San Diego Union-Tribune

HONKY-TONK SINGER, 60-YEAR MEMBER OF GRAND OLE OPRY

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Stonewall Jackson, the honky-tonk singer who overcame an abusive, hardscrabb­le childhood and went on to enjoy a long, successful career in country music, including more than 60 years as a member of the cast of the Grand Ole Opry, died on Saturday. He was 89.

His death, after struggling with vascular dementia, was announced by the Opry.

In the book “From the Bottom Up: The Stonewall Jackson Story as Told in His Own Words” (1991), Jackson said his stepfather, a shorttempe­red sharecropp­er named James Leviner, often abused him, once hoisting him high above his head and dashing him against a rock.

Another time, Jackson wrote, his stepfather beat him and left him lying senseless in a field after the boy accidental­ly spilled a bucket of water that he had been carrying.

“The physical scars and pain of being abused don’t last long,” Jackson said, “but the mental part of it goes on and on and on.”

Jackson’s 1962 recording “A Wound Time Can’t Erase,” a Top 10 country hit written by Bill D. Johnson, called to mind this early trauma.

“Is it power you’ve won for the things that you’ve done? What you’ve gained I guess

I’ll never see,” Jackson wonders aloud, his heartache set to the record’s chugging rhythms and uncluttere­d production.

“A Wound Time Can’t Erase” was the 11th in a string of 23 consecutiv­e singles that reached the country Top 40 for Jackson from 1958 to 1965. He later had a run of eight consecutiv­e Top 40 country hits from 1966 to 1968, and ultimately placed 44 singles on the country charts before the hits stopped coming in 1973.

“Waterloo,” a catchy ditty written by John D. Loudermilk and Marijohn Wilkin, was his biggest record, occupying the top spot on the country chart for five weeks in 1959 and crossing over to the pop Top 10. “B.J. the

D.J.,” his other No. 1 country single, began its run up the charts toward the end of 1963.

Most of Jackson’s recordings were made in the traditiona­l style known as hard country: a lean, shuffling sound accented by keening fiddle and steel guitar. Eleven of his singles, including “Life to Go,” a prisoner’s lament written by George Jones, and “I Washed My Hands in Muddy Water,” a Top 20 pop hit for Johnny Rivers in 1966, reached the country Top 10.

Stonewall Jackson was born on Nov. 6, 1932, in Emerson, N.C. His biological father, a railroad engineer named Waymond David Jackson, wanted him to be named after Thomas Jonathan

“Stonewall” Jackson, the Confederat­e general from whom he claimed to have been descended, but he died of complicati­ons of a hernia before Stonewall, the third of his three boys, was born.

Jackson’s mother, who was born Lulu Loraine Turner, remarried after his father died.

Fearing for their safety, Jackson’s mother eventually left her sons’ abusive stepfather and moved the family to Georgia, where they lived in a shack on the farm of the boys’ paternal grandmothe­r and her husband. Stonewall was working in the fields and cutting timber there before he reached the age of 10.

Hoping to escape the drudgery of sharecropp­ing,

Jackson, who received only a limited education, lied about his age and joined the Army when he was 16. He was discharged as soon as the deception was discovered.

The next year, he enlisted in the Navy, where he served on the submarine rescue vessel Kittiwake and began honing his skills as a guitar player and songwriter. Four years later, he returned to Georgia to farm a small plot before moving to Nashville to try his luck as a songwriter.

His many hit records notwithsta­nding, Jackson’s biggest claim to fame was his six-decade run on the Grand Ole Opry. He remains the only singer to have been invited to join the Opry cast before releasing a record, much less having a hit.

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