Premium

With another loss, The Pinch feels its name

By , Daily Memphian Updated: March 22, 2025 10:00 AM CT | Published: March 20, 2025 4:00 AM CT

When North Main Street in The Pinch District was dark last year because the streetlights didn’t work — and Memphis Light, Gas and Water wasn’t responding — Comeback Coffee co-owner Hayes McPherson ultimately strung up lights himself.

He paid for them — strings of neat, white lights — crisscrossing over several hundred feet of public thoroughfare, two stories above traffic, and covered the utility bill by running the conduit through Comeback’s space at 358 N. Main St. 


Sheraton’s impact worth risk despite hotel’s volatile past, mayor says


When the coffee shop closes April 11, along with sunny plant shop, Greenhaus, at 356 N. Main St., McPherson will continue to pay the bill, a symbol of how much merchants in The Pinch feel about their area of the world.

The news last week that Comeback Coffee and Greenhaus — a contiguous, 100-plus feet of remodeled, active storefront on a ghost town of a street — were closing was another gut punch to the neighborhood, the oldest in the city.

This is an excerpt of this story. To read more, please click here and subscribe.

Topics

Comeback Coffee The Pinch District B.J. Chester-Tamayo Alcenia's Alex Turley Subscriber Only Hayes McPherson

2025 is almost over. Now is the time to support your trusted local news source.

Will you help us reach more Memphians with quality, in-depth local news? Make a fully tax-deductible donation or other contribution to The Daily Memphian, a 501(c)3 nonprofit news organization, today.

Thank you for keeping up with what’s happening in Memphis. Thank you for investing in our community’s trusted local news source.

Jane Roberts

Jane Roberts

Jane Roberts has reported in Memphis for more than 20 years. As a senior member of The Daily Memphian staff, she was assigned to the medical beat during the COVID-19 pandemic. She also has done in-depth work on other medical issues facing our community, including shortages of specialists in local hospitals. She covered K-12 education here for years and later the region’s transportation sector, including Memphis International Airport and FedEx Corp.


Comments

Want to comment on our stories or respond to others? Join the conversation by subscribing now. Only paid subscribers can add their thoughts or upvote/downvote comments. Our commenting policy can be viewed here