
This month, I want to take a closer look at the man who is considered by most people familiar with gospel music as the “father of southern gospel music”.
James David Vaughan was born December 14, 1864 in Giles County, Tennessee. Music was an integral part of his life from the outset, as was church. He was motivated from very early in life to the concept of sharing the gospel through song.
As a teenager, he attended a singing school and quickly assimilated the concepts and rudiments of shape note singing. By the time he was eighteen, he was teaching singing classes himself, and in a short time he started a male quartet composed of his three younger brothers and himself to publicize his school and his teaching, a portend of what was to come in the succeeding years.
Vaughan married a Tennessee girl, Jennie Freeman, in 1890, and suddenly decided to relocate to Cisco, Texas, a rural town in the central part of the state. Vaughan had an uncle there who was a Methodist minister, and who more than likely encouraged young James to begin a teaching career there. It wasn’t long afterward that most of James’ family, including his parents and his brothers John and Charles, likewise moved to Cisco.
Vaughan not only began teaching public school, he continued to offer friends and neighbors alike the opportunity to learn music through shape-note singing schools. By 1892, he met up with Ephraim Hildebrand, who operated a Virginia music publishing company, and also taught advanced normal schools along with traditional singing schools. Through the connection with Hildebrand, Vaughan became even more interested in music as a career than before. Hildebrand convinced Vaughan to compose gospel songs of his own. This proved to be a fortuitous move for Vaughan, who by 1896 was a published writer in “Crowning Day #2, a shaped-note gospel song collection.
It was tragedy, though, that prompted the next big move in Vaughan’s life. A tornado devastated Cisco, and Vaughan took his young and growing family back to Giles County, Tennessee, where James became a school principal there.
Vaughan by this time was firmly committed to making music his life’s calling, and in 1901 left his school principal job to relocate to Lawrenceburg, Tennessee. By this time he had already published his first independent song sollection, named “Gospel Chimes” after one of the original Vaughan compositions in the book.
It was here that Vaughan began the James D. Vaughan Music Company to market and publish songbooks of his own. Because of Vaughan’s contacts in the world of shape note publishing and his growing singing school teaching career, he was able to get a foothold in the songbook publishing business, and he was well on his way toward becoming a success in the gospel singing world.
And it was in 1910 that Vaughan made the most significant business decision of his life. He organized a male quartet that year to travel throughout the area to sing for anyone who would listen. The quartet’s repertoire consisted exclusively of songs in Vaughan’s songbooks, and sold 5,000 songbooks to a crowd of 1,500 at the quartet’s first official concert engagement at the Cumberland Presbyterian Assembly in Dickson, Tennessee.
This innovative concept is generally recognized as the beginning of professional gospel singing. For the first time, people organized to sing songs of praise to God, and they received renumeration for their efforts. Vaughan realized what a valuable tool that the singers he employed were to his business, and like any good businessman, he began expanding on his good idea, and soon his concept took on a reality all its own.
Within just a few years, Vaughan had as many as 16 quartets on his payroll, and due to the burgeoning automobile industry, was able to sponsor trips for his singers to states as far away from Tennessee as Illinois.
But Vaughan saw his business as a ministry as well, though his work predated the reference to musical ministries by a good 50 years (at least). Vaughan was a faithful and devoted Christian man, and in addition to his songbook and quartet ventures, he started a subscription newsletter known as the Vaughan Family Visitor. The publication offered spiritual advice along with advertisements about Vaughan’s songbooks and quartet appearances. Besides being a way to keep in touch with his customers, Vaughan’s music and spiritual life journal had the greatest circulation of any such publication of its type, and lasted into the late 1960s.


Ads Sponsored by Southern Spin
Another great article. John.
I learned a lot.
Cliff Cerce
The Cerces, PO Box 8525, Springfield, MO 65801
417-863-8440
http://www.thecerces.com
.(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)
Lawrenceburg, TN will host the JAMES D. VAUGHAN QUARTET FESTIVAL on July 25 & 26. The Perrys, Dixie Echoes, Inspirations, Blackwood Brothers, Gold City, Dove Brothers, & Host Quartet and Lawrenceburg's own, The Kellys will be performing. Being know for the birthplace of Southern Gospel Music, we have several great gospel concerts there a year with our Vaughan Festival the biggest! Come be with us!
I wonder if the Southern Gospel Music world will celebrate 100 years of SGM in 2010. It is always interesting to read about the history of this great music. Thanks for another informative article.
Keep me safe ‘til the storm passes by
I know that in Lawrenceburg, TN, we will be doing something big! Keep a watch!
I always wondered about the historical background of one of my favorite Gospel singers, Vaughn Monroe. Now I know.
Thanks for a great history lesson. I learned a lot. I do thank James Vaughn for giving me the greatest music in the world.
God is good all the time & all the time God is good.
Elaine Harcourt
John, I always look forward each month to reading your SG 101 articles Thank you for the time and effort in bringing them to us.
i am looking for the cd of the Dixie Echols 40th reunion do you know where i can find it? please let me know may God Bless you.
Page 1 of 1 Comment Pages