LORETTA LYNN’S FATHER WORKED THE COAL MINES HIS WHOLE LIFE — BUT NEVER LIVED TO HEAR THE SONG THAT MADE HIM IMMORTAL. Ted Webb did not know he was becoming country music history. He was just trying to feed eight children in Butcher Hollow, Kentucky, with coal dust on his clothes and a body that gave a little more away every time he went back underground. Loretta remembered the poverty clearly: the small cabin, the hard work, the kind of love that did not have much money but kept showing up anyway. Her father worked the Van Lear mines and came home worn down, but still present. Still Daddy. Black lung damaged him. A stroke took him in 1959, long before Loretta became the voice the world would know. That is the ache behind “Coal Miner’s Daughter.” It was not just a song about being poor. It was a daughter finally giving her father the honor life never gave him while he was alive. Ted Webb never got to stand in the crowd and hear the world sing his story back. But Loretta made sure they learned his name.
Loretta Lynn’s Father Worked the Coal Mines His Whole Life — But Never Lived to Hear the Song That Made…