ARTSCULTURE · HISTORICAL MARKER
The Chatmon Family
Bolton, Mississippi · Mississippi Sheiks
Arts & Culture
4
The Henderson Chatmon family, living near this site on Texas Street in 1900, produced some of Mississippi's most important blues and string band musicians. Henderson's sons Armenter, known as Bo Carter, and Sam Chatmon recorded extensively as solo artists and also with the Mississippi Sheiks, a popular group that featured their brother Lonnie Chatmon on fiddle. Various Chatmon ensembles entertained black and white audiences for several decades in Mississippi. In the 1930s the Mississippi Sheiks were the country's most prominent African American string band, recording classics including “Sitting on Top of the World,” “Stop and Listen Blues,” and “Winter Time Blues.” At dances the Sheiks featured various members of the prolific Chatmon family and friends from Bolton, Raymond, and Edwards, but in the recording studio the group was most often a duo of violinist Lonnie Chatmon and singer-guitarist Walter Vinson, sometimes joined by guitarist Bo Chatmon, who recorded more than 100 songs under the name Bo Carter, Sam Chatmon, or Charlie McCoy. The Chatmons played at dances in central Mississippi and the Delta, often splitting into smaller groups to make the pay go farther. On records they were best known for blues, but they also played waltzes, reels, Tin Pan Alley songs, ballads, and minstrel show tunes for both white and black audiences. Muddy Waters, then playing in a similar string band, said he “walked ten miles to hear them play.” Henderson Chatmon, born about 1850, was a fiddler who rented land from Gaddis & McLaurin Farms and raised crops with his sons at various locations south and west of Bolton. In the 1900 census the household was listed here between those of George C. McLaurin and Thomas Lacy. His wife Eliza and children Fred, Josie, Alonzo, Armenter, Edgar, Willie, Lamar, Vivian, Larry, and Harry, born between about 1885 and 1904, played multiple instruments including guitar, violin, banjo, mandolin, bass, and piano. Ferdinand, a son from Henderson's first marriage, Walter Vinson, Charlie and Joe McCoy, and Charley Patton, whom Sam said was a son of Henderson, also played with the Chatmons at times. Crystal Springs bluesman Houston Stackhouse sometimes played with Lonnie and with a group called the Mississippi Sheiks No. 2. The Sheiks recorded from 1930 to 1935, until their string band blues faded from fashion with record buyers. Bo Carter, who recorded “Corrine Corrina” and specialized in bawdy blues, continued recording until 1940 after moving to Anguilla. He and several Chatmons also lived at times in Coahoma County and in Jackson, where Harry remained, playing piano around the city and across the river in Rankin County. In 1936 Lonnie opened a cafe in Glen Allan, while Sam worked as a farmer and night watchman in Hollandale before beginning a new recording and touring career during the folk blues revival of the 1960s. In 1972 he and Vinson reunited to record as the New Mississippi Sheiks. As the other Chatmon brothers died or retired from performing, only Sam remained to carry on the family's musical tradition until his death in 1983.
PHOTOS
Photo: Mark Hilton
Photo: Mark Hilton
Photo: Mark Hilton
Photo: Mark Hilton
Photo: Mark Hilton
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Bolton, Mississippi · USA
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