This Day in History : [ 14 / Apr ]

Country legend Loretta Lynn is born in Butcher Hollow, Kentucky

If theres one thing nearly everyone knows about country-music legend Loretta Lynn its what her father Ted Webb did for a living.Like any man struggling to provide for a family during the Great Depression he took work wherever he could find it but his primary job was in the mines of the Consolidation Coal Company in the rugged mountains of eastern Kentucky.Ted and his wife Ramey raised eight children in their small wooden house in Johnson County including the most famous coal miners daughter in the world who was born on this day in 1935.As she sang in her autobiographical 1971 country hit Coal Miners Daughter Loretta Webb grew up dirt poor but well-loved and taken care of by her hardworking parents.

She adored music and sang in church choirs as a child but childhood did not last long for Loretta who was married at the age of thirteen and left Kentucky for the logging country of Washington State with her husband Oliver Doolittle Lynn.She was already a mother of four when she got her first guitar at age 18 and began to teach herself to play and write songs.Her next big move came at the age of 25 when Doolittle and Lorettas tireless promotion of her first record Im A Honky Tonk Girl got Loretta enough attention to warrant a move to Nashville where she signed a contract with Decca Records.

Success was the aptly named song that gave Loretta her first top-10 country hit in 1962 at the age of 27.Loretta Lynns record sales and chart performance over the next two decades were enough on their own to qualify her for genuine legend status among country singers but her contribution to the genre went beyond mere popularity.As a woman writing much of her own material and writing it from a strong feminine perspective Lynn helped transform the role of women in country music.Songs like You Aint Woman Enough and Dont Come Home a Drinkin (With Lovin on Your Mind) (both 1966) introduced a new kind of female narrative to country music while also giving Loretta Lynn two of her biggest hits.While Loretta Lynns popularity waned in the 1980s and 90s she made a creatively triumphant return with her 2004 album Van Lear Rose produced by Jack White of The White Stripes and named for a mining community near the place she was born on this day in 1935.