ONE OF THE MOST IMPORTANT COUNTRY SONGS EVER WRITTEN. SHE DIDN’T THINK ANYONE WOULD BUY IT. IT BECAME HER NAME. “Well, I was born a coal miner’s daughter…” Loretta Lynn wrote “Coal Miner’s Daughter” completely alone — on a $17 guitar that wouldn’t stay in tune. “Every word is true,” she said. It began in a one-room shack in Butcher Holler, Kentucky. Daddy worked all night in the Van Lear coal mines, all day in the cornfields — eight kids to feed. He died in 1959, his lungs ruined by coal dust. He never heard the song. In a couple of hours, she poured out nine verses — the washboard, the Bible by coal-oil light, shoes with holes patched with cardboard. Then she doubted anyone would buy “a song just about me.” The label shelved it for nearly a year. It hit No. 1 in 1970. Then a bestselling book. Then an Oscar-winning film. Then, simply, who she was. “She blazed so many trails for all of us girls in country music,” Miranda Lambert said. “Thank you for all the songs.” Some singers write songs. Loretta Lynn wrote the truth — and the truth outlived her.
How Loretta Lynn Turned a Hard Childhood Into One of Country Music’s Most Important Songs “Well, I was born a…