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400 Second St
Indianola, Mississippi, USA
33.4533° N · -90.6551° W
Get DirectionsB.B. King is buried on the grounds of the B.B. King Museum and Delta Interpretive Center at 400 Second Street in Indianola, Mississippi — the town where he grew up and to which he remained connected throughout his life. King died on 14 May 2015 in Las Vegas at the age of 89, and was interred in Indianola in accordance with his wishes. The grave is located in a garden on the museum grounds, marked with a monument that reflects his stature as the most celebrated electric blues guitarist of the twentieth century.
The B.B. King Museum opened in 2008 in a converted cotton gin in downtown Indianola, tracing King's journey from the cotton fields of Sunflower County to international stardom through artefacts, instruments, photographs, and recordings. The museum was built with King's active involvement and he attended the opening. Indianola was King's home base for the years when he worked the Delta fields as a young man before moving to Memphis; his connection to the town was genuine rather than ceremonial, and he returned throughout his life to perform at Club Ebony and to maintain ties to the community that shaped him.
The museum is open Tuesday through Saturday and admission is charged. The grave on the grounds is accessible to visitors during museum hours. Club Ebony, which King purchased to preserve it and donated to the museum, is two blocks away on Hannah Avenue. Indianola is approximately 30 miles southeast of Greenville in the heart of the Sunflower County Delta.
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