Uncle Dave Macon
The most widely known citizen of the
Kittrell community was "Uncle Dave Macon." David Harrison Macon
was born near Smart Station in Warren County in 1870. In 1883
when he was a young boy, his parents moved to Nashville and ran
the Broadway Hotel. After his father died, his mother sold the
hotel in 1886 and bought the Charles Ready farm at Readyville.
In 1889 he married Miss Matilda
Richardson and moved to a farm in the Kittrell community where
he lived until his death in 1952. In 1901, in addition to
farming, he started a wagon freight line from Murfreesboro to
Woodbury. He had two wagons. Hatton Sanfrod drove one, and he
drove the other until Archie, the oldest of his seven sons, was
big enough to help.
They went to Woodbury one day and to
Murfreesboro the next, handling and delivering materials all
along the way. He knew every man, woman, and child along the
twenty mile route and kept up with everything that happened.
When a truck line started in 1920, Mr. Macon decided it was time
to stop his wagons.
He always loved to sing and play the
banjo. After the boys go big enough to help with the freight
line, he had more time on his hands.
On rainy days he would take his banjo to
the neighborhood store and entertain all who came by. Soon he
started going to schools on Friday afternoons. School children
began calling him "Uncle Dave."
It was not long until he was called on
to help raise money with school programs, box suppers, pie
suppers, cake walks, picnics, and all kinds of community
affairs. If it were advertised that "Uncle Dave Macon" was going
to be on a program, there was sure to be a crowd, for everyone
loved his humor and ready wit as well as his music.
In the early twenties he played some at
Lowe's Theatre. In 1924 he went to Knoxville and did his first
recording.
When the "Solemn Ole Judge," Mr. George
Hay, started the WSM "Grand Ole Opry" in 1925, Uncle Dave Macon
became one of the first artists on the program.
During the next twenty-seven years he
seldom missed a Saturday night being there. He began calling
himself "The Dixie Dew Drop."
He was one of the first Grand Ole Opry
artists to begin a traveling program during the week. He went
all over the South, New Orleans, Atlanta, Birmingham, Mobile,
and many small towns, also New York and other northern cities.
He drew large crowds wherever he went.
He was a member of Haynes Chapel
Methodist Church. He died of pneumonia in 1952. He is buried in
the Coleman Cemetery on the Woodbury Road. One hundred and
twenty-five Grand Ole Opry stars contributed to the erection of
a three thousand ton granite monument to his memory beside the
highway on top of the hill overlooking Woodbury.
Today his name stands among the great of
the music world in Nashville where a plaque has been placed in
his honor in the Grand Ole Opry Hall of Fame.
Kittrell | Rutherford County |
Tennessee
Source: Rutherford County Historical
Society, Publication No. 2, winter, 1973.
(Sources: Interviews with Mr. Archie Macon and Mrs. Ruth Wood;
Magazine Section, Nashville Tennessean.)
|