WHEN LORETTA LYNN DIED IN TENNESSEE, THE ROAD BACK TO BUTCHER HOLLOW STARTED FILLING WITH MEMORY. Loretta Lynn passed away on October 4, 2022, at her ranch in Hurricane Mills, Tennessee. She was 90. The world mourned the legend — the gowns, the hits, the banned songs, the woman who made country music tell the truth about marriage, motherhood, poverty, and survival. But in Kentucky, the grief had a different address. Governor Andy Beshear said it plainly: “Today, all of Kentucky mourns the loss of our very own Loretta Lynn.” He called her a legend who blazed a trail in country music while telling the stories of Appalachia and Kentucky. And that is why her death did not only feel like losing a star. It felt like the mountains had lost one of their own. The road of memory led back to Butcher Hollow, the coal-country hollow where Loretta Webb was born in a small cabin before anyone knew her name. Long before the awards, before “Coal Miner’s Daughter,” before Nashville learned how much truth one woman could fit into a song, there was that house, those hills, and a childhood with little money but plenty of memory. She died at the ranch she loved. But the story kept walking back to the cabin that made her.
Introduction When Loretta Lynn Died in Tennessee, the Road Back to Butcher Hollow Started Filling...