RIP 211 Club -- Seattle -- it's been 11 years

9BallPaul

Banned
Yes, AZers, I worked for a living. Here's a little story I wrote eleven years ago from Seattle:

SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER
http://seattlep-i.nwsource.com/local/pool25.shtml

Poolroom scratched

Classic 211 Club succumbs to the march of progress in trendy Belltown

Monday, December 25, 2000

By P. HUTCHINSON
SPECIAL TO THE POST-INTELLIGENCER

It's a violation of poolroom etiquette to go sentimental on anything, so regulars at the 211 Club just tightened their jaws yesterday and said, "See ya."

Then they went sappy anyway.

"I loved this place for so long," said a snooker player who goes by "Phred the Cook." "I don't know what I'll do with myself now that it's gone. I'm still in denial."

Last rites for the city's classiest poolroom concluded by late afternoon, Christmas Eve, when players unscrewed their cues, said their good-byes, then shuffled down the stairs and out to the streets of busy Belltown, where the new has overtaken the old.

R.I.P., 211.

Within a few months, the room will be reborn as yet another manifestation of Seattle's dizzying high-tech revolution. Some call it progress.

"I hate to see it get pushed out," said John Selivanoff, a Seattle native. "It's my favorite place to be."

For a few hours yesterday, the 211 Club jumped, as it had so many days in its storied past. Players, cue cases slung over shoulders, dropped by to pay their favorite joint a proper farewell. With every table in action, they huddled in threes and fours, laughing and smoking and shaking their heads.

"What a shame," said a guy named "Coach," a longshoreman with a passion for snooker. "Best place in town. Best players, too."

Players like Dan Louie, Seattle's finest. Or the incomparable Efran Reyes, whenever he passes through town. Or, in the old days, Harry Platis, lover of fast action and high stakes. Or the guy they call "Too Tall."

"Don't know why they call me that," Too Tall likes to say. "I'm only 5-17."

With the regulars gone and the party over, owner John Teerink dimmed the lights and locked the door on 104 years of Seattle billiards lore.

There was a day when every town had a room like this, where the smell is smoky and slightly boozy, the furnishings comfy but slightly seedy, the air tinged with excitement but slightly scary. And once you got to know it, and the people who hung there, it felt like home.

One by one, in town after town, these rooms have succumbed to the march. The 211 was among the last of its kind in the West.

Teerink might have saved his club had he been willing to compromise. Newer, corporate-run pool halls pump high-decibel music and feature banks of TVs and video games, and a large dose of ersatz nostalgia. No surprise they're packed with patrons, even if their equipment is cheesy and seldom maintained.

But Teerink wouldn't bend to the times. He insisted that his room be a temple, an authentic expression of how a poolroom used to be. And how it should be, by God, today.

In his joint, every table must roll true, every rail bounce straight. Tables must be covered in Simonis wool-blend cloth, imported from Belgium at triple the cost. House cues must be inspected regularly, tips replaced, shafts smoothed. Triangle chalk, of course, and the very best balls.

As Teerink sees it, the defining quality of a poolroom is its cast of characters. In that regard, the 211 was rich beyond measure.

There was Gary Shelley, "a space case," as Teerink remembered him, "who would come in and drink coffee, always quiet, but this became his home. He was an oddball who fit right in." After he died, the club honored him with a table bearing his name.

Then there was "Slow Ball Harry."

"He was old when I got here and he survived another 20 years after that," Teerink said. "He was a Seattle guy who'd won a city championship back in the '30s. He finally got so he couldn't play anymore, so he'd sit on the rail and watch. He'd show his appreciation for a good shot by tapping a cue on the floor."

The pair were among the many pensioners who occupied nearby hotels, but found their home at the 211. They'd play cards or ride the rail, watching the players. Railbirds, they were called.

"They're all dead now," Teerink said. "Literally, some of them came in here to die. And they did."

The 211 joins such long-gone Seattle poolrooms as Brown & Hulens, Pope & Sibley's, Greenland's Recreation and Les Brainard's, all downtown fixtures in the early part of last century. The club emerged from a joint called Gilroy & Nefziger's, at 211 Union St.

Teerink, a top-flight, three-cushion billiards player (high run: 17), discovered the 211 Club in the early 1960s, and 10 years later bought shares in the corporation that owned it.

"I just fell in love, that's all there is to it," he recalled, Share by share, he acquired full ownership. "In all the years I've been here, I've only seen one fight."

To understand Teerink's affection for the place, consider the jam he faced 14 years ago. He'd lost his lease at the old location, a couple blocks away, but all he could find was a two-story walkup with leaky ceilings and sagging floors. Not the ideal setup for two-dozen tables of a ton or two each.

"We did all the work ourselves," he recalls. "The wiring, the plumbing, the painting, all of it."

That was the easy part.

To finance the move required $68,000 cash, up front, and a masterful stroke of domestic finesse. Teerink had to convince his wife, Betty, to sell their two-story Colonial home in Silver Lake, where they'd lived, quite comfortably, for many years.

"She doesn't even like pool," Teerink said. "Actually, she hates it."

Realizing her husband's pool jones was incurable, Betty Teerink agreed to sell the house to keep the 211 alive. Then came the tough sell: Would she care to live in the back of a poolroom?

So that's where they've been for the past 14 years: John with his love for the game, living just where he wants, and Betty with her love for John, willing to live behind a Belltown pool hall if that's what it takes.

The Teerinks will go south for the winter, then make some decisions. The club's equipment has been sold, piece by piece, mostly to regulars.

"Everybody says I can buy the stuff back if I ever open up again," Teerink says, with a hint that it just could happen. "That's pretty special that my customers would feel that way. Kind of gives you a lump . . ."

Late yesterday, he wasn't the only one with a lump, poolroom etiquette be damned.



© 1998-2000 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
 
Nice write up, Paul.

I was able to visit the 211 Club just once, after their move to the 2 story. I was also lucky enough to compete against John in late 1980 in a 3-cushion tourney - he stroked my butt off :). I'm sure that room has been missed in the Seattle area.

Anyone know what John is doing now?

Happy Holidays,

Dave
 
I miss that place dearly. It was a time period in my life that I will never forget and it holds many great and fun memories for me.

Here is my very first post here on AZB and I made it about the 211 Club.

http://forums.azbilliards.com/showpost.php?p=412782&postcount=1

and here is a thread I created about the 211 Club several years later with some pics and several other thread links.

http://www.onepocket.org/forum/showthread.php?p=42952#post42952

(I had to take down the House of Games video link due to copyright, once I did that, it allowed my account to post unlimited length videos:))

LONG LIVE THE 211 CLUB !!!! Merry Xmas John and Betty!
 
211 Club

Yes I two miss that place . It was a time period in my life that I will never forget, I stated playing there in 1969, I bought my first cue from John for $25.00 A adems and stell have it.
I went over and visited John & Betty about 2 months ago at Port Susan Tulalip Wa


LONG LIVE THE 211 CLUB !!!! Merry Xmas John and Betty! and Steve and Jay and Big Will

Yours allway Carl
 
Yes, AZers, I worked for a living. Here's a little story I wrote eleven years ago from Seattle:

SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER
http://seattlep-i.nwsource.com/local/pool25.shtml

Poolroom scratched

Classic 211 Club succumbs to the march of progress in trendy Belltown

Monday, December 25, 2000

By P. HUTCHINSON
SPECIAL TO THE POST-INTELLIGENCER

It's a violation of poolroom etiquette to go sentimental on anything, so regulars at the 211 Club just tightened their jaws yesterday and said, "See ya."

Then they went sappy anyway.

"I loved this place for so long," said a snooker player who goes by "Phred the Cook." "I don't know what I'll do with myself now that it's gone. I'm still in denial."

Last rites for the city's classiest poolroom concluded by late afternoon, Christmas Eve, when players unscrewed their cues, said their good-byes, then shuffled down the stairs and out to the streets of busy Belltown, where the new has overtaken the old.

R.I.P., 211.

Within a few months, the room will be reborn as yet another manifestation of Seattle's dizzying high-tech revolution. Some call it progress.

"I hate to see it get pushed out," said John Selivanoff, a Seattle native. "It's my favorite place to be."

For a few hours yesterday, the 211 Club jumped, as it had so many days in its storied past. Players, cue cases slung over shoulders, dropped by to pay their favorite joint a proper farewell. With every table in action, they huddled in threes and fours, laughing and smoking and shaking their heads.

"What a shame," said a guy named "Coach," a longshoreman with a passion for snooker. "Best place in town. Best players, too."

Players like Dan Louie, Seattle's finest. Or the incomparable Efran Reyes, whenever he passes through town. Or, in the old days, Harry Platis, lover of fast action and high stakes. Or the guy they call "Too Tall."

"Don't know why they call me that," Too Tall likes to say. "I'm only 5-17."

With the regulars gone and the party over, owner John Teerink dimmed the lights and locked the door on 104 years of Seattle billiards lore.

There was a day when every town had a room like this, where the smell is smoky and slightly boozy, the furnishings comfy but slightly seedy, the air tinged with excitement but slightly scary. And once you got to know it, and the people who hung there, it felt like home.

One by one, in town after town, these rooms have succumbed to the march. The 211 was among the last of its kind in the West.

Teerink might have saved his club had he been willing to compromise. Newer, corporate-run pool halls pump high-decibel music and feature banks of TVs and video games, and a large dose of ersatz nostalgia. No surprise they're packed with patrons, even if their equipment is cheesy and seldom maintained.

But Teerink wouldn't bend to the times. He insisted that his room be a temple, an authentic expression of how a poolroom used to be. And how it should be, by God, today.

In his joint, every table must roll true, every rail bounce straight. Tables must be covered in Simonis wool-blend cloth, imported from Belgium at triple the cost. House cues must be inspected regularly, tips replaced, shafts smoothed. Triangle chalk, of course, and the very best balls.

As Teerink sees it, the defining quality of a poolroom is its cast of characters. In that regard, the 211 was rich beyond measure.

There was Gary Shelley, "a space case," as Teerink remembered him, "who would come in and drink coffee, always quiet, but this became his home. He was an oddball who fit right in." After he died, the club honored him with a table bearing his name.

Then there was "Slow Ball Harry."

"He was old when I got here and he survived another 20 years after that," Teerink said. "He was a Seattle guy who'd won a city championship back in the '30s. He finally got so he couldn't play anymore, so he'd sit on the rail and watch. He'd show his appreciation for a good shot by tapping a cue on the floor."

The pair were among the many pensioners who occupied nearby hotels, but found their home at the 211. They'd play cards or ride the rail, watching the players. Railbirds, they were called.

"They're all dead now," Teerink said. "Literally, some of them came in here to die. And they did."

The 211 joins such long-gone Seattle poolrooms as Brown & Hulens, Pope & Sibley's, Greenland's Recreation and Les Brainard's, all downtown fixtures in the early part of last century. The club emerged from a joint called Gilroy & Nefziger's, at 211 Union St.

Teerink, a top-flight, three-cushion billiards player (high run: 17), discovered the 211 Club in the early 1960s, and 10 years later bought shares in the corporation that owned it.

"I just fell in love, that's all there is to it," he recalled, Share by share, he acquired full ownership. "In all the years I've been here, I've only seen one fight."

To understand Teerink's affection for the place, consider the jam he faced 14 years ago. He'd lost his lease at the old location, a couple blocks away, but all he could find was a two-story walkup with leaky ceilings and sagging floors. Not the ideal setup for two-dozen tables of a ton or two each.

"We did all the work ourselves," he recalls. "The wiring, the plumbing, the painting, all of it."

That was the easy part.

To finance the move required $68,000 cash, up front, and a masterful stroke of domestic finesse. Teerink had to convince his wife, Betty, to sell their two-story Colonial home in Silver Lake, where they'd lived, quite comfortably, for many years.

"She doesn't even like pool," Teerink said. "Actually, she hates it."

Realizing her husband's pool jones was incurable, Betty Teerink agreed to sell the house to keep the 211 alive. Then came the tough sell: Would she care to live in the back of a poolroom?

So that's where they've been for the past 14 years: John with his love for the game, living just where he wants, and Betty with her love for John, willing to live behind a Belltown pool hall if that's what it takes.

The Teerinks will go south for the winter, then make some decisions. The club's equipment has been sold, piece by piece, mostly to regulars.

"Everybody says I can buy the stuff back if I ever open up again," Teerink says, with a hint that it just could happen. "That's pretty special that my customers would feel that way. Kind of gives you a lump . . ."

Late yesterday, he wasn't the only one with a lump, poolroom etiquette be damned.



© 1998-2000 Seattle Post-Intelligencer




I live in Tacoma Washington, and I spent some time at the 211. I also got to know John pretty well. Don't know how many know that John was one hell of a 3-Cushion Billiards players and that he played in the National Championships. I don't recall if John every won one of them, but either way he was certainly competition for the best around.


Nice article thanks for sharing.
 
I live in Tacoma Washington, and I spent some time at the 211. I also got to know John pretty well. Don't know how many know that John was one hell of a 3-Cushion Billiards players and that he played in the National Championships. I don't recall if John every won one of them, but either way he was certainly competition for the best around.


Nice article thanks for sharing.

I actually talked to John T. about 3-C one time and somehow it came up that I had heard a rumor that Luat played world class 3-Cushion, and John called BS, and told me "Luat can come right on in here and get played. I doubt he averages over .750."

The way he said it let me know that John figured he had the mortal nuts with that game.

I used to have fun going into some of the Korean halls and getting a spot in straight rail from the owners, who autmatically assumed no American could play without holes to aim at.. :-)

Russ
 
I actually talked to John T. about 3-C one time and somehow it came up that I had heard a rumor that Luat played world class 3-Cushion, and John called BS, and told me "Luat can come right on in here and get played. I doubt he averages over .750."

The way he said it let me know that John figured he had the mortal nuts with that game.

I used to have fun going into some of the Korean halls and getting a spot in straight rail from the owners, who autmatically assumed no American could play without holes to aim at.. :-)

Russ



Russ, like I said above John's 3-Cushion game is real strong, he can play with the best in the world and gain respect from any champion. I think the biggest fact is that John is getting older and not in the best of health, but even with that said he has a dangerous game. The 211 had a couple of nice 3-Cushion tables and John had one that was only his table. He also use to play at the Tacoma Elks lodge, about ever three years they host a National Championship, they have 5 Verhofen Heated Tables which are considered to be one of the best tables for that games here and in Europe.

I have not seen John in around seven years, I hope him and his wonderful are enjoying good health.

Take Care
 
Time just flies by so quickly...

OMG! The 211 club was a mainstay in Seattle. I remember going there before and after I turned 18. When I heard the doors were closing I got together what little money I had to buy a piece of history. Unfortunately I got there and John said most everything was sold. Saddened I slowly left the building and looked up at the famous 211 sign. I ran back inside and asked John who bought that and he said nobody. I made an offer to him and his wife and he said I would have to get it down myself. I had a friend who had a truck and a huge ladder. I had a piece of Seattle pool history.
When I moved from Seattle back in 2003 I could not move the huge sign with me so I had a friend store it in her poolroom at her home where it still resides today on her wall. I cannot believe it's been 11 years. Thanks for the nice memory.
 
That was a nicely written article. It's sad to hear about the end of an era like that. Pool can be just a game, but it can also be a culture where pool rooms are temples or at least places of congregation. Sounds like 211 Club was one of those places, as well as a tiny corner of living history.

It made me think of how here in the SF Bay Area we sadly lack that pool culture. Many billiards houses here have come and gone, most were not memorable. We have our favorite anchor pool halls here, and some dedicated players, but none (at least in the southern bay area) have spanned generations or have been true cultural fixtures.

Perhaps in 20 years, at least one of them will still be around... And as a guy who is not a great pool player, but has pool running through his blood, I'll feel like I was part of it's history and sit as an old (I'm 42 now) rail-bird with some stories to tell.

Thanks for sharing your article with us.
 
Most of the tables and pictures are here in Colorado Springs...

Hey Bud -- I'm here in Golden. Where exactly are you talking about?

Thanks for all the nice comments, AZers. As an aside, I should point out that the managing editor who assigned me this story was David McCumber, author of "Playing Off the Rail" and a pretty fine player himself. He kept a cue in a locker at the 211.
 
Hey Bud -- I'm here in Golden. Where exactly are you talking about?

Thanks for all the nice comments, AZers. As an aside, I should point out that the managing editor who assigned me this story was David McCumber, author of "Playing Off the Rail" and a pretty fine player himself. He kept a cue in a locker at the 211.

Hey 9BP I'm not going to speak for Bud, but I would think they are at Antiques Billiards and Museum. They have a huge billiard room and the walls are filled with pics and old cues and some Maces and I'll guess about 40 tables many very old. Maybe Bud will come back on and confirm.
 
On top of all the really neat old tables John had two of the better maintained snooker tables around the Seattle area in the 70’s. It was always worth the drive up there to play. Thoroughly missed, thoroughly missed…
 
Most of the tables and pictures are here in Colorado Springs...

When you say pictures, do you mean there are a bunch of pictures of the 211 Club from both locations? Or some other kinds of pictures?

My problem is.. I had once taken a whole bunch of video of the place but when I moved to Atlanta, my apt complex got burnt to the ground and I lost everything I owned in life, which included all my pictures and video of the place. I was just curious if there are pictures of the 211. I would be very interested in any pictures... if someone could scan any of them.

Or if someone could pm me John's phone number, it would save me some detective work to track him down. I would like to give him a call and catch up, but maybe also ask him if he has any pictures left from those days.. I would try and get him to let me scan them.

Yes, there were 2 3 cushion tables that were his pride and joy. He had another one too, but that was one that he would let anyone play on:) His two were way off in the corner, away from everyone else and they were heated too. There were about 5 or 6 guys that were regulars that would come by and shoot with John. They would hang out and play all night. he really enjoyed his 3 cushion and playing with his friends.

The only other game he would play, is golf on the 6 x 12 table. He was a champion at that game too.:) He was the favorite to win at that game, no matter who was playing. We played where you had to kick or bank the out ball in, and it was his 3 cushion experience that gave him a edge over everyone else, as he would make the most unbelievable shots by kicking 3,4,5 rails and knocking his ball in. Those Fri/Sat night golf games with 6 or 7 people in them, were some of the funnest times ever.
 
Hi CaliReds ,
They have pictures of the old 211 Club and alot of other stuff on the wall from 211 .
They have the 6x12 Snooker table and two 5x10 Billiards tables. Plus others tables from the 211....
 
I was 16 in late 1963. 'd been playing for a couple years on whidbey island, 25 miles north of Seattle, Headed to the big city to see the sights and the shooters. First stop was Ben Paris, downstairs, anybody remember that? Classic place, just like the 211 club.
At my age I was more comfortable at the Ball and Rack at 45th and Stone way:D

A few years later, '71 or so, it was Soft Sams on the Mukilteo speedway.
Harry Plastis was hanging out there and there was some serious 9 ball action there. Way over my head but fun to watch. I think it was a couple years later that he got serious into one pocket?
 
211 Club

I thank we all miss the 211 club on 2nd and union, or the one at 2nd and bell. RIP
 
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