Vernon Dalhart was born Marion Try Slaughter on April 6, 1883 in northeast Texas. Marion took his professional name from Vernon and Dalhart Texas,the towns between which he had punched cattle in the second half of the1890's. His first commercially released recording was Edison Blue Amberol # 3185 "Can't Yo' Heah Me Callin' in June 1917. Dalhart's first Victor recording was recorded in 1918. His first Victor side "The Pickaninny's Paradise" went on sale in February 1919. He recorded his biggest hit: "Wreck of the Old '97" first for Edison in May of 1924 and again for Victor on July 13, 1924. Dalhart's Victor recording of "Wreck ofthe Old '97" and "The Prisoner's Song" sold six to eight million copies. His lifetime record sales is in excess of seventy - five million records. |
![]() Dalhart in 1926 |
| "The Santa Barbara Earthquake" was written within two weeks of the event by the Rev. Andrew "Blind Andy" Jenkins, and was recorded and released quickly by Columbia and Dalhart to capitalize on the widespread interest in the disaster. | Click HERE
to |
![]() The Old Mission, showing extensive damage
The Santa Barbara earthquake of 1925 pointed out one of the problems of the rapid growth
of communities in California -- sub-standard construction, often encouraged by the
amicable climate, leads to structures which give way all too easily in the shaking of an
earthquake. Such was the problem in the Santa Barbara area when the quake of June 29, 1925
struck. Unlike the great San Francisco earthquake of 1906, which was accompanied by a fire
that led many to confused conclusions about what caused most of the destruction of
buildings, the Santa Barbara earthquake produced no fire, and demonstrated clearly the
destructive capability of the earthquake alone. In the business district of Santa Barbara,
an area of about 36 blocks, only a few structures were not substantially damaged, and many
had to be completely demolished and rebuilt. |
![]() The old Potter Hotel |
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