Heading North out of Austin on IH-35, past Waco, just past a fork in the
highway leading to Fort Worth and Dallas, if you take the Dallas route you
will see a sign that says 2 or 3 miles to Carl's Corner. Carl's Corner is a
truck stop that is situated in a dry county. Carl wanted to serve hard
drinks in his bar so he filed some paperwork with the state and declared his
truck stop a city.
For motorists headed South past Carl's Corner, there are two billboards
for Carl's. One is of a giant truck and trailer with the trucker in the cab
waving. The other is a billboard of a man, presumably Carl or the observing
motorist, in a reclining chair. A woman in a tight red miniskirt is bent
over at the hips pulling the reclined Carl's cowboy boots off.
Carl's Corner is covered in a mural of giant images. Large animals are
painted on display boards atop the buildings. The Corner is like an oasis, a
watering hole in the vast (and boring) North Texas prairie and scrub. In the
parking lot, the smell of marijuana wafts by with the dust turned up by
eighteen wheelers.
Inside, there are several aisles for candy, chips, trucker supplies, and
Carl's Corner T-shirts and hats. On the way to the lavatory can be found the
trophy wall. The trophy wall has a couple of hundred news clipping from years
back. The subject is the controversy surrounding Carl's Corner's city
charter. But there is also another topic.
According to the news clippings, some years ago Carl's Corner burned
down. It was a catastrophic event for the truck stop; Carl didn't have the
money to rebuild his business. Fortunately the Corner had by that time
established itself in the trucker community. Thousands of truckers passing
through every week had come to rely on Carl's Corner as a haven, a place
they could pull their boots off and wet their whistles. The Corner was to
North Texas what Kansas City was to the Midwest in the early cattle- and
booze-moving days of the early 20th century. What with the North American
Free Trade Agreement, Carl's Corner is a necessary hub upon which the
backbone of the American economy rests today.
All that served to draw attention to the catastrophe. So how did Carl's
Corner get rebuilt? The answer is that truckers weren't the only people
relying on the Corner for a rest. Apparently Willie Nelson, the folk country
music icon of Texas, had frequented Carl's Corner for years. Willie and Carl
were actually great friends, so Willie did for Carl what any great musician
would do for a friend in need. He held a benefit concert.
It was thanks to this benefit concert held by Willie Nelson on the shores
of the nearby Lake Whitney, that Carl's Corner stands today.