Introduction

LORETTA LYNN HAD FOUR CHILDREN BEFORE SHE TURNED TWENTY. NASHVILLE HAD NOT HEARD HER NAME, BUT THE SONGS WERE ALREADY STARTING IN THE KITCHEN.
Loretta Webb was fifteen when she married Oliver “Doolittle” Lynn.
He was a war veteran from Kentucky.
She was a coal miner’s daughter from Butcher Hollow who had barely been away from the hills where she grew up.
Not long after the wedding, they left for Custer, Washington — a logging town far from Appalachia, far from Nashville, and far from anything that looked like a music career.
By Twenty, She Had Four Children
Loretta was pregnant with her first child when they arrived.
By the time she turned twenty, she had four children.
There were diapers.
Laundry.
A small house crowded with the ordinary work of keeping a young family alive.
Doolittle worked.
Loretta worked at home.
Nobody in Nashville was waiting for a young mother with four little children and no record deal.
Nobody was asking her what she had to say.
But the songs were already beginning.
Then Doolittle Bought Her A Guitar
It was a seventeen-dollar Sears guitar.Guitars
Loretta did not know many chords.
She learned them one at a time.
She played around the house.
Then wherever somebody would let her stand near a microphone long enough to prove she could sing.
The guitar was cheap.Guitars
The life behind it was not.
She Did Not Need Nashville To Give Her Stories
The songs came from the world she already knew.
Women working all day and still dealing with a husband coming home drunk.
Women who had babies too young.
Women left behind.
Women talked down to.
Women cheated on.
Women expected to smile anyway.
Loretta did not need Nashville to invent those women for her.
She had grown up around them.
She had listened to them in kitchens, on porches, at church, in little houses where nobody called their lives material for songs.
Loretta did.
“I’m A Honky Tonk Girl” Opened The Door
In 1960, she recorded “I’m a Honky Tonk Girl.”
Doolittle helped press the records.
Mail them.
Drive from station to station.
Try to convince disc jockeys that this young woman from Washington had something country radio needed to hear.
The song became a hit.
Then came Nashville.
Then “Success.”
“You Ain’t Woman Enough.”
“Don’t Come Home a-Drinkin’.”
“Coal Miner’s Daughter.”
But those songs did not begin under studio lights.
They began much earlier.
The Real Beginning Was In The House
The deepest part of Loretta Lynn’s story is not only that she became one of country music’s greatest writers.
It is where the voice began.
A fifteen-year-old girl leaving Butcher Hollow.
A logging town in Washington.
Four children before twenty.
A house full of work.
A seventeen-dollar guitar.
And songs written by a woman who had already lived enough to know what other women were too tired to say out loud.
Loretta Lynn did not wait for Nashville to make her a country singer.
She became one after the babies were fed, the laundry was done, and the guitar was still close enough to reach.