Sunday, August 22, 2021

the smartest person that she ever knew


Dolly Rebecca Parton had a difficult childhood.

She was born January 19, 1946, in a one-room cabin on the banks of the Little Pigeon River in Pittman Center, Tennessee. She is the fourth of twelve children born to Avie Lee Caroline (née Owens; 1923–2003) and Robert Lee Parton Sr. (1921–2000). As of 2021, Parton has three deceased siblings. Parton's middle name comes from her maternal great-great-grandmother Rebecca (Dunn) Whitted. Parton's father, known as "Lee", worked in the mountains of East Tennessee, first as a sharecropper and later tending his own small tobacco farm and acreage. He also worked construction jobs to supplement the farm's small income. Despite her father's illiteracy, Parton has often commented that he was one of the smartest people she had ever known in regards to business and making a profit.


 

Parton's mother, Avie Lee, cared for their large family. Her 11 pregnancies (the tenth being twins) in 20 years made her a mother of 12 by age 35. Parton credits her musical abilities to her mother; often in poor health, she still managed to keep house and entertain her children with Smoky Mountain folklore and ancient ballads. Avie Lee's family were originally from Wales and they sang the old songs of the immigrants who had moved to southern Appalachia over a century earlier. Avie Lee's father, Jake Owens, was a Pentecostal preacher, and Parton and her siblings all attended church regularly. Parton has long credited her father for her business savvy, and her mother's family for her musical abilities. When Parton was a small girl, her family moved from the Pittman Center area to a farm up on nearby Locust Ridge. Most of her cherished memories of youth happened there. The farm acreage and surrounding woodland inspired her to write the song "My Tennessee Mountain Home" in the 1970s. Years after her parents sold the property, Parton bought it back in the late 1980s and her brother Bobby helped with restoration and new construction.

Parton has described her family as being "dirt poor". Parton's father paid the doctor who helped deliver her with a bag of cornmeal. She outlined her family's poverty in her early songs "Coat of Many Colors" and "In the Good Old Days (When Times Were Bad)". For six or seven years, Parton and her family lived in their rustic, one-bedroom cabin on their small subsistence farm on Locust Ridge. This was a predominately Pentecostal area located north of the Greenbrier Valley of the Great Smoky Mountains. Music played an important role in her early life. She was brought up in the Church of God (Cleveland, Tennessee), in a congregation her grandfather, Jake Robert Owens, pastored. Her earliest public performances were in the church, beginning at age six. At seven, she started playing a homemade guitar. When she was eight, her uncle bought her first real guitar.

Parton began performing as a child, singing on local radio and television programs in the East Tennessee area. By ten, she was appearing on The Cas Walker Show on both WIVK Radio and WBIR-TV in Knoxville, Tennessee. At 13, she was recording (the single "Puppy Love") on a small Louisiana label, Goldband Records and appeared at the Grand Ole Opry, where she first met Johnny Cash, who encouraged her to follow her own instincts regarding her career.

After graduating from Sevier County High School in 1964, Parton moved to Nashville the next day. Her initial success came as a songwriter, having signed with Combine Publishing shortly after her arrival with her frequent songwriting partner, her uncle Bill Owens, she wrote several charting singles during this time, including two Top 10 hits: Bill Phillips's "Put It Off Until Tomorrow" (1966) and Skeeter Davis's "Fuel to the Flame" (1967). Her songs were recorded by many other artists during this period, including Kitty Wells and Hank Williams Jr She signed with Monument Records in 1965, at age 19; she initially was pitched as a bubblegum pop singer. She released a string of singles, but the only one that charted, "Happy, Happy Birthday Baby", did not crack the Billboard Hot 100. Although she expressed a desire to record country material, Monument resisted, thinking her unique voice with its strong vibrato was not suited to the genre.

After her composition "Put It Off Until Tomorrow", as recorded by Bill Phillips (with Parton, uncredited, on harmony), went to number six on the country chart in 1966, the label relented and allowed her to record country. Her first country single, "Dumb Blonde" (composed by Curly Putman, one of the few songs during this era that she recorded but did not write), reached number 24 on the country chart in 1967, followed by "Something Fishy", which went to number 17. The two songs appeared on her first full-length album, Hello, I'm Dolly.

Although she was dirt poor as a child, Dolly’s career has made her a very rich woman. Her net worth has been estimated at $650 million – but she is still s humble person.

 Country music legend and Tennessee native Dolly Parton asked state legislators to remove a bill to erect a statue in her honor on Capitol grounds.

Parton, 75, said she was "honored and humbled" by the gesture but doesn't think it's the right timing.

"Given all that is going on in the world, I don't think putting me on a pedestal is appropriate at this time," she said in a statement on Twitter.

In January, state Rep. John Mark Windle, a Democrat, introduced a bill to create a statue in Nashville recognizing Parton for "her for all that she has contributed to this state."

The statue was to be financed by gifts, grants and donations.

Windle told The Chattanooga Times Free Press that his bill had received a lot of support. He credited the backing to not only Parton's music but her philanthropy.

"It shocked me the amount of the response we've had," he told the outlet in an interview earlier this month, saying that Tennesseans "love Dolly Parton, not just because she's a great musician. She's a caring, compassionate and just a decent person. She takes care of her community; she takes care of her state. And she does it selflessly."

 https://www.nbcnews.com/pop-culture/pop-culture-news/dolly-parton-asks-tennessee-lawmakers-not-erect-statue-her-capitol-n1258259

 5 years ago, Tennessee's favorite daughter, Dolly Parton, pledged to lend a financial helping hand to the people here who lost their homes to the wildfires in Gatlinburg.

The country music superstar, who grew up in the area, said through a spokesman that her foundation will provide each person with $1,000 a month for six months.

While exact numbers remain unclear, the donation is expected to assist hundreds of people and could amount to $2 million, said David Dodson, president of The Dollywood Foundation.

So far, officials say some 700 homes in the area have been damaged or destroyed.

"Like everybody, Dolly was heartbroken," said Dodson during a press conference in Gatlinburg. "It is a big dream but Dolly is the chief of big dreams.

https://www.ajc.com/news/dolly-parton-pledges-help-for-gatlinburg-fire-victims/g7mwzPdgeNgusq3YAHryzN/#:~:text=Dollywood%20to%20reopen%20Friday%20Tennessee%27s%20favorite%20daughter%2C%20Dolly,person%20with%20%241%2C000%20a%20month%20for%20six%20months.

                                                                        

Dolly never attended college, but her most lasting legacy involves books.

Inspired by her father’s inability to read and write Dolly started her Imagination Library in 1995 for the children within her home county. Today, her program spans five countries and gifts over 1 million free books each month to children around the world.

To date, nearly 2,000,000 children have registered, and she has given away 163,000,000 books., far more than James Patterson, who has given away 3,000000 books and $70 million dollars to support education.

Dolly’s music will entertain us for decades to come, but her most lasting contribution will be the Imagination Library, a lasting tribute to her father, who never learned to read or write – but was the smartest person the she every knew.

 

https://imaginationlibrary.com/

 

 

 

 


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