The Coal Miner’s Daughter (October 2020 | Volume: 65, Issue: 6)

The Coal Miner’s Daughter

AH article image

Authors: Holley Snaith

Historic Era: Era 10: Contemporary United States (1968 to the present)

Historic Theme:

Subject:

October 2020 | Volume 65, Issue 6

Editor's Note: Holley Snaith is a historical researcher who has worked at the Nixon Foundation and Eleanor Roosevelt Center. Photos courtesy of Loretta Lynn Enterprises, unless otherwise noted.

Loretta Lynn recently visited her family's original cabin in Butcher Holler. David McClister.
Loretta Lynn recently visited her family's original cabin in Butcher Holler in eastern Kentucky. David McClister.

     “Well I was borned a coal miner’s daughter. 
     In a cabin, on a hill in Butcher Holler. 
     We were poor but we had love. 
     That’s the one thing my daddy made sure of. 
     He shoveled coal to make a poor man’s dollar.” 

“Coal Miner’s Daughter” has become one of the most revered and recognized songs in country music, its words true Americana. This October marks fifty years since Loretta Lynn released her autobiographical tune, the song she will forever be associated with, the one fans holler for her to sing before her shows even begin. 

Yet it is also Lynn’s most meaningful song. “It’s her favorite because she wrote it from the heart,” said Tim Cobb, Lynn’s longtime assistant and dressmaker, during a recent interview in Hurricane Mills, Tennessee. “You can’t escape from that.” 

Her journey from Kentucky coal miner’s daughter to the most-awarded female in country music has been a long one, but Loretta’s heart has never left that simple cabin on a hill. 

Surprisingly, when thirty-seven-year-old Loretta Lynn sat down and began writing “Coal Miner’s Daughter,” it wasn’t meant to be hers. She had been asked to compose a song for a bluegrass act called the Osborne Brothers, appearing on The Wilburn Brothers Show, a weekly television program starring Doyle and Teddy Wilburn that Lynn also performed on. She began writing the song in typical bluegrass style, but it soon became clear that it was going in an entirely different direction. 

Like many songwriters, Lynn writes about what is on her mind, and that day she was reminiscing over her childhood growing up in Butcher Holler, Kentucky, where bluegrass music was a tradition. It was after she completed that first verse that she realized this song was not meant for the Osborne Brothers; it was meant for her. By the end of the day, she had written nine verses. 

lynn in coalminer dress
Lynn wearing her "Coal Miner's Daughter" dress, the same one featured on the song's album cover and later worn by actress Sissy Spacek in the 1980 film based on the country singer's life. 

Lynn's producer at Decca Records, Owen Bradley, told her no one would want to listen to such a long song. So, she sat down and carefully removed three verses, an arduous task for a songwriter. Even with the song trimmed down, Bradley thought little of the tune, but he agreed to let Lynn record it out at his famous Bradley’s Barn in Nashville. She dictated the session, telling the steel