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| Hank Williams Sr. - About |
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Hank
Williams Sr.
Hank Williams Sr.

b. Hiram (misspelt on birth certificate
as Hiriam) Williams, 17 September 1923,
Georgiana, Alabama, USA, d. 1 January
1953, on the road between Montgomery,
Alabama and Oak Hill, West Virginia,.
On a warm night in June, 1949, with his
first number one record spilling out of
radios across the country, a frail
young man walked onto the stage of
Nashville's Ryman Auditorium for his
Grand Ole Opry debut. Behind him lay
nearly a decade of struggle and
rejection in pursuit of this goal;
ahead, a little more than five years in
the limelight.
By 1953, literally worn out at
twenty-nine, Hank Williams was gone.
But he had given country music much of
its standard repertoire, a new
definition of stardom and a legend so
enduring that he is still the model for
countless singers and songwriters.
Born in Mount Olive West, Alabama (near
Georgiana) on September 17th, 1923,
Hiriam was the second child of Lon and
Lillie Williams. Lon, a WWI veteran,
was hospitalized during most of Hank's
early life, leaving the boy's
upbringing to his strong-willed mother.
Small and fragile from the beginning
(and afflicted with spina bifida), Hank
may well have gravitated toward music
as an alternative to sports. While
living in Georgiana, he befriended
Rufus Payne, a black street musician
known as "Tee-Tot".
Years later, Hank would say that Payne
had given him "all the music training I
ever had", and most biographers
consider Payne the source of the
noticeable blues thread running through
Hank's music. Hear a sample of "Long
Gone Lonesome Blues"
At sixteen, living in Montgomery,
Williams quit school and began his
music career in earnest. He had made
his first radio appearance on WSFA in
late 1936 or early 1937, and would soon
become one of the station's most
popular performers. He also worked beer
joints and regional shows with his
band, already named the Drifting
Cowboys. Lillie drove the group to
venues in her station wagon and
collected gate money. By the early 40s,
Hank was one of the biggest draws in
the region, and had come to the
attention of several Nashville artists
and music business luminaries. But his
reputation as a singer was already
matched by the one he'd built for
drinking and unreliability. Most
considered him an unsafe bet.
In 1943 Hank met Audrey Mae Sheppard,
an Alabama country girl with a two-year
old daughter, Lycrecia, from a previous
marriage. Audrey learned to play
stand-up bass (well enough, anyway, to
play in the band) and began acting as
manager.
They were married in December, 1944.
She desperately craved a singing
career, pushing for inclusion in the
show at every chance. Her ambition,
however, far exceeded her talent.
Audrey would vie with Lillie for Hank's
attention throughout the relationship.
In 1946, she accompanied her husband to
Nashville to meet publisher Fred Rose.
© Copyright Eagle Free Enterprises 2004