Uncle Pete’s Old Guitar with Master Craftsman Marty Lanham- A Martin Restoration in Progress: Part2
“It’s been up and down the country roads, its’ brought a tear and a smile. It’s seen its share of dreams and hopes, and never went out of style.”
At the present moment, my great uncle Pete Hatton’s 1929 0-18 Martin is in the hands of one of Nashville’s finest vintage instrument restoration craftsman. In the last installment of this story, I promised to discuss how Marty Lanham was chosen to refurbish this cherished, vintage instrument.
Last June, at the Bill Monroe Memorial Bluegrass Festival in Bean Blossom, Ind., my cousin Ray Hatton and I got together. He brought along Uncle Pete’s vintage Martin, which he had inherited. We discussed what a shame it was to have that instrument in such disrepair.
Ray didn’t know who he could trust to do a good job. He certainly didn’t want to ship it through any of the normal freight companies. Ray was at a stand still with the renovation of this wonderful instrument. As you recall, there is a strong emotional attachment to the guitar also.
I have passed around, at various bluegrass festivals, the story of the instrument. This past winter, I got a phone call from Tom Ewing. He wanted to set up a phone interview with me about my grandpa working with Bill Monroe at the Sinclair oil refinery in Hammond, Ind.
For those of you who are unfamiliar with Tom Ewing, he was the guitarist with Bill Monroe’s Bluegrass Boys from 1986 until Monroe’s death in 1996. Tom actually played guitar with Monroe the last time he appeared on the Grand Ole Opry stage, just prior to his death.
Tom has written the wonderful book, “The Bill Monroe Reader,” and is following it with what many are saying will be the definitive book on the life of Bill Monroe.
Tom Ewing is hard at work trying to complete his newest project. As details emerge about when it will hit the shelves, we will keep you posted.
Tom has incredible insight into Bill Monroe’s character and his life. This comes from a man who worked longer with Monroe than just about anybody.
During our enjoyable visit on the phone, I asked Tom where he would recommend getting Uncle Pete’s guitar fixed.
Tom, without hesitation, said Marty Lanham in Nashville, Tenn., does all his guitar repairs.
As soon as I got off the phone with Tom, I did some research on the Internet about Marty Lanham and found nothing but praise heaped on his craftsmanship. I also found out he was the owner of the Nashville Guitar Company, maker of high quality instruments.
I immediately called my cousin Ray and told him about Tom Ewing’s recommendation. Ray did some research and came to the same conclusion, it was time to take the guitar to Marty.
Ray lives about 3½ hours north of Nashville. He had to wait for a day off and he and his lovely wife decided to take an excursion to see Marty.
Marty informed Ray it would take a couple of months to repair the guitar. I asked Ray if we at BluegrassJournal.com could follow the repair of this vintage Martin for our readers. He said he didn’t mind at all. Then I called Marty and asked him if he could keep us posted on his restoration work. He seemed happy to oblige and has been fantastic at sending us pictures and commentary.
We will continue to keep you posted, as details continue to emerge concerning work being completed on the old Martin.
No commentsUncle Pete’s Old Guitar - A Martin restoration in progress Part 1
“This old guitar ain’t mine to keep, just taking care of it now, It’s been around for years and years, just waiting in this old case.”
– From “This Old Guitar” by Neil Young
The story of this old Martin guitar begs for me to tell it. This is a tale not only from my past, but about Mom’s family, the Hatton’s past.
The legend starts around 1929 when my great-uncle Pete Hatton purchased a ‘29 0-18 Martin guitar. At that time, C.F. Martin was already almost a century old, having been established in 1833. I have no doubts; Uncle Pete knew the superb quality of the guitar he had recently purchased.
To back up for a minute, my grandpa was Roy Orvel Hatton. He was born in September 1896, the oldest of 10 boys and two girls. My Uncle Pete was the third sibling in line. In 1929, the year he purchased the Martin, Pete was still a young man. In 1930, my Grandpa and Grandma Hatton got married on Valentine’s Day and promptly moved to Hammond, Ind.
While in Hammond, my grandpa and his brother Pete found work at the Sinclair Oil Refinery. Tough work, but they were hard working men with family members to feed, especially during the tough economic times of the 1930s. About this time, Bill Monroe also started working at the refinery. My grandpa drove the tractor and Bill would ride behind on the wagon, picking up barrels. These two men were assigned to work together. I wish I knew a larger portion of the many stories from that work pairing that will forever be lost.
Bill Monroe knew about my Uncle Pete’s Martin guitar. One day, with a playing job in the works, Monroe asked my Grandpa if he thought Pete would loan him his guitar. Pete, being a very congenial guy, was happy to oblige. Monroe brought the guitar back to Pete in a couple weeks. Pete’s response: “You didn’t have to bring it back so soon, I wanted you to play it for a while.” Bill Monroe replied with, “I was afraid something awful would happen to it and besides, I liked it so well I went out and bought one just like it.”
Now you understand why this guitar is so important to me and the Hatton clan. Somewhere around the same time, Bill Monroe left the Hammond area for the road life of a musician and my grandparents and Uncle Pete moved back to southern Indiana.
My recollections of Uncle Pete are from back in the 1960s when my grandpa would take my siblings, cousins and I down to Pete’s gas station in Fritchton, Ind. In that station, we would plop ourselves up on the stools at the counter and Grandpa would tell Pete to get us whatever we wanted. He would serve us ice cold pop from an old water cooler, dream sickles and the greatest tasting candy in the world. It was nothing but sheer joy to go with Grandpa for a Sunday visit to Uncle Pete’s station.
My knowledge about the old Martin never surfaced until years after Pete’s death. I was familiar with the story about my grandpa working with Bill Monroe, but had no inkling of the guitar. This all changed at a family reunion years about 10 yeas ago while talking to my cousin, Ray Hatton.
Ray is the son of my Great-Uncle Bill, the youngest of the 12 boys and girls. My grandpa and Uncle Pete were several years older than Uncle Bill. Ray, knowing I was a big music fan, proceeded to tell me about the history of the guitar he possessed.
Ray farmed the land that Pete and his lovely wife, my Great-Aunt Eva, owned. Pete and Eva had one daughter, Phyllis, who died at the early age of 37. After Pete died and their daughter passed as well, Aunt Eva presented Ray with the prized instrument. She knew Ray loved music and had been in bands throughout the years. Ray was hesitant to take it, but finally caved in under the persistency of Aunt Eva.
The guitar has been virtually unplayable all these years. The bridge on this old Martin kept rising and consequently raised the strings to the point of making it difficult to play. It became so difficult for Uncle Pete to play that he turned it into a “Hawaiian guitar”, an instrument that could only be played with a slide.
By the time Ray acquired the guitar, it was virtually useless. Ray kept it in the old case, only getting it out occasionally to show someone who might be interested in the instrument and its wonderful story. Ray, being a fine musician, always wanted it fixed, but didn’t know who he could trust to restore the instrument.
This brings the story to today. As we speak, the guitar is in the hands of Marty Lanham, owner of the Nashville Guitar Company and one of the premiere guitar restorers in the world.
This article is meant to be the beginning of a work in progress. In future installments of the story, we will discuss how Marty was chosen for the restoration of this project. We will also observe a behind-the-scenes look at a detailed restoration of this old Martin.
No commentsBluegrass Bits and Pieces
Coming this Monday on BluegrassJournal.com
On Monday, April 7, Rickey Lamb brings us Part 1 of a multi-part feature story on the restoration of a 1929 Martin 0-18 guitar that belongs to his family. The history of the guitar crosses the path of Bill Monroe who once borrowed the guitar from Rickey’s Uncle Pete Hatton.
Marty Lanham of the Nashville Guitar Company is doing the restoration on the guitar and has been kind enough to help us document the restoration of this treasured instrument over the course of the next 2 to 3 months.
Charlie Sizemore Band coming to the Station Inn
Charlie Sizemore and company is scheduled to perform at the Station Inn in Nashville, Tenn. on Saturday April 12. The show will start at 9:00 PM and admission is $10.00.
A native of eastern Kentucky, Sizemore was hired at age 17 to take over for the departing Keith Whitley in Ralph Stanley’s Clinch Mountain Boys, with whom he stayed for nine years before leaving to start his own band and attend college. He graduated with honors from the University of Kentucky, and now maintains a successful law practice in addition to his musical endeavors. Over the past 20 years since leaving the employment of Ralph Stanley, Sizemore has garnered a devoted following among fans and performers alike. He’s appeared on two Grammy® nominated albums (Ralph Stanley’s Saturday Night & Sunday Morning and The Stanley Tradition: Tribute to a Bluegrass Legacy) and received a Dove award nomination (for a track from 2002’s The Story Is…The Songs of Tom T. Hall).
The Charlie Sizemore Band is Charlie Sizemore (lead vocals, guitar), Danny Barnes (mandolin, vocals), Matt DeSpain (Dobro), and John Pennell (bass).
Hot off the menu: This month on the WDVX Blue Plate Special
East Tennessee’s Own WDVX will host several great Bluegrass bands on the Blue Plate Special, an hour long program featuring bands playing live on air, during the month of Arpil. Locals are encouraged to be part of the WDVX studio audience weekdays at noon (Eastern Time) for free performances in downtown Knoxville, Tenn. at the WDVX studios and for those who can’t make it down for a show, listen live on-line.
The WDVX studios are located in the Knoxville Visitor’s Center at the corner of Gay Street and Summit Hill Avenue in downtown Knoxville, Tenn.
- Wed., April 9: Todd Steed and the Suns of Phere / The Gibson Brothers / Ben Soll
- Sat., April 12: at 3PM The Punch Brothers featuring Chris Thile
- Thu., April 17: Yu’uns / Carolina Chocolate Drop
- Fri., April 18: Biscuit Burners / Howling Brothers / Jason Rigenberg
- Fri., April 25: Dale Ann Bradley / Charlie Sizemore / Jennings and Keller/ Early Grace Band
Mountain Heart video available on YallWire.com
Yallwire.com has recently added the video for Mountain Hearts’ “Road That Never Ends” to it’s library of music video’s online. You’ll have to watch a short advertisement before the video starts but it gets to the good stuff pretty quick. “The Road That Never Ends” is the title cut from Mountain Heart’s latest release on Rural Rhythm Records.
Mountain Hearts current lineup features Josh Shilling, Jim Van Cleve, Clay Hess, Barry Abernathy, Aaron Ramsey and Jason Moore.
No comments

