Tags
Appalachia, Ashland, Cincinnati, Ed Haley, fiddle, history, John Hartford, Lawrence Haley, life, music, Nashville, Portsmouth, U.S. South
Once I returned to Nashville, I called Lawrence Haley, who was in the mood to reminisce.
“Me and Pop hitch-hiked to Cincinnati out of Portsmouth a time or two,” he said. “We took old 52. And we’d had about three rides to get there.”
I asked him if Ed took his fiddle on those trips and he said, “Yeah, if he thought he was gonna be in a little bit other than country settings, he would put it in the case. But most of the time, he’d just carry it in his hand, tucked under his arm, maybe, with the bow in his hand.”
I wondered if Ed packed any extra bags on the road and Lawrence said, “Mostly just the clothes on his back, unless he was going on an extended trip — then he’d pack him a suitcase. He’d, of course, fill it up about a third with his homemade tobacco. His own cure — apple or peach or something. He’d take him some of that with him and off he’d go.”
Lawrence Haley passed away on February 3, 1995, the 44th anniversary of his father’s death.