 
Jimmie Rodgers was born on September 8, 1897, in Meridian,
Mississippi, the youngest of three sons. His mother died when he was very
young, and Rodgers spent the next few years with relatives in southeast
Mississippi and southwest Alabama. He eventually returned home to live with his
father, Aaron Rodgers, a maintenance foreman on the Mobile and Ohio Railroad,
who had settled with a new wife in Meridian.
Jimmie’s
affinity for entertaining and the road developed early. By age 13, he had twice
organized traveling shows, only to be brought home by his father. The first
time, he stole some of his sister-in-law’s bedsheets to make a crude tent. Upon
his return to Meridian, he paid for the sheets with money he had made from his
show! For the second trip, he charged to his father (without his father’s
knowing) an expensive canvas tent. Not long after that, Jimmie’s father found
Jimmie his first railroad job, as water boy on his father’s gang. A few years
later, Jimmie became a brakeman on the New Orleans and Northeastern Railroad, a
position secured by his oldest brother, Walter, a conductor on the line.
In
1924, at the age of 27, Jimmie contracted tuberculosis. The disease temporarily
ended his railroad career but gave him the chance to get back to his first
love, entertainment. He organized a traveling road show and performed across
the Southeast until a cyclone destroyed his tent. He returned to railroad work
as a brakeman on the east coast of Florida, but eventually his illness cost him
his job. He relocated to Tucson, Arizona (thinking the dry climate might lessen
the effects of his TB), and worked as a switchman for the Southern Pacific. The
job lasted less than a year, and the Rodgers family (which by then included
wife Carrie and daughter Anita) settled back in Meridian in 1927.
Later
that year, Jimmie traveled to Asheville, North Carolina. In February 1927,
Asheville’s first radio station, WWNC, went on the air, and on April 18, Jimmie
and Otis Kuykendall performed for the first time on the station. A few months
later, Jimmie recruited a group from Tennessee called the Tenneva Ramblers and
secured a weekly slot on the station as the Jimmie Rodgers Entertainers. A
review in The Asheville Times remarked that “Jimmy (sic) Rodgers and his entertainers managed ... with a type
of music quite different than [the station’s usual material], but a kind that
finds a cordial reception from a large audience.” Another columnist said: “Whoever
that fellow is, he either is a winner or he is going to be.”
The
Tenneva Ramblers hailed from Bristol, Tennessee, and in late July of 1927,
Rodgers’ bandmates got word that Ralph Peer of the Victor Talking Machine
Company was coming to Bristol to record area musicians. Rodgers and the group
arrived in Bristol on August 3 and auditioned for Peer, who agreed to record
them the next day. That night the band argued about how it would be billed on
the record, which led Jimmie to declare, “All right ... I’ll just sing one
myself.”
On
August 4, Rodgers recorded two songs: “Sleep, Baby, Sleep” and “The Soldier’s
Sweetheart.” For the recordings, he received $100.
The
recordings were released on October 7, 1927, to modest success. In November of
that year, Peer recorded Rodgers again at the Victor studios in Camden, New
Jersey. Four songs made it out of this session: “Ben Dewberry’s Final Run,” “Mother
Was a Lady,” “Away Out on the Mountain” and “T for Texas.” In the next two
years, “T for Texas” (released as “Blue Yodel”) sold nearly half a million
copies, rocketing Rodgers into stardom.
In
the next few years, Rodgers did a movie short, The Singing Brakeman, and made various recordings across the
country. He toured the Midwest with humorist Will Rogers. On July 16, 1930, he
even recorded “Blue Yodel No. 9” (also known as “Standin’ on the Corner”) with a
young jazz trumpeter named Louis Armstrong, whose wife, Lillian, played piano
on the track.
Rodgers’
next to last recordings were made in August 1932 in Camden, and it was clear
that TB was getting the better of him. He had given up touring by then but did
have a weekly radio show in San Antonio, Texas, where he’d relocated when “T
for Texas” became a hit.
In
1933, Rodgers traveled to New York for recording sessions beginning May 17. He
completed four songs on the first take. But there was no question that Rodgers
was running out of track. When he returned to the studio after a day’s rest, he
had to record sitting down and soon retreated to his hotel, hoping to regain
enough energy to finish the songs he’d been rehearsing.
The
recording engineer hired two session musicians to help Rodgers when he came
back to the studio a few days later. Together, they recorded a few songs,
including “Mississippi Delta Blues.” For his last song of the session, Jimmie
recorded “Years Ago” by himself, finishing as he’d started six years earlier,
just a man and his guitar. Within 36 hours, “The Father of Country Music” was
dead.
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