Hank Williams

@Father of Contemporary Country Music, Birthday and Personal Life

Hank Williams was a renowned country musician from America

Sep 17, 1923

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Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: September 17, 1923
  • Died on: January 1, 1953
  • Nationality: American
  • Famous: Father of Contemporary Country Music, Musicians, Country Musicians
  • Nick names: Hank Williams I, Hank Williams Sr. Luke the Drifter, Hank Senior
  • Spouses: Audrey Sheppard, Billie Jean Jones Eshlimar
  • Siblings: Irene

Hank Williams born at

Alabama

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Birth Place

Williams married Audrey Sheppard, a musician on December 15, 1944, who gave birth to their only son ‘Randall Hank Williams’ (later Hank Williams Jr.) on May 26, 1949.

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Personal Life

However, they divorced on May 29, 1952. He married a 19-year old Billie Jean Jones Eshlimar, on October 18, 1952 who remained his wife until death.

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Personal Life

Williams died unexpectedly on January 1, 1953, while on his way to Charleston, West Virginia. He succumbed to a serious heart attack, as a result of years of alcohol and drug addiction.

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Personal Life

Born as Hiram King Williams on September 17, 1923, in Butler County, Alabama, Hank was the third child of Elonzo Huble Williams and Jessie Lillybelle Skipper.

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Childhood & Early Life

When he was seven, his father suffered from facial paralysis in 1930, for which he had to be hospitalized. To support her family, William’s mother moved with them to Greenville, Alabama, where she started a boarding house.

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Childhood & Early Life

Soon, the family left Greenville for Garland in 1935, before moving to Georgiana, Alabama, where his mother found a job in a cannery and also worked as a night-shift nurse.

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Childhood & Early Life

Williams learned guitar from a street performer named, Rufus ‘Tee-Tot’ Payne, who played blues. In 1938, he made a debut in radio with the WSFA radio studios. His voice was liked by the audience and soon he was earning enough to support his family.

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Childhood & Early Life

In 1939, he began a band named ‘Drifting Cowboys’ and quit school in the month of October that year, to work for his band on a full-time basis.

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Childhood & Early Life

Singing for the radio helped him establish his image in the music industry and in 1946 he went to Acuff-Rose Music, a music publishing company. Impressed by his talent, the company signed him and he had his first recording session on December 11, that year.

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Career

Some of his recordings caught the attention of MGM Records which earned him a contract with the company in 1947. He recorded ‘Move It On Over’, his first major single which was a huge hit.

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Career

In 1948, he appeared in the radio show ‘Louisiana Hayride’ which helped him establish a larger fan base. To add to his increasing reputation, he came up with the single ‘Lovesick Blues’, a massive hit which earned him the ticket to Grand Ole Opry, a very famous country music stage concert, in Nashville.

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Career

Through the 1950s, he recorded a number of hit songs, among which the single ‘Cold, Cold Heart’ became immensely popular.

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Career

As a result of his growing addiction towards alcoholism and the subsequent notoriety, he was fired from Grand Ole Opry on August 11, 1952. His public image suffered a lot and he began playing with local bands.

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Career

His first hit single ‘Move It On Over’, was the singer’s first major hit, which peaked at no.4 on the Billboard Country Singles chart.

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Major Works

He came with ‘Lovescik Blues’ in 1949, which sold 50,000 copies in just two weeks and went on to become number one on Billboard's Top C&W singles for a minimum of six weeks.

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Major Works

‘I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry’ another hit single by the singer, was placed at no.111 on ‘Rolling Stone’s’ list of the ‘500 Greatest Songs of All Time’. The song was recorded by several artists’ after William’s death.

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Major Works

His ‘Your Cheatin' Heart’ was also a smash hit, topping in the Billboard's Country & Western chart and selling millions of copies. It was featured at 217th position on ‘Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time’ and was placed at no. 5 on ‘Country Music Television's’ ‘100 Greatest Songs in Country Music’.

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Major Works