tried to enlist, like many of his friends, with the Royal Canadian Navy but was told minorities weren't allowed, the Manitoba Historical Society says.

Unwilling to accept no as an answer, he repeatedly wrote to officials in Ottawa, including Naval Secretary Angus McDonald, who was the former premier of Nova Scotia and federal minister of defence for naval services.

So convincing and persistent was Haynes that the rules were changed and he became the first Black naval member.

"The thought that he had to browbeat people into submission to let them join is just amazing," said Sheppard, who retired from the navy asa petty officer, the same rank as Haynes.

Piercy (Percy) Haynes, left, plays with his band, circa 1953. (Owen Clark Collection/Manitoba Music Museum)

Sheppard, who's originally from Nova Scotiabut wasposted to Victoria, B.C., and thenWinnipeg in 1996, said he had always assumed the colour barrier for the navy was broken on the east coast,home to Canada's largest naval base, not by someone from the middle of the continent.

"When I found out it was Winnipeg, I was lost for words. I didn't know what to think, but it just made me even more eager to find out Piercy Haynes' story," he said.

AWinnipeg Free Press article by Cassidy from seven years ago saysHaynes never went to sea during the war. Instead, his skills as a composer and entertainer kept him in Halifax entertaining troops and staging musical shows.

Zenabriefly relocated there and they performed together. Haynes was also part ofa musical revue show that played for troops and civilians across Canada and the United Kingdom.

He even appearedin a 1945 movie version of the show, filmed in Britain.

After the war, Haynes spent 29 years as a porter with the Canadian Pacific Railway while also building his musical career.

He and Zenamarried in 1943 and later expanded their Lulu bungalow several times as it evolved intoHaynes Chicken Shack.

The restaurant opened in 1952 and was run by Zenaand her sister Alva Mayes, servingup southernstaples like fried chicken, chicken tamales, barbecuespareribs, chili con carneand creole shrimp.

There is nothing to indicate the importance of the Haynes' house and chicken shack to any passersby and its future looks bleak. (Submitted by Christian Cassidy)

It sounds like everyone in the Black community visited the chicken shack at some point, Sheppard said.

"This place doesn't look that big for all the entertainment and everything that was going on inside there. It's just amazing," Sheppard said.

"You would think of it [being] more in a different area, a different part of town, for what was going on."

The old shack stands just off Logan Avenue,south of the CPyards in the city's West Alexander neighbourhood well north of the city centre's theatres and nightclubs.

There was a piano in the restaurant, which led rousing nights of entertainment.

Big-name musicians like Billy Daniels, Oscar Petersonand Harry Belafonteheaded there after their concerts downtown and jammed through the night, Cassidy said.

"It was a tiny house which ended up becoming this huge nightspot," he said.

A newspaper ad for Haynes Chicken Shack from 1989, featuring a photo of the Haynes, advertises jazz music and southern food, seven days a week. (Submitted by Christian Cassidy)

Haynes eventually retired from CP and he and Zena performed nightly at the restaurant. Growing up around that scene inspired their son, Del Wagner, who became a prominent musician and band leader.

Zena died in 1990 and Haynes, who worked at the restaurant until a week before his death, died in 1992.Two longtime employees bought the restaurant from the estate and tried to keep it going butit closed in 1998.

It was a residence for some time but fell into disrepair andwas boarded up in 2012, Cassidy said.

"I am within reason by saying this was one of the city's more important Black community hubs," hewrote in his blog.

Sadly,it seems to havefallen outside theinterest of heritage groups,he said in an interview, suggesting fewer resources areput toward simple houses on back streets than on mansions in tony neighbourhoods or downtown buildings.

Percy and Zena Haynes feature in a Jan. 10, 1976, story in the Winnipeg Tribune. (Christian Cassidy/Winnipeg Tribune Archives/University of Manitoba)

"Lots of marginal buildings, if you want to call them that, have fascinating histories but because they don't get bumped into that official historic building category, nobody's interested in them and the city doesn't tell their story," Cassidy said.

"It might be too late for this building now, but if the story had been told for 40 years, maybe the building would have never come to look like this," Cassidy said.

Progress has been made toward including more Black history in museums and school curriculums, "but this is stuff that just started coming out lately," Sheppard said.

"How many people know anything about Canadian Black history to even think to save these different sites? So all these years have passed with nothing, and places like the chicken shack go forgotten."

For more stories about the experiences of Black Canadians from anti-Black racism to success stories within the Black community check out Being Black in Canada, a CBC project Black Canadians can be proud of.You can read more stories here.

A banner of upturned fists, with the words 'Being Black in Canada'.
(CBC)