The announcement of Brock’s death was posted on Friday, Nov. 22 on the social media page for Rising Son Records, Guthrie’s record label.
Back in 1964, Alice and her former husband Ray Brock purchased the St. James Chapel building located at 2 Van Deusenville Road.
The building was originally the St. James Chapel, built in 1829. Eventually, the building was expanded in 1866 and renamed the Trinity Church. Around the same time, Ray and Alice Brock also opened Alice’s Restaurant in Stockbridge.
The year was 1965 when both Guthrie and his friend Rick Robbins helped to clean out garbage from the Brocks’ property, which subsequently led to their arrests for illegally dumping trash down a Stockbridge hillside all because they could not find a trash dump open on Thanksgiving day.
Guthrie used the story about the arrest, along with a story about how he was drafted and how the arrest helped him get out of serving during the Vietnam War, for his infamous 1967 song “Alice’s Restaurant.” The song, and the story behind “Alice’s Restaurant,” became a worldwide phenomenon, leading to a movie, several books, and a cookbook, as well as fame for the Brocks and Guthrie.