Barnes, Nathaniel, 1909-

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Barnes, Nathaniel, 1909-

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Name :

Barnes, Nathaniel, 1909-

Barnes, Bill, 1909-

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Barnes, Bill, 1909-

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1909

1909

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Biographical History

Nathaniel Barnes was born in the year 1910 in D’Lo Mississippi in Simpson County. Following a bollweevil infestation of the Mississippi farmlands, approximately 600 workers and their families migrated to Texas for work. Mr. Barnes came with his family during this migration and resided with them at the Murray Farm in Crockett, Texas. He began working on the farm with his father at the age of 13. It was then that his father began singing spirituals with young Nathaniel while they worked and teaching him to play guitar in the evenings. At the age of 19 Nathaniel Barnes formed his own quartet, named the Vistoula Four. He honed his skills playing guitar and was then also taught piano by his father.

In 1939 Mr. Barnes moved to Houston and to other larger cities throughout Texas as he worked a series of jobs. Interspersed throughout this moving about, he lived in Houston intermittently. At one point he worked at the Brown Shipyards and organized the Silver Gate Singers which were a group formed to entertain troops as they boarded their ships that were going to war.

He befriended and was influenced by Lightnin’ Hopkins during the early 1940s. Mr. Barnes noted that they met often during this time in a house in the Third Ward on West Gray Street. He also formed a band with O.J. Williams which they called O.J. Williams and the Sons.

In his later years Mr. Barnes reverted from playing blues to playing only spirituals. In the 1940s he had recorded his first set of original songs. His second recordings were taped in 1963. Neither was released in the United States because they were in the blues style and Mr. Barnes wanted his only associations to be with religious music. He instructed the studio not to release the recordings, but to give them away. He was unconcerned about making a profit from them. Mr. Barnes never returned to playing music other than spirituals and spent his remaining days playing organ for churches throughout Houston.

From the guide to the Nathaniel "Bill" Barnes Collection MSS 441., 1910 to 1992, (Houston Metropolitan Research Center, Houston Public Library)

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External Related CPF

https://viaf.org/viaf/43885704

https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-no95046340

https://id.loc.gov/authorities/no95046340

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Guitarists

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Third Ward (Houston, Tex.)

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<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>

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w6vp0rw7

42968118