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The Author..Wayne Jancik
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STONEWALL JACKSON
“WATERLOO
“
(JOHN D LOUDERMILK, Marijohn Wilkin)
Columb1a 41393
No. 4 July 13. 1959
.
..
Stonewall Jackson was born in a railroad shack outside Tabor City, North Carolina, on November 6,
1932. His daddy, who named him after his great-grandfather (the historic Confederate General
Thomas Jonathan ”Stonewall” Jackson) died when Stonie was but two. Papa Jackson was a logging
train engineer who died of complications from a hernia, before Stonie was born. Mama, half Seminole
Indian, married a violent man. Conditions were rough, with money hard to come by and a stepdad
who would repeatedly beat him, one time leaving him for dead. Jackson played on an improvised,
hand-me-down string box until ’42 when he traded a tireless bike for a real guitar. At 14, Stonie left
home to roam. First joining the Army with falsified birth certificate, then the Navy, where he was
stationed 0n the U.S.S.
Kittyhawk,
which was a submarine rescue ship. With a rigged up sound
system, Stonie would play country tunes.
.n
From 1954 to 56
,
Stonie worked hard as a farmer and logger, saving up to go to Nashville and become
a country star. Without any arrangements or recommendations, Stonewall drove his logging truck to
the doors of the Grand Ole Opry, where he somehow wrangled an audition with Judge George D. Hay,
the founder of the institution. The somber judge signed him on the spot and Jackson made his first
appearance on the Opry that night, November l, 1956. The chances of managing such a move without
a hit record, then as now, were next to nil. Two years later, Stonewall would have that hit.
/
Once he played the Grand Ole Opry, doors of opportunity opened, including those at Columbia
Records. “Life Goes On,” his first single, charted top 10 on the C & W charts. The follow-up,
“Waterloo.”
was
a monster crossover hit. the most momentous recording of his entire career.
Three more singles made
Billboord’s
Hot 100, and a few more charted big on the country listings.
Near a half Century ago, the hits stopped, but not Stonewall. ln 1991, Stonie issued privately his
autobiography, From the
Bottom
Up.
.
Things begin, things end. “Every puppy has his day,” Stonewall sang. “Everyone must pay.” How true,
how true. And “Everyone must must meet his Waterloo.”
COPYRIGHT 1997 Wayne Jancik