Samantha Bumgarner of Sylva, NC was one of the first women and traditional Southern banjo player to be recorded. Playing both banjo and fiddle, she and Eva Davis were recorded in 1924 and these were some of the first Southern old-time music records released. Samantha, like many other musicians of her time, learned to play fiddle by sneaking out at night with her father’s instrument to play with others. Learning to play the banjo during these forays, she was accompanying her father when he played in surrounding counties by the age of 15. She performed at the first Mountain Dance and Folk Festival in 1929, a brainchild of Bascom Lamar Lunsford, and appeared every year until 1959. In the 30s she traveled the country and for a time had her own radio show in a Texas border town. In 1939, she was invited by Lunsford to play for President and First Lady, Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt, and the King and Queen of England during their visit to the US. Until her death in 1960, she continued to play music in the Asheville area, winning instrumental and clogging contests and catching the attention of the folk revival enthusiasts.

Samantha Bumgarner

Samantha Bumgarner of Sylva, NC was one of the first women and first traditional Southern banjo players to record old-time mountain music. Best known as a banjo player, she played both fiddle and banjo on her 1924 recordings with Eva Davis which were among the earliest Southern string band records to be released.

Bumgarner, whose maiden name was Samantha Biddix, was born in Jackson County. Her father, Has Biddix, was a fiddler. Many old-time musicians recall that they first learned to play by sneaking their father’s instrument out when he was not at home, as Bumgarner did with her father’s fiddle. She also learned banjo as a child and her first banjo was “a gourd with a cat’s hide stretched over it and strings made of cotton thread and waxed with beeswax.” By the age of 15 she was accompanying her father on the banjo when he went out to play in the surrounding communities.

Samantha Bumgarner performed at Bascom Lamar Lunsford’s first Mountain Dance and Folk Festival in Asheville in 1929, and appeared every year subsequently until 1959. In the 1930s she traveled all over the country playing music, and had her own show on a Del Rio, Texas, border station. In 1939, at the invitation of Bascom Lunsford, she was one of several mountain musicians to perform for Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt and the King and Queen of England. Even in her old age, she played music regularly in the Asheville area, winning instrumental and clogging contests and coming to the attention of members of the folk revival. Bumgarner died on Christmas Eve, 1960.

Source:
https://www.blueridgeheritage.com/artist/samantha-bumgarner/

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