Ralph Moberly, formerly of Ralph’s Chadwick Square Diner dies

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Ralph Moberly, the man who created one of Worcester, Massachusetts more interesting venues for rock and alternative music passed away last Thursday morning suddenly at age 64.  Reportedly suffering a heart attack while visiting in Philadelphia, Mr. Moberly was most recently residing in Vermont. Here is the text of an article that appeared in the Worcester Telegram & Gazette on Friday…

Legendary city eccentric dies Owned Chadwick Square diner

By Scott McLennan Telegram & Gazette Staff

WORCESTER— Friends of Ralph Moberly last night were mourning the loss of one of Worcester’s wildly eccentric characters whose legacy is a one-of-a-kind nightspot that still bears his name six years after he sold it. Mr. Moberly, believed to be 64, apparently suffered a heart attack yesterday morning while visiting Philadelphia. He had been living in Vermont, but was in Worcester earlier this month for the opening of the Hanover Theatre for the Performing Arts.

“I saw him when he came for the opening of the Hanover. He looked great,” said Vincent Hemmeter, who bought Ralph’s Chadwick Square Diner from Mr. Moberly. Mr. Hemmeter also worked for Mr. Moberly, joining the staff of Ralph’s Diner in 1986.

“He hired me to work the stage door. Then he gave me the register to the diner. I had to be bartender and he told me, ‘Whatever you don’t know, fake it,’ ” Mr. Hemmeter recalled, the story a fitting vignette about a place that seemed to thrive on improvisational zeal.

Mr. Moberly bought the diner in 1979 and moved it from Route 9 to Prescott Street, affixing it to a warehouse building that would eventually become the premier music club in Worcester. Adorned with classic bar fixtures taken from the Blue Moon Saloon in Milford plus an assortment of eclectic eye candy, Ralph’s created an environment that nurtured all manner of lunacy. Artists, jocks, bikers, musicians and weirdos of any stripe all managed to call Ralph’s theirs as the nightclub became both landmark and booming business in Worcester.

Mr. Moberly, his wife, Carolyn, and their sons Miles and Brigham all worked the diner nightclub. Mr. Moberly opened Bowlers nightclub in 1992 near Ralph’s Diner. Upon separating from his wife and business partner Carolyn, Mr. Moberly took to operating Bowlers and leaving his namesake establishment to Carolyn. In 2000, he reappeared at the diner, quipping that as part of his divorce agreement with Carolyn he “lost the custody battle and got the diner.”

But tired of the business, Mr. Moberly struck a deal to sell Ralph’s Diner to Mr. Hemmeter, who had left the nightclub to open his own namesake bar in 1997.

Mr. Moberly’s enigmatic personality cultivated his legend as someone who was either brilliant or deranged. Most will say he was probably a little of both.

“He was a folk legend,” said Joey Rovezzi of his longtime friend Mr. Moberly. Asked his favorite Ralph story, Mr. Rovezzi shot back, “Being with him in New Orleans and getting drunk with Dr. J.”

The annals of Worcester nightlife are full of such Ralph lore.  “He wasn’t cheated.” Mr. Hemmeter said.

“He lived his life exactly the way he wanted to.”

Funeral arrangements were not clear last night, but celebrations of Mr. Moberly’s life are expected in the coming week.