
Earl Ronald “Doc” Payne. Photo: Nicky Sundt
R.I.P. “Doc” Payne
by Larry Janezich
Posted July 6, 2023
“Doc” Payne, 83, passed away last Sunday. He was a fixture outside of Peregrine Espresso near Eastern Market for years – soliciting change from customers and passersby regardless of the weather. His full name was Earl Ronald “Doc” Payne.
According to his friend and Peregrine habitué Nicky Sundt, “Doc was born in 1940 in Washington, DC, and by the age of 14 was living on his own. He learned how to box and was promising in the ring….But before he could get close to realizing that dream, he killed a man. Enraged after his brother-in-law beat Doc’s sister, Doc tracked him down to the military commissary where he worked. He chased him through the commissary and thrashed him. His brother in law fractured his skull in the fight and died. Doc shows me the scar on the back of his head where the Military Police hit him with the butt of a gun to subdue him.
He spent more than twenty years in Federal penitentiaries for that. He subsequently returned to DC and entered a program that teaches “long timers” to live outside prison after their release.”

“Doc” and friend Tama Duffy Day prior to the motorized wheelchair. Photo: Tama Duffy Day
Sundt continued, “In recent years, after a minor stroke and a long hospital stay, Doc (had) a harder time getting around and relie(d) on a walker….when one of his many fans noticed that his old walker was in poor condition, she picked up a new one and dropped it off at his house.” Later, when the walker became too difficult to manage, he acquired a motorized wheelchair.
Doc lived in Kentucky Courts, raising his daughter’s two teenaged sons, one of whom died about a year ago. His daughter – who lived in West Virginia – died in an auto accident a several years earlier.
He’s remembered for his unfailing kindness and positivity. Sundt recalls Doc’s customary greeting to passersby: “It’s a beautiful day in the neighborhood! Yes it is, yes it is.”
During the pandemic, his friends feared he wouldn’t survive. But he did. He survived despite a host of medical problems and a life time of adversity. And he never gave up.
What a beautiful tribute to such a kind man. RIP Doc. Thank you for this.
Thank you very much for your lovely tribute to Doc Payne. My wife and I have known him for several years and will miss his kindness, his sense of humor, and his total devotion to his grandsons.
We would like to help his surviving grandson, if that is possible, and would welcome any suggestions that you might have on how to do so.