- George S. Davis
Infobox Musical artist
Name = George S. Davis
Img_capt =
Img_size = 200 px
Landscape = no
Background = solo_singer
Birth_name =
Alias = The Singing Miner
Born = 1904
Died = death year and age|1992|1904London, Kentucky ,USA
Origin =Hazard, Kentucky ,USA
Instrument =Guitar ,singing
Voice_type =
Genre = Country
Occupation =Disc jockey ,singer-songwriter
Years_active = 1933-1992
Label =
Associated_acts =
URL =
Notable_instruments = D28Martin Guitar George S. Davis (1904 — 1992), The Singing Miner, composed and worked as a disc jockey on the radio stations in
Hazard, Kentucky from 1947 until 1969.Career
Davis began his career about 1933, about the same time the
United Mine Workers of America began organized the Coal Mines in Eastern Kentucky.Among the songs he wrote and sang were "White Shotgun," "Buggerman in the Bushes," "Coal Miner's Boogie," "When Kentucky Had No Union Men," and "Harlan County Blues." Although "
Sixteen Tons ", the song about the misery of coal mining, has generally been credited as being written in 1946 by U.S. country singerMerle Travis , who was the first to record it, Davis claimed that the Travis version was actually based on an earlier song of his called "Nine-to-ten tons" written in the 1930s. Davis' 1966 recording of his version of the song can be heard on the album "George Davis: When Kentucky Had No Union Men" (Folkways FA 2343, 1967).Death and legacy
Davis was 88 years old when he died in 1992 in
London, Kentucky . His D28Martin Guitar that he played from 1947 until 1992 will be displayed in the new studios of WKIC and WSGS on Main Street in Hazard.External links
* [http://www.wsgs.com/singing.htm Remembering George Davis The Singing Miner] wsgs.com
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