Saturday, May 6, 2017

Grave of Hank's Musical Mentor Found in 1998

Grave of Hank's Musical Mentor Found
By Rick Harmon - Montgomery Advertiser - 1998

A handful of people gathered Wednesday before an unmarked grave in Lincoln Cemetery for a quiet ceremony to honor Rufus "Tee-Tot" Payne, the black musician who Hank Williams said was not only his friend, but his musical mentor.


Amid ant hills and pine straw, Payne's son, Henderson Payne, and his younger. sister, Ruby Mae Price Womack, heard The Rev. Dr. James E. Cook of Chapel AME Zion Church and Indian Hill Zion Church in Greenville say a service for their father — almost 60 years after the musician died and was laid to rest in a pauper's grave in the black cemetery

"We could be standing on his grave now," Womack said, looking at her feet. "At least we finally know around where he is buried."

Historians had long sought the location of Payne's grave site, as had Hank Williams, who had set aside money for a marker to honor the man he said taught him his musical style.

Henderson Payne, who stood before his father's grave site for the first time Wednesday, had also tried to find his father's burial place.

I down came Womack three or four times trying to find it," said Payne's 78-year-old son, who was 19 and living in Kokomo, Ind., when his father died in 1939. "But no one knew where (the grave) was."

Fans should have less trouble finding the area in the future. Lloyd Geeslin, who owns the Oakwood Cemetery Annex where Hank Williams is buried, has had a commemorative marker created that will be placed at Payne's grave. Geeslin has offered to have another marker for Payne placed by Hank Williams' grave.

There was some disagreement about whether a second marker should be placed by Williams' grave, since it might give people the wrong idea that Payne is buried in Oakwood or take away from the other marker which will be at Lincoln Cemetery.

But Henderson Payne said he was leaning toward having both markers.

"I'm thinking of my daddy be-cause I knew him well enough to know what he would want," Henderson Payne said. "They were al-ways together. Wherever he went, people would say 'there's Tee-Tot and that white boy again.' They were always close, and I think he'd want something to show that they were close now."

Geeslin said he'd like the second marker near Williams' grave because people should realize the link between the two men.

"Wherever you find Hank Williams, you find Rufus Payne," Geeslin said. "Rufus Payne was why Hank's music was so different, why Hank could step on stage and make people go crazy."

Montgomery historian Mary Ann Neeley, executive director of the Landmarks Foundation that oversees Old Alabama Town, said the discovery of the location of Payne's grave site was an important one.

"People have been searching for his grave for around 30 or 40 years," she said. "Hank Williams is one of the subjects we are asked about most frequently at Old Alabama Town, and I think this will increase the interest in Rufus Payne, and who he was."

Who Payne is a question that has long intrigued Montgomery historian Alice Harp, who located Payne's grave after a four-year search.

Harp, who had researched such area blues legends as Big Mama Thornton and Johnny Shines, said l the key in finding the grave's location was doing often tedious work in checking through records and going beyond musical lore to historic fact.

She said it's always been known that Payne had a huge impact on Williams' music.

"I've heard a radio interview in which Hank Williams was asked who his influences were, and he said 'Rufus Payne was my only musical influence,' she said. But Harp said it appears the relationship between Tee-Tot and Williams was longer and more important than was realized.

Many sought the location of Payne's grave in Greenville, where according to Williams' lore, Payne was a street musician who taught Williams to play when the country singer was a boy.

But Harp sought the grave in Montgomery because she discovered information that convinced her Williams had brought Tee-Tot to the city to join him.

She said a 1939 city directory showed Rufus Payne living on South Bainbridge, just a few blocks from the boarding house that Williams' mother, Lillie, ran on South Perry Street.

But Payne's final resting place is only one of the many mysteries about the man who taught Hank Williams about music.

No picture is known to exist of Tee-Tot, and both Harp and Payne's relatives say written information about the musician may be both incomplete and inaccurate.

"We're not talking about a man who sharecropped, wore overalls and sat on the curb and sometimes f played some blues," Harp said. "Payne was a professional musician."

She said although Payne did sometimes play on street corners, that was because he played almost everywhere. She said he usually dressed in coat and tie, wore a tuxedo jacket to play piano at the par-ties of wealthy whites and played not just blues, but country, jazz and Cajun music that he learned growing up in New Orleans.

"He was an educated man who insisted that his children also be educated," Harp said.

Henderson Payne said blues wasn't even his father's favorite type of music.

"He liked playing hillbilly music more than he liked playing the blues," his son said. "When he played hillbilly music he got paid. When he played the blues, he played for free."

Harp said she has already sent in the paperwork to have Payne's grave designated a historic site.

She is continuing to research Payne, an endeavor in which she said Hank Williams Jr. has been very supportive.


Harp "is glad that Payne is finally getting the credit that his father always wanted him to have."

The Montgomery Advertiser, Dec 31, 2002.

Alabama Bluesman is Last of Line

Alabama Bluesman is Last of Line
By Henry Willett - The Montgomery Advertiser - 1978

Near Tuscaloosa in the town of Holt, Alabama, lives Johnny Shines, a man who represents what seems to be a disappearing generation of traditional bluesmen. Born in Memphis, Tenn. in 1915, Johnny Shines were brought up in a musical family. His mother's family were all church people, and he remembers there always being music and musical instruments around the house. "There were tambourines, a fiddle, a bass, bones, all kinds of instruments; but we being the youngest of six kids, all the instruments were gone from the house by the time I got old enough to do anything with them."

"When I was nine years old I decided I didn't like home, so I left and headed South `til I found myself working in a groundhog sawmill in Louisiana. That was the hardest work I've done in my life." It was in Louisiana that Johnny Shines received his earliest exposure to downhome Mississippi Delta blues.

At the age of sixteen he bought his first guitar." It was a six dollar Black Regal. It took me about two months to buy it." He pretty much taught himself to play. "I learned from a lot of people ...Charlie Patton, Son House, my half-brother Willie Reed... Robert Johnson was my biggest influence. One time in Arkansas I was watching Howlin' Wolf play. He stopped playing to go shoot dice and I took that guitar and started playing. Soon I had that whole place howlin'. They started calling me 'Little Wolf.' But Howlin' Wolf said that was the last time he'd leave his guitar' laying where somebody could get ahold of it."

At the age of sixteen, Johnny Shines got married and settled in Memphis. "I was directing the church choir, and one day I said, `You'll just have to find yourself a new director, because I'm going back to the blues."'

In 1934 he met Robert Johnson, and they traveled together for a number of years." Those was rough times. I remember sleeping in corn-cribs... playing in clubs for a dollar a night and all you could drink. You didn't just play for a few hours. You played until they quit dancing. Sometimes we'd play on the street for nickels and dimes."

And he remembers tales of his travelling with Robert Johnson. "Once we were near Decatur, Ill. There were only two black people in the town and no one hardly ever saw them, so we were a curiosity. They charged 25 cents for people to just come in and look at us. Robert Johnson died in 1938 in Mississippi. Some people said he'd been voodooed or mojoed or poisoned by a woman. I suspect he died from a stomach ailment. He was an awful heavy drinker."

Shines moved to Holt in 1969. In a sense, it was a returning home to Alabama. His ancestors were from near Tuscumbia, and he remembers his grandmother telling him stories of slavery days in that area.  

Johnny Shines supposes he'll be singing the blues until his dying day.

For more on Shines, click HERE

Longtime Blues Preservation Organization Garners Prestigious Oakley Award

Mt. Zion Memorial Fund wins the Oakley Award 
from the Association for Gravestone Studies

The MZMF erected the marker for Charley Patton in 1991
The award winning work of the Mt. Zion Memorial Fund continues through the July 29 dedication of a memorial to eminent recording artist Armenter Chatmon (aka Bo Carter), of the Mississippi Sheiks, at the abandoned Nitta Yuma Cemetery in Nitta Yuma, Mississippi - To learn more and support this, please click HERE or GoFundMe

We are also currently working with St. John MB Church in Camden, MS to erect a memorial to Belton Sutherland, who folklorist Worth Long and Alan Lomax featured in the film The Land Where the Blues Began. To learn more, please click HERE or GoFundMe


Ruth and Moore first collaborated on the discovery of
the military marker of Son Simms in 2014, but Ruth's
coimetromania extends much farther back and connects
to his love for older photographic processes.
The Board of Trustees of the Association for Gravestone Studies (AGS) has unanimously approved the nomination to award Euphus Ruth a Fred Oakley Award both for your dedicated photographic investigation of the rural and abandoned graveyards throughout the Mississippi Delta. In addition, to your creative work, T. DeWayne Moore, who nominated you, convinced the board that your work with the Mount Zion Memorial Fund extends the necessity of this award. There you have provided important research, identification and preservation of prominent African American musicians' graves. The unearthed and restored markers and newly identified graves have helped to renew several African American burial grounds in your area. Indeed, you are an inspiration! 

We thank you for your work for and on such important historic and fragile cemeteries. Your award will be presented at the annual conference of the AGS at the University of Alabama this spring. 

With kind regards, 
Anne Tait Chair Awards Committee




Roosevelt T. Williams: The "Grey Ghost" Walks Again

Roosevelt T. Williams: The "Grey Ghost" Walks Again
By George Papajohn - 1989

Nobody knows you, yes, when
you're down and out
In your pocket, not one penny
And your friends, you have not any



Roosevelt T. Williams, Texas' 85-year-old "Grey Ghost," knows these words to be true. He knows them the way he once knew the freight trains of the Southwest that carried him from one show to the next, the way he knows how to walk onto a stage, or into a club, or a houseparty or a roller rink, sit down at an unfamiliar piano and in no time have the place jumpin', the tips jar janglin'.

On this sultry San Antonio Sun-day, the piano is an electric Yamaha—not the acoustic one that had been promised—and Ghost's manager and friend, Tary Owens, the architect of the Ghost's unlikely late-life comeback, is a little nervous. The Ghost, though, is taking it in stride as he heads into the sunshine for the Bowie Street Blues festival stage.

"That's okay," he said. "I'll do the best I can. If they don't like it, they can put some cotton in their ears." That isn't necessary. By the time the Ghost plays "Nobody Knows You When You're Down and Out"—one of his favorites among the 300 or so songs in a repertoire the piano professor has built in more than 60 years of study—the early-afternoon crowd of 300 gathered on a grassy incline is his.

There's no tips jar, but after Ghost's one-hour stint as opening act, Owens sells all eight copies of Grey Ghost records he has on hand, and the newly won fans are lining up for Ghost's autograph. Not bad for a man who didn't have a record re-leased until he was 83, who saw national fame pass him by four decades before, who only three years ago was not only down and out but believed by many to be gone for good, a true ghost at last.

"People are treating me like I'm 28 or 29," be said, painstakingly scrawling his given name and his nickname on a record jacket. "Here I am been half ready for the grave., But I ain't goin' yet." Tary Owens was not the first white man, or even the first Owens, to try to bring the Ghost to a larger audience.

In 1940, folklorist William Owens discovered the Ghost playing at a roller rink in Navasota, Tex., recorded some of his songs, including an original called "Hitler Blues" and wrote about his find. Other publications, including Time, followed up, and Alistair Cook used "Hitler Blues", in a BBC report on the impact of the war on American music.

"We had made permanent the work of 4 genuine folk poet and musician," Owens, who is not related to Tary, wrote in 1983 in his book, "Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song."

Piano men: Lavada Durst, Grey Ghost, Erbie Bowser. Photo by Clay Shorkey.
But his attempts to promote the Ghost were unsuccessful. "He was a black blues singer and there was not much of an audience for a black blue& singer, I was told at radio stations," Owens wrote. "The waste of imagination? Of talent? No one cared the to give him a chance."