Poor Monkey's sits in a cotton
field in Bolivar County, west of the town of Merigold on the Hiter
farm, land worked by members of the same family for generations.
Monkey's is the only surviving sharecropper shanty on this
land, although there are remains of a few others nearby. In the
early 1950s, Willie Seaberry, known as Poor (Po') Monkey,
began to operate the unused sharecropper house as a lounge.
(
Enlarged
Map: Poor Monkey's and Merigold)
The building is made of unpainted cypress planks, roofed with corrugated
galvanized steel that is often referred to as a "tin."
It is windowless, but has three doors. The front sports several
faded, hand-painted signs. One describes the dress code by saying
"not like this" next to a picture of a man with his
cap on backwards, and "not like that" next to an image
of a man with his underpants showing above his waist. Other signs
tell patrons not to bring beer inside, "no loud music"
(consistently spelled "lounld"), and "no dope
smoking."