Jan Howard

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Jan Howard (born Lula Grace Johnson; March 13, 1929 – March 28, 2020)[1] was an American author, as well as a country music singer and songwriter. As a singer, she placed 30 singles on the Billboard country songs chart, was a Grand Ole Opry member and was nominated for several major awards. As a writer, she wrote poems and published an autobiography. She was married to country songwriter Harlan Howard.

Jan Howard
Howard at the Grand Ole Opry in 2001
Born
Lula Grace Johnson

(1929-03-13)March 13, 1929
DiedMarch 28, 2020(2020-03-28) (aged 91)
Resting placeSpring Hill Cemetery (Nashville, Tennessee)
Occupations
  • Singer
  • songwriter
  • author
Years active1958–2020
Spouses
  • Mearle Wood
    (m. 1945; div. 1953)
  • Lowell "Smitty" Smith
    (m. 1953; ann. 1955)
  • (m. 1957; div. 1968)
  • Maurice Acree Jr.
    (m. 1990, divorced)
Children4
Musical career
Genres
InstrumentVocals
Labels
Websitejanhoward.com

Howard was mostly raised in West Plains, Missouri. The family moved to various homes during her childhood. Marrying in her teens, Howard and her husband relocated various times, including Colorado, Kansas, Illinois, and Missouri. She took several part-time jobs to support her growing family, which included three children. Howard divorced her first husband in 1953. She met and married her second husband the same year. Moving to his military base, the couple and her three children lived a suburban lifestyle. In 1955, Howard discovered that he was a bigamist and she resettled with her children in Los Angeles, California.

In 1957, she met and married Harlan Howard. Early in their marriage, he discovered that she could sing. Impressed by her voice, Harlan arranged for her to record demonstration tapes. These tapes were heard by other country artists and led to her first recording contract with Challenge Records. Howard had her first major country hit in 1960 with "The One You Slip Around With". As her husband's songwriting became more successful, Howard's recording career followed suit. She had her biggest success after signing with Decca Records. Howard had major hits with the singles "Evil on Your Mind" (1966) and "My Son" (1968). She also had several hits after teaming up with Bill Anderson, including the number-one hit "For Loving You" (1967). The pair continued recording and touring together until the mid-1970s.

By 1973, two of Howard's children had died and she divorced Harlan Howard. In a depressive state, she nearly gave up her career. Upon the encouragement of other performers, she released several more albums and singles into the 1980s. At the same time, she began devoting time to other interests including writing. In 1987, Howard published her best-selling autobiography entitled Sunshine and Shadow. She also started writing poems and short stories, and remained active in other ways, including regular appearances on the Grand Ole Opry. She also worked with United States military veterans through various programs. She donated to charities and spoke at fundraisers.

Early life

1929–1945: Childhood and teenage years

Lula Grace Johnson was born in West Plains, Missouri, the daughter of Linnie and Rolla Johnson.[2] She was the eighth of 11 children,[3] including two siblings who died before the age of two.[4] Her mother was a nurse's assistant who took take care of elderly people at the family house.[5] Her father was a brick mason who received employment assistance from the Works Progress Administration during the Great Depression.[6] The family moved frequently in her childhood in order for her father to sustain employment. They lived in various midwest communities including Kansas City, Birch Tree, and Oklahoma City.[7] The family briefly returned to West Plains when Lula was eight. Upon her return, she was raped by a family friend.[1] "My body was violated and my mind was damaged in a way I wasn't to know the full extent of for years to come," she wrote in her 1987 autobiography.[8] The abuse was kept secret from her family in the years to come.[3]

Because the family moved frequently, Lula attended school sporadically during her childhood. Most of the buildings were one-room schoolhouses that were convereted into churches on Sundays.[9] At times, truancy officers would come by the Johnson home, forcing Lula to return to school.[10] Lula's mother separated from her father in 1943, returning the children to West Plains. To help support the family, Lula worked as a dishwasher in a local cafe. Because the cafe owner could not afford to pay her, he gave Howard's family food for weekly meals. She then took a job at a drugstore at age 16.[11] In 1945, she married Mearle Wood and subsequently dropped out of high school.[12] Wood enrolled in the military after their marriage and the couple resettled Waynesville, Missouri. In their first home together, they shared a house with another military couple. She briefly returned to her parents' house after discovering Wood was engaging in an affair. However, when Wood was restationed in Little Rock, Arkansas, Howard reunited with him in his new location.[13]

1946–1957: Early adulthood

Lula gave birth to three sons between the late 1940s and early 1950s.[12] The young family continued to move as Wood took on various jobs and attempted to start university coursework as a teacher. One of their first residences was at a college campus in Pittsburg, Kansas. After Wood was informed of a better university to study teaching, he moved the family to Greeley, Colorado.[14] Lula claimed that Wood refused to hold a job and with three small children, the family had little money to survive on, which resulted in Lula asking Wood's parents for money.[15] In addition, the family's rented trailer caught on fire in the middle of the night.[16] Lula and her children then returned to Missouri following the fire while her husband stayed at the university.[17] Wood then dropped out of college but found a job as a public school teacher in the rural farm community of Dora, Missouri. The family then rented a three-home house with limited amenities. However, after Lula's youngest son developed pneumonia, they moved to a home closer to Dora's downtown neighborhood.[18]

 
A downtown view of West Plains, Missouri, the hometown of Howard

Wood then brought his wife and children to Cairo, Illinois where he planned to work in a canning factory. After Lula discovered the dilapidated conditions in Cairo, she and her children left. Wood then moved his family to Sunflower, Kansas where he taught in a public high school. Wood was then fired after engaging in an affair with another teacher.[19] After getting a new job repairing railroad tracks, Wood moved the family to Verdonia, Kansas. Yet, Wood was often missing from home and spent most of his income. Lula and her children then abandoned the apartment after the landlord threatened eviction. When the car Lula was driving ran out of fuel, Lula pulled over into a residential home where an elderly couple took her and her children in for several weeks. After asking for money, the family returned back to her parents home.[20] Lula and her husband briefly reunited in West Plains after he obtained a new teaching position. However, Wood quit his job and when he decided to move again, Lula refused. According to Lula, Wood was angered by her refusal, and held a butcher knife to throat in response.[21] His actions were interrupted when a friend knocked on the front door of their home. Lula and her three sons fled to her family's Oklahoma home the same day.[3] Lula and Wood divorced in 1953.[3]

Lula and her children then moved in with her brother near Columbus, Ohio. She then married her brother's friend and US military sergeant Lowell "Smitty" Smith.[22][3] Smith moved Lula and her children into local military housing and got a job in the "tea room" of the Morehouse Fashion Department Store. Lula then gave birth to the couple's child in 1954 who died shortly after birth due to complications from a cerebral hemorrhage.[23] Smith was then transferred to Warrensburg, Missouri where the couple rented a three bedroom home in a suburban community.[24] In Missouri, Lula became pregnant again but miscarried the child.[3] Shortly after the miscarriage, Smith was transferred to the Panama Canal Zone and informed Lula he would send for her once he was settled.[25] After not nearing from Smith, she received a letter in the mail informing her than Smith's first wife had never actually filed for divorce. Smith then reunited with his wife and his marriage to Lula was annulled in 1955.[26][27]

Lula decided to make a new start in Gardena, California in 1955. After pawning Smith's wedding ring for $25, Lula and her two children took a bus out to California. She then worked a series of low-wage jobs (including a cocktail waitress in a men's club), writing in her book, "I must have had 30 jobs in days."[28] Despite not being able to "type or take shorthand", Lula obtained a secretarial position. Her friend was dating country artist Wynn Stewart who introduced Lula to his friend and aspiring songwriter Harlan Howard.[27][29] The couple then married 30 days after their meeting in 1957.[30][12]

Singing career

1958–1963: Early success

Lula would often sing to herself while attending to domestic duties but was too shy to sing in front of other people. Alone in her kitchen one day, Lula was singing when she was heard by her husband who impressed by her singing skills. "I didn't know you could sing," he told her. He then convinced Lula to record a demonstration record of his newly-composed song "Mommy for a Day". The demo was later heard by Kitty Wells who recorded it and her version made the US country charts in 1958.[31] Howard then brought his wife to Bakersfield, California to record more demo records of his songs. Among them was "Pick Me Up on Your Way Down", a song heard by Charlie Walker whose version also became a US country radio success.[12] Howard also believed that his wife could have her own country music recording career.[32] With his encouragement, Lula and Wynn Stewart recorded a demo of the song "Yankee Go Home". Howard then brought it to Joe Johnson of Challenge Records (who Stewart was recording for). Howard told Johnson he could take the song if he signed his wife too.[33] She then officially signed with the Challenge label.[1] The label then changed her name from Lula to "Jan".[34] Under the name "Jan Howard", her own version of "Pick Me Up on Your Way Down" was released as her debut single in 1958.[35]

 
Early publicity photo of Howard in an ad from Billboard, 1960

Jan and Wynn Stewart's duet of "Yankee Go Home" was released as a single by Challenge in 1959[36] and was followed by a second duet single in 1960 titled "Wrong Company". The latter reached the top 30 on the US Billboard country songs chart.[37] Her recent success prompted Joe Johnson to release a solo single by called "The One You Slip Around With" (penned by Harlan Howard and Fuzzy Owen).[38] The song rose into the US country top 15 in 1960.[39] Its success brought Jan the "Most Promising Country Female" award from both Billboard and Jukebox Operators magazines.[12] Jan and Stewart then embarked on a three-day tour in Lubbock, Texas and an appearance on the Town Hall Party California television program. With Harlan's songwriting career gaining momentum, the Howard's received royalty checks on a regular basis. The income financed the Howard's move to Nashville, Tennessee in 1960.[40]

Jan was still battling shyness despite having a recording career. She had trouble following a backing band and stage fright caused her to often lose pitch. She also received anonymous phone calls from people who mocked her performance abilities. Jan's fear of her peers resulted in her leaving performances right after doing her slot. This was often the case with her initial Grand Ole Opry performances.[41] After watching Patsy Cline perform on the Opry, Jan was confronted by Cline who thought she was conceited for not communicating with her. After she pushed back, Cline laughed at the incident and the pair became close friends.[42] Jan would record the demo for Cline's "I Fall to Pieces". Although the song was promised to Jan by her husband (who co-wrote it with Hank Cochran), it was given to Cline in belief that it would sell more copies than Jan's version would.[43] Because the Howard family owed the IRS $20,000 in back taxes[44] Jan began touring and booking agent Hubert Long organized her tour dates. She then started appearing on package shows alongside June Carter, Skeeter Davis, George Jones, Buck Owens, and Faron Young.[45]

Without her approval, Jan's Challenge recording contract was bought by Capitol Records. Discovering that $5000 would be paid out of her royalties, she went before a court judge who sided with her. However, after having an argument with her husband about the contract, she ultimately "agreed to drop" the legal battle.[46] According to Jan, her first Capitol sessions with an unnamed producer were "a disaster". Frustrated, she contacted Ken Nelson who agreed to produce her in Los Angeles. The Capitol marketing division steered Jan's music towards the pop market, which resulted in her recording several pop covers.[47] From the sessions, Howard's debut studio album was released in 1962 called Sweet and Sentimental.[48] She recorded for Capitol through 1963 yet only had one US country charting single: a cover of "I Wish I Was a Single Girl Again".[37]

1964–1974: Peak commercial success

Jan left her Capitol recording contract in 1964 but continued touring. Instead of having her own band, she often relied on house bands (who were often unfamiliar with her music) so she could avoid having to pay for additional expenses and provide her an income of $500 to $600 per gig.[49] The Howard's also started their own publishing company called Wilderness Music and set up a Nashville office during this period.[50] Harlan then informed his wife that Owen Bradley of Decca Records was interested in signing her. After the Howard's made a demo of four songs and presented it to Bradley, Jan signed with the label. Among their four demo's was Harlan's self-penned "What Makes a Man Wander?".[51] When officially released as a single for Decca, it rose into the US country songs top 30 in 1965.[39] According to Jan, Bradley had a hard time separating her musical style from her Decca counterparts (Brenda Lee and Loretta Lynn) which caused her follow-up singles to fail. The pair then found another Harlan-penned tune called "Evil on Your Mind".[52] Released as a single, it rose to the number five position on the US country songs chart in 1966 and ultimately became Jan's highest-peaking solo release.[37] The Grammy-nominated single[53] became identified as a signature song in Jan's career[54] and later served as the title track to her US country top ten LP Jan Howard Sings Evil on Your Mind.[55]

 
Howard in an issue of Billboard Magazine, August 1968

The success of "Evil on Your Mind" led to an increased demand for Howard's concert bookings. "If I thought I'd been busy before, it was a vacation compared to now," Howard wrote. In 1966, she played a tour alongside other artists that ended at the Hollywood Bowl in California. She also played a show in Detroit, Michigan that attracted roughly 24,000 people.[56] While not touring, Howard was in the recording studio. Her next single release was "Bad Seed", which reached number ten on the Billboard country chart in 1966.[12] An album of the same name followed in 1967 that reached number 13 on the country albums chart.[57] Her fourth studio album, This Is Jan Howard Country, was released in October 1967 and reached the top ten on the Billboard country chart.[58] Her further hit singles during this time included "Roll Over and Play Dead" (1967), "Any Old Way You Do" (1967), and "Count Your Blessings, Woman" (1968).[59] Music writers and critics took notice of her material as well. In Billboard's 1968 review, one writer called her singing to be "loaded with sincerity and heart."[60] Nashville music journalist Robert K. Oermann wrote in 2003, "Jan specialized in up-tempo tunes, usually filled with feisty female lyrics provided by Harlan...She brought feminine spunk to the Nashville Sound."[59]

Howard also began touring and recording with Bill Anderson during this period.[39] Both artists were not only on the same label but also were being booked by Hubert Long. On the road, the pair would sometimes sing together, often performing the song "I Know You're Married But I Love You Still". Anderson and Howard approached Owen Bradley with the proposal of recording duets. Bradley agreed and the pairing began with their first single in 1965.[61] Their second single was 1967's "For Loving You". It became Howard's first and only single to reach the number one spot on the Billboard country chart.[39] The duo's debut album of the same name reached number six on the country albums chart in 1968.[62] Now a successful musical collaboration, Howard joined Anderson's roadshow and also became part of his syndicated television program.[12] The show was mostly filmed in Windsor, Ontario, which meant Howard had to fly there every two weeks for tapings.[63] Working with Anderson provided her with a steady source of income.[64]

In 1968, Howard's oldest son Jimmy was drafted into the army to fight in the Vietnam War.[65][66] Howard wrote to him frequently, including one letter that was put to music.[59] Her second son (Carter Howard) and Anderson inspired Howard to record it. Upon showing the letter to Owen Bradley, he insisted that she record it.[67] Decca entitled the letter "My Son" and it was released as a single in 1968, reaching number 15 on the Billboard country chart.[39] Howard received over 5,000 letters from soldiers and their families following its release. "They said they felt like it was for them," Howard commented.[59] The song was later nominated for Best Female Country Vocal Performance at the Grammy Awards.[53] Before the end of 1968, Jimmy Howard was killed in battle, aged 21.[65]

In July 1969, Howard's self-titled seventh studio album was released and reached number 25 on the Billboard country albums survey.[68] In 1970, Howard released an album of patriotic music entitled For God and Country. It was partially inspired by a poem her son Carter had written called "I Am". Put to music, the poem was featured on her album. Howard also decided to dedicate the album to Jimmy. "It was the most difficult album I'd ever recorded, yet one that would always be the closest to my heart," Howard wrote in 1987.[69] Despite personal difficulties, Howard continued working as part of "The Bill Anderson Show".[12] In March 1970, the duet released their second album entitled If It's All the Same to You. Its title track became a top ten country single.[70] They continued recording and touring together through 1973. Their further singles reached the top ten on the Billboard country chart: "Someday We'll Be Together" (1970) and "Dis-Satisfied" (1971).[39] By 1973, Howard's latest singles were reaching minor chart positions on the Billboard country survey. According to Howard, she approached Owen Bradley about the idea of working with a new producer at Decca. Bradley declined the proposition and Howard ultimately left the label in 1974.[71]

1975–2020: New directions and slowing down

By 1975, Howard had left Bill Anderson's road and television shows. "I wasn't mentally or physically able to keep up the pace doing the show full time," she later wrote.[72] Anderson replaced her with a newer artist named Mary Lou Turner and Howard was working by herself again. She had fewer concert dates than before and was working with pick-up bands who "would have made good electricians", according to Howard. Some nights, she performed with little to no instrumentation. During one booked engagement, she performed on the back of a flatbed truck. "Many nights I'd be so depressed and ashamed, I'd go back to the motel, cry and go to sleep," Howard wrote.[72] During this time, she began touring with Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash as part of their roadshow.[59] "It'll do you good," the Cashes said to her. Howard toured with the show nationally and internationally. This included performances in Hawaii and Australia.[73] Not only touring together, Howard also joined Cash in the recording studio. She sang background vocals on some of his biggest hits. This included singing the line, "Mama sang tenor", on his 1969 hit "Daddy Sang Bass". She also was a background vocalist on Cash's 1963 hit "Ring of Fire".[74]

 
Howard on stage at the Opry, 2000s

Howard also returned to the recording studio. During this period, she was a neighbor of Nashville producer, Larry Butler,[75] who produced her next studio album. Titled Sincerely, Jan Howard, it was issued on GRT Records.[76] The album's first and only single to chart was "Seein' Is Believin'", which peaked outside the top 40 of the Billboard Hot Country Singles list.[77] In 1977, she briefly signed with Con Brio Records, where she had three minor hits on the country chart. This included the song, "To Love a Rolling Stone" (1978), which was her final chart appearance.[78] In the late 1970s, she also toured as part of Tammy Wynette's roadshow as both a background and lead vocalist.[79]

In the early 1980s, record producer and friend Pete Drake asked Howard to be part of a new album series he was producing for Grand Ole Opry members. She agreed to the project and collaborated with Drake on her next studio album.[80] Titled Stars of the Grand Ole Opry, the album was released by First Generation Records in April 1981.[81] It contained re-recorded versions of Howard's hits and several new tracks.[80] Howard continued recording during the decade. Her next studio album was released on AVI Records in 1983 called Tainted Love.[22] The album's title track was a cover of the hit originally written by Ed Cobb. Cobb also shared production credits on the album's release.[82] In 1985, Howard was part of a joint venture between MCA and Dot Records, which included several other veteran artists. From the venture, a self-titled studio album was released in 1985. Produced by Billy Strange, it was Howard's last studio release.[83]

In the 1990s, Howard slowed down her singing career.[84] Howard spoke of her career slow down and her continued passion for singing in her autobiography: "I love to sing and hope that, for a long time to come, God will give me the opportunity to do so. And when he tells me to quit, I hope I have the sense to follow His advice."[85] While working occasionally, she mainly did performances as part of the Grand Ole Opry cast.[84][86] In the 2000s, Howard was inducted into the Missouri Country Music Hall of Fame and released a boxed set of her recorded material.[87] She has since appeared on albums by other artists. In 2007, she recorded a duet with Bill Anderson and Vince Gill for Anderson's studio release, Whisperin' Bluegrass.[88] In 2017, Howard and Jessi Colter appeared on Jeannie Seely's studio album Written in Song, singing on the track "We're Still Hangin' in There, Ain't We Jessi".[89] In 2019, she celebrated her 90th birthday at the Opry, making her the show's oldest living member.[90]

Style and legacy

 
Howard backstage at the Opry, 2017

Howard's musical style was rooted in the country and Nashville Sound genres.[39][91] Her music has been described as being part of the foundational landscape of country music. Stephen Thomas Erlewine of Allmusic spoke of her singing style in his review of The Very Best of Wynn Stewart and Jan Howard CD in 2004. "Howard is a strong,, straight-ahead, hardcore country singer, and the sides collected here are excellent, unheralded pure honky-tonk with a Bakersfield tinge."[92] Robert K. Oermann commented on Howard's "brassy" singing style and noted that her Decca recordings were "downright gutsy", "sassy" and "self-assured."[93] Oermann also spoke on Howard's legacy as an artist: "Jan opened the door for many more Nashville Sound stylists. Marion Worth, Margie Bowes, Connie Smith, Jeannie Seely and Connie Hall climbed the charts."[59]

Howard is also remembered for her commercial success. Sandra Brennan of Allmusic called her "one of the hottest female vocalists of the 1960s."[81] Ken Burns called her "one of the most popular female country artists of the 1960s and early 1970s."[54] Her legacy has also been mentioned in recent years. In 2018, she was ranked among the "100 Greatest Women of Country Music" in a poll by Country Universe.[94] In 2005, Howard's single, "Evil on Your Mind", was listed as one of country music's "500 greatest singles" in the book Heartaches by the Number.[54] In 1971, she became a member of the Grand Ole Opry and continued to make public appearances there until 2019.[95]

Writing career and other professions

1966–1983: Songwriting

In addition to singing, Howard wrote songs for herself and others. One of her first released compositions was "Crying for Love", which appeared on her 1966 studio album Jan Howard Sings Evil on Your Mind.[96] Howard's songs continued to appear on her studio albums over time. Self-penned songs appeared on the studio albums For God and Country,[97] Love Is Like a Spinning Wheel,[98] Sincerely, Jan Howard[99] and Stars of the Grand Ole Opry.[80] Songs she composed were also recorded by other artists. In 1966, she wrote "It's All Over But the Crying", which became a major hit for Kitty Wells.[59] The same year, the song was given among the "Most Frequently Played Tracks" accolade from the BMI Awards. Howard later called the situation "ironic" because her husband (Harlan Howard) was better known for songwriting. At the time of the awards dinner, the Howards had separated, but attended the event as a couple.[100]

As a songwriter, Howard co-wrote songs with Bill Anderson (left) and Tammy Wynette (right).

Howard also penned songs with other artists. With Bill Anderson, she wrote "I Never Once Stopped Loving You", which became a major hit for Connie Smith.[59] The pair also co-wrote "Dis-Satisfied", which they made a hit of their own as a duet partnership. Howard's son, Carter, was also given credit on its writing. The song appeared on their studio album Bill and Jan (Or Jan and Bill).[101] Howard also self-penned "Love Is a Sometimes Thing," which was recorded and became a major hit for Anderson. She would also release it as a single herself around the same period. These compositions were also awarded BMI Songwriters Awards.[59] In 1980, she collaborated with Tammy Wynette in writing the track "Only the Names Have Been Changed". The song appeared on Wynette's studio album Only Lonely Sometimes.[102] Her last writing credit is on the track, "My Friend", a song that appeared on Howard's 1983 studio album Tainted Love.[82]

1987–2020: Autobiography and other writing

For several years, friends told Howard that she should write an autobiography. In response, she said, "Yeah, it would make a great soap opera."[3] Howard had written an outline for the book, but put it aside for three years before turning to it again.[100] She later explained that she chose to continue writing the autobiography because she became suicidal. In 1979, she was visiting a friend in Florida. "It was a very bad time in my life. I was in Florida and, I didn't know whether I was going to walk into the ocean or not. And I can't swim," Howard said in 2003. Deciding not to end her life, she went back inside the house. She then sat on the floor and wrote a song called "My Story". Howard later threw the song away because it was full of "bitterness". "Once I started again, it was just like rolling back the years," she said in 2003.[3]

The year of the book's release, Howard cancelled all her concert engagements to prepare for its completion.[103] When officially released in 1987, the autobiography was titled Sunshine and Shadow: My Story. The book was published by Richardson & Steirman, a company based in New York City.[84] Sunshine and Shadow received mostly positive reviews by critics upon its release. In their July 1987 review, Kirkus Reviews gave the book a positive commentary. Reviewers highlighted stories of Howard's interactions with other country artists and the recounting of her son's suicide. Kirkus concluded their review by stating, "Sure to be appreciated by die-hard country fans, and by any who seek a tale of victory over despair."[104] Publishers Weekly gave their review of the release in August 1987. Reviewers of the book praised Howard's personal stories, but disliked the editing style of the book.[105]

Also in the late 1980s, Howard explained that she was working on her first fiction short story and a novel.[59] In a 2015 interview, Howard explained that she still writes a "little bit of everything" including songs, poems and short stories. Howard also said she had started three fiction novels that had yet to be completed. "I need to put those together, I need to go through them. And I found things in there that I forgot I wrote and I said 'oh, this is pretty good' or 'this is bad'. So right now I'm gonna put those all together and put them in a leather-bound book," Howard said.[106]

 
Jan Howard's business card from when she was worked as a real estate agent, late 1970s

Howard also wrote out her recipes that she used. She featured directions for her recipes on her official website, which were updated on a monthly basis. On her recipe page, website administrators stated, "Each month on this page we’ll be adding a favorite recipe or two provided by Jan…so keep checking back."[107]

Other professions and efforts

In the late 1970s, Howard obtained her real estate license for a local company in Hendersonville, Tennessee, called Lakeside Realtors. As a realtor, she sold several homes including one to local Nashville musician Jimmy Capps.[59] Howard remained a real estate agent for only a short period of time. On her website, she commented that after a while, people would bring "sacks of tapes" for her to listen to rather than be potential clients. "My license is in retirement and will stay there, but I still pay my dues," Howard wrote on her fan page.[108]

In 2002, she appeared with Faye Dunaway in the film Changing Hearts. Other performers were featured in the cast including Rita Coolidge and Jeannie Seely.[109]

After her son was killed in the Vietnam War, Howard worked to support veterans returning from war, including with various organizations in support of the American military veterans.[110] She worked previously with the Veterans Administration, Veterans of Foreign Wars, and the Vietnam Veteran organizations. Howard contributed to a campaign that helped raise funds for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, which was finished in 1982. From Howard's efforts, she received the "Gold Medal of Merit Award" from the Veterans of Foreign Wars. "I never want to be in the forefront of anything like this, but it’s worth it to bring attention to those who gave so much. If it wasn’t for them, we wouldn’t have the life we enjoy as Americans," Howard commented in 2011.[111] Since 1982, Howard was involved in veteran-related activities at Middle Tennessee State University, where her son was a former student. In 2017, she made an appearance at the university's veterans' memorial service. She was presented with a "Gold Star Brick" from the school for her work with veterans.[112]

Personal life

Marriages

Howard was married four times.[113] At the time of her first marriage to Mearle Wood, she was only 16 years old.[12] The couple met when Howard was working at her local drugstore in West Plains, Missouri. He would frequently come by to say hello and have a soda. The two spent more time together, eventually becoming a couple and marrying.[114] Howard later said that she did not want to marry Wood, but her mother encouraged their courtship. "I felt like I was dressing for a funeral. And in a way, I was. The funeral of my girlhood," she wrote.[114] Her second marriage to Lowell "Smitty" Smith lasted only two years after discovering that he was a bigamist.[115]

In her third marriage to Harlan Howard, Jan's three children legally were adopted by him and took on his last name.[116] In the mid-1960s, the couple owned a publishing company in Nashville called "Wilderness Music". Together, they bought an older home, renovated it and turned it into a series of offices for the company.[117] Jan later commented that Harlan took control of the Wilderness when they divorced. According to Harlan, the company and its music were his "brainchildren". Upset about the situation, Jan said to her divorce lawyers, "I don't want anything. Just the divorce."[118] Following her divorce, she became closer to her divorce lawyer, Jack Norman. A licensed pilot, Norman took her on plane rides and also spent many nights at her home. The two became romantically involved while Norman was still married.[119] Their affair carried on into the mid 1970s.[120] In 1990, she remarried for a fourth time to Dr. Maurice Acree, Jr.[115] Only married for a short period of time,[121] Acree died in 2013, according to an obituary from The Tennessean.[122]

Children

From her first marriage, Howard gave birth to three sons: Jimmy, Carter (Corky), and David.[113] As a young child, Jimmy was hospitalized in critical condition with spinal meningitis. Within four weeks, he recovered from the illness.[123] During the Vietnam War in 1968, Jimmy was drafted into the military. Once he received his draft notice, Carter volunteered for the army. "If Jimmy's going, I'm going," he said to Howard.[124] After being sent to basic training, the military was supposed to let Jimmy come home, but they refused. Upset about the situation, Howard discussed the situation with her friend and country DJ, Ralph Emery. Through the assistance of Emery, Howard got in contact with Congressman Richard Fulton. Emery found Fulton at a restaurant at nine o'clock the same night when he contacted him. Fulton got permission from the military to send Jimmy home for 21 days. In her autobiography, Howard recounted the phone call she received from Jimmy the day he came home, "Mom! What did you do? The Secretary of the Army himself called down here! My sergeant came and got me and said, 'Howard! Go call your mother, then be prepared to work you ass off!'"[124] Howard also recalled Jimmy's nervousness as he prepared for Vietnam. The evening before his departure, he sat at her bedside explaining his nervousness and anxieties. The next evening, he flew out at three o'clock in the morning.[125]

The world was black. I prayed for death. The room was filled with people...One by one they filled in. Owen, Hubert, my brothers, Junior, Pete, Dick, and Bob...So many more. Each time I'd open my eyes someone would put a pill in mouth. Merciful sleep. Voices kept coming through. Someone said it would be ten days before they could get the boys home. Then I heard Dr. Goldner say, "she can't live ten days".

 —Howard on the days following her son's death.[126]

In October 1968, Jimmy was killed in action.[65] She found out when she saw several friends arrive at the front door of her home. Realizing the reasons for them being there, she began screaming and crying. Howard remembered the days following Jimmy's death in her autobiography, going through the days and weeks by "forcing" herself to keep going. She had trouble eating and sleeping, taking pills on a regular basis to help her through the anxieties and grief. "I was crying when I woke up, and crying when I went to sleep," she wrote in 1987. One morning, Howard made the decision to dispose of all her medicine and continue on with her life. "As I walked into the den and saw the relief on Corky and David's faces, my efforts were worthwhile," she wrote.[127]

Howard's youngest son, David, began abusing drugs in the years following Jimmy's death.[128] Prior to this, he had been employed at the Opryland USA theme park, where he appeared as an actor in several shows, including a major role in the cast of the play I Hear America Singing.[129] Howard then began noticing changes in his behavior, including coming home late at night and having symptoms of depression. When she would ask David, he would reply by saying that he was "just tired." She also noticed that he began associating with people who provided David with substances.[130] She eventually had him see a psychiatrist for his personal setbacks, but only found out that he was using the time for other reasons.[131] One morning in 1972, Howard found David in his bedroom dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound. She recalled that the next several days were a "blur". Devastated by her son's suicide, she stayed in bed for days at a time. After many weeks of grieving, Howard cleaned out his room and sold his Volkswagen Beetle. "When everything was done, I took one last look around, walked out, and closed the door on the past. But it would never be locked," she wrote.[132]

In the years following David and Jimmy's deaths, Howard's middle son Carter began working with military veterans. He also owned his own business and became a real estate broker in Nashville.[128]

Other personal challenges and death

The psychological trauma of Howard's childhood affected her as she entered her adult years.[115] After giving birth to her third child, she would cry uncontrollably. "There were many times my heart would pound so hard I thought it would pop out of my chest," Howard commented. Howard's sister took her to see a doctor, who explained she was having a "nervous breakdown". To calm her anxieties, he prescribed Howard a strong pharmaceutical drug she was told to take four times per day.[133] In the early 1960s, she was rushed to the hospital after experiencing intense bleeding. Doctors told her, after giving birth to a stillborn baby and a previous operation, Howard had a strong possibility of developing cancer if she did not have her uterus removed. Howard underwent surgery at the UCLA Medical Center in Los Angeles, and within three weeks was back to a normal routine.[134]

Her trauma followed her into her marriage with Harlan Howard. While married, her weight dropped below 97 pounds and she would pace their home at night. This prompted Harlan to institutionalize Jan.[115] In her autobiography, she recounted being brought into a hospital room with doctors and nurses. She recalled where she was screaming and shouting until a nurse gave her a shot, which put her "six feet under". A doctor diagnosed her with having paroxysmal tachycardia and sent her home. He also ordered her to seek counseling services from a psychiatrist. According to her psychiatrist, she developed a series of phobias from the traumatic experiences in her childhood.[135] After moving to Nashville, she continued having depressive episodes. One evening in 1962, she took a handful of sleeping pills and was rushed to the hospital. While at the hospital, her blood pressure dropped significantly low at which she was in critical condition. When she awoke, she recalled seeing Mother Maybelle Carter feeding her. "Little by little I felt stronger and knew, thank God, that I was going to live," she wrote.[136]

Years later, Howard reflected on her life experiences: "One thing I want to make clear is that I'm not a martyr. I can't stand self-pity. I don't deserve and don't want any kind of pity...There are a lot of people who have gone through worse things than I have."[59]

Howard died on March 28, 2020, fifteen days after her 91st birthday, in Gallatin, Tennessee. The cause of death was pneumonia.[1] "We were all so lucky so many nights to hear her voice on stage and to catch up with her backstage. We’re all better for having had her in our lives," said Dan Rogers, Vice President of the Grand Ole Opry.[137] She is buried at Spring Hill Cemetery, in Nashville.[138]

Discography

Awards and nominations

Year Nominee / work Award Result Ref.
1960 Billboard Most Promising Female Country Vocalist Won [139]
Cash Box Most Promising Country Female Vocalist Won [140]
Jukebox Operators Most Promising Female Artist Won [12]
1961 Cash Box Most Programmed Female Country Vocalist Nominated [141]
Most Promising Female Country Vocalist Nominated
1962 Nominated [142]
1966 Billboard Most Promising Female Vocalist Nominated [143]
Cash Box Top Female Vocalist – Albums and Singles Nominated [144]
Record World Fastest Climbing Female Vocalist Nominated [145]
1967 Billboard Top Female Vocalist Nominated [146]
9th Annual Grammy Awards Best Country Vocal Performance, Female – "Evil on Your Mind" Nominated [53]
Record World Top Female Vocalist Nominated [147]
1968 Billboard Top Female Vocalist Nominated [148]
Top Country Artist Nominated
Cash Box Most Programmed Country Album – For Loving You (with Bill Anderson) Nominated [149]
Country Music Association Awards Vocal Group of the Year (with Bill Anderson) Nominated [150]
Record World Top Vocal Duo (with Bill Anderson) Won [151]
1969 11th Annual Grammy Awards Best Country Vocal Performance, Female – "My Son" Nominated [53]
Record World Top Female Vocalist Nominated [152]
1970 Billboard magazine awards Top Female Vocalist – Albums and Singles Nominated [153]
Top Duos & Groups – Singles and Albums (with Bill Anderson) Nominated
Cash Box Most Programmed Country Vocal Group (with Bill Anderson) Nominated [154]
Country Music Association Awards Vocal Duo of the Year (with Bill Anderson) Nominated [150]
Record World Top Female Vocalist Nominated [155]
1972 Billboard Top Female Vocalist – Albums and Singles Nominated [156]
Top Duos & Groups – Albums (with Bill Anderson) Nominated
Record World Top Female Vocalist Nominated [157]
Top Duo Nominated
1992 Tennessee Adjutant General's Award Distinguished Patriot Medal Won [111]
2005 Missouri Country Music Hall of Fame Induction Inducted [54]
R.O.P.E. Awards Ernest Tubb Humanitarian Award Won [158]
2013 Songwriter Award Won [158]

References

Footnotes

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  6. ^ Howard 1987, pp. 4.
  7. ^ Howard 1987, pp. 3–11.
  8. ^ Howard 1987, p. 16-17.
  9. ^ Howard 1987, p. 33.
  10. ^ Howard 1987, p. 37.
  11. ^ Howard 1987, pp. 36–38.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Trott, Walt 2012, p. 250.
  13. ^ Howard 1987, p. 54.
  14. ^ Howard 1987, p. 68-69.
  15. ^ Howard 1987, p. 71.
  16. ^ Howard 1987, p. 79-80.
  17. ^ Howard 1987, p. 81.
  18. ^ Howard 1987, p. 81-86.
  19. ^ Howard 1987, p. 89-92.
  20. ^ Howard 1987, p. 93-97.
  21. ^ Howard 1987, p. 99-100.
  22. ^ Howard 1987, p. 100-115.
  23. ^ Howard, Jan 1987, p. 121.
  24. ^ Howard 1987, p. 126-127.
  25. ^ Howard 1987, p. 128-130.
  26. ^ a b Bufwack & Oermann 2003, p. 227.
  27. ^ Howard, Jan 1987, p. 137.
  28. ^ Howard 1987, p. 152-155.
  29. ^ Howard 1987, p. 155-156.
  30. ^ Bufwack & Oermann 2003, pp. 227–28.
  31. ^ Bufwack, Oermann & 2003 228, p. 166.
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