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Hank Williams, Alabama’s Troubadour
Museum Honors
Country Singer’s Life And Career
Okay,
I’ll admit it. I’m not really a Hank Williams fan. Though I love
country music, his “twangy” style just never caught my fancy. But
who can not appreciate the
contributions he made to the American music scene? Over 50 years after
his untimely death, Hank Williams has an ever growing legion of fans,
his music still plays on radio stations and jukeboxes around the world,
and his legacy lives on. The Hank
Williams
Museum
in Montgomery,
Alabama
celebrates the life of this music pioneer who shaped much of what we
hear today.
Born
south of
Montgomery
in Butler
County
on September 17, 1923, Hiram "Hank" Williams learned to play
the guitar and sing on the streets of Georgiana. His career began at the
age of fourteen when he won a talent show at the Empire Theater in Montgomery
Alabama
in 1937 with his original tune WPA
Blues. The rest is music history.
Williams
made his way to Nashville, and in 1949 he stopped the show at the Grand Ole Opry
when he performed Lovesick
Blues. Williams was both an accomplished singer and a prolific
songwriter. His short career was like a comet streaking across the sky
over the country’s roadhouses and honkytonks with compositions like Your
Cheatin’ Heart, Jambalaya,
Ramblin’ Man, Beyond the
Sunset, and Kaw-Liga. And
like all comets, he burned out way too soon. Williams died in the back
of his baby blue 1952 Cadillac convertible on January 1, 1953. He left
behind a grieving family and fans, a son who would make his own
indelible mark on the music business, and memories of a lonely, haunted
man who learned early on that he expressed his pain best with a guitar
in his hands, while standing on a stage.
Located
in downtown Montgomery, where Hank Williams lived from 1937 to 1953, the Hank
Williams
Museum
displays the most complete collection of the singer’s memorabilia to
be found anywhere.
Exhibits
include costumes Williams wore on stage, musical instruments, albums,
photographs, portraits, a magnificent old Wurlitzer jukebox, and the
Cadillac in which he made his final journey. Other items on display
include the singer’s cowboy boots, ties, hats, his saddle, piano,
Hank’s 1947 Gibson Guitar, the microphone and stand Hank used at his
last performance, his blue suede shoes, suitcase, shaving kit, his
favorite revolver, a fiddle, a 1939 Sidney Lanier High School yearbook,
signed programs and books, sheet music, songbooks, and Hank Jr.'s first
cowboy boots and Boy Scout hats. Williams’ platinum records and awards
are also on display. His music plays from hidden speakers as you tour
the museum’s galleries.
A
bust of the singer greets visitors to the museum’s lobby, along with a
handsome portrait, and a statue of the wooden Indian Kowaliga. Legend
has it that Kowaliga was a Creek Indian who once lived on Lake
Martin. He fell in love with a beautiful Indian maiden and asked her to marry
him. Alas, her father had already promised her to another and she
rejected Kowaliga’s proposal and left, never to be seen again.
Heartbroken, Kowaliga swore to strand on the edge of the lake and wait
faithfully for her return. He stood on that lakeshore so long that his
feet finally took root and he turned to wood. In August, 1952, Hank
Williams visited Lake
Martin
and was so taken by Kowaliga’s sad tale that he immortalized him in
his song Kaw-Liga.
While
the artifacts exhibited tell a lot about Hank’s career, I found that
the personal memories from his band members, wife Audrey, and fellow
musicians really helped me understand the man behind the songs.
In
a series of notes, Audrey recalls her first meeting with Hank and their
whirlwind courtship. They had their first date the night after they met,
he proposed to her on their second date the next night, and they were
married a year later. Audrey recalled “Pretty soon he said “I love
you” so much I got to believing him.”
Any
new relationship takes work, and the rigors of show business and
Hank’s mercurial personality took their toll on the marriage. The
couple separated several times in the early days of their marriage, but
Audrey recalled “I always went back because I knew the heart of Hank
Williams was great. He was often misunderstood because his emotions, his
thinking, and his feelings were so much deeper than the average
person’s. But his love was even deeper. It can never be written on
paper. Words won’t express him or his life.” Audrey’s notes recall
that some of Hank’s best “suffering” songs were written during the
times they were separated.
When
Hank Williams bought eight year old Cecil Jackson a coke at a small gas
station located across the street from where he lived, he created a fan
for life. From then on, Cecil listened to Hank on radio station WSFA in Montgomery. When Cecil was eleven, Hank came to the Lightwood Community in Elmore
Country for a show. The youngster changed a tire for Hank that night,
and the singer later dedicated a song to the Lightwood flat fixers. In
1952, one week before Hank Williams’s death, Cecil rotated and
balanced the tires on Hank's 1952 baby blue Cadillac. Cecil Jackson
realized a long held dream when he opened the
Hank
Williams
Museum
in Montgomery
on February 8, 1999. Today he serves as president of the Hank Williams
Memorial Foundation Montgomery. Jackson’s daughter, Beth Birtley, is the museum manager. Influenced by her
father’s love for the music legend, she spent most of her life
listening to country music, especially Hank Williams.
Hank
Williams’ professional debut was in Montgomery, and his final public performance was here also.
"He attended a musicians’ union meeting," Beth
Birtley explains. "This was on December 28, 1952, at the Elite
(pronounced E-light) Cafe, which was on Montgomery Street.” A few days later he was dead, but his music will live on forever. Oakwood
Cemetery, the resting place of Hank and Audrey Williams, is only five minutes
from the Museum.
For
his fans, a visit to the Hank
Williams Museum
is a trip into the past, a past that continues today; the life and times
of Hank Williams. For younger generations, the museum offers the
opportunity to get to know the man revered by generations of music
lovers. Visit the place where the man who left his mark on the musical
world and you just may discover that he has left his mark on you as
well.
The
Hank
Williams
Museum
is located at 118 Commerce Street
in Montgomery, just one mile from Exit 172 off Interstate 65. The museum is open
Monday through Saturday from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., and Sundays from 1
p.m. to 4 p.m. There is limited parking at the museum and no room for
large RVs. Park your rig at a local RV park and drive your dinghy or tow
vehicle. For more information on the Hank
Williams
Museum, call (334) 262-3600 or visit their website at www.thehankwilliamsmuseum.com.
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