The Liston B. Ramsey Center for
Regional Studies at Mars Hill University has announced that traditional
musician, scholar, and teacher Betty Smith will receive the Order of the Long
Leaf Pine on October 2, 2017, during the Ramsey Center’s opening celebration
for its new exhibit, “The Minstrel of Appalachia.” The award, conferred by the
Governor of North Carolina, is one of the most prestigious in the state and is
awarded for “exemplary service to the State of North Carolina.”
Betty Smith was born in 1926 in
Rowan County and grew up in Guilford County, hearing her father sing
traditional songs such as ballads and shape-note hymns. As a young woman she
learned to play the guitar, autoharp, mountain dulcimer, and psaltery, and has
performed and recorded extensively as a well-respected ballad singer and
musician. She has spent much of her adult life in western North Carolina, and
has made a significant impact on the study of traditional music through her
scholarship on Madison County ballad singer Jane Hicks Gentry, from whom Cecil
Sharp collected numerous ballads in 1916. Smith wrote a book about Gentry, "Jane
Hicks Gentry: A Singer Among Singers" (The University Press of Kentucky,
1998), and also wrote and performed a one-act, one-woman play about the singer,
"A Mountain Riddle."
Smith also has contributed to the
perpetuation of North Carolina musical traditions through her teaching. She has
taught at well-known schools in Appalachia, such as Berea College, the Pine
Mountain Settlement School, the Swannanoa Gathering, and the John C. Campbell
Folk School, and has also produced music curricula for elementary school
students.
“Betty Smith is one of North
Carolina’s greatest treasures: as a source of information about the folklore
and musical history of Appalachia, as a gifted performer, and as a generous
mentor to those who are interested in learning about our cultural heritage,”
says New York Times best-selling author Sharyn McCrumb.
Smith is part of the Blue Ridge
National Heritage Area’s Traditional Artist Directory and has received numerous
awards for her contributions to the preservation and study of North Carolina’s
musical traditions, including the Bascom Lamar Lunsford Award (2002), the North
Carolina Folklore Society’s Brown-Hudson Award (2001), and the North Carolina
Society of Historians’ Paul Green Multimedia and Willie Parker Peace History
Book awards (1999 and 1998). In 2009, Smith received an honorary doctorate from
Mars Hill University (then College).
The award will be presented by Carol
Boggess, the university's vice president for academic affairs, during the
opening celebration for the Ramsey Center’s new exhibition, "The Minstrel
of Appalachia," about the life of Bascom Lamar Lunsford. The event, which
is free and open to the public, is on October 2 from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. in the
Liston B. Ramsey Center in Renfro Library on the campus of Mars Hill
University. It also will include remarks from university President Dan Lunsford
(who received the Order of the Long Leaf Pine in March of 2017), refreshments,
and mountain music from Roger Howell, Brandon Johnson, and Gary Spence. For
more information, contact Leila Weinstein, program coordinator for the Ramsey
Center, at 828-689-1115 or visit www.mhu.edu/ramsey-center.
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