SHE WROTE IT ON A $17 GUITAR — BUTCHER HOLLER, KENTUCKY, 1969. ON DECEMBER 19, 1970, IT HIT #1. 48 YEARS LATER, AFTER A STROKE NEARLY TOOK HER VOICE FOREVER, SHE SANG IT ONE LAST TIME — AND NO ONE IN THE ARENA COULD BREATHE.Nobody asked Loretta Lynn to write it. She wrote it anyway — a daughter trying to get a dead man’s story into the world before the world forgot he ever existed. Ted Webb worked the Van Lear coal mines his whole life and died in 1959 with nothing to show for it but eight children and a shack on a hill. She wasn’t sure anyone would care. Then December 19, 1970 — it hit #1. Forty-eight years later, Nashville’s biggest stars gathered at Bridgestone Arena for her 87th birthday. She hadn’t sung since her stroke. Then someone handed her a microphone. Her sister Crystal started the song. Loretta joined in — fragile, unhurried, completely herself. The arena went silent. Not polite silence. The kind that only happens when everyone in the room understands they are watching something that will never happen again.What do you sing when the song outlives everything — except the reason you wrote it?
She Wrote It on a $17 Guitar — and Carried Her Father Back Into the Room One Last Time Some…