Latest: Cash house still smolders; no memorabilia lost
By PETER COOPER & JENNIFER BROOKS /Staff writers
- The
longtime home of Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash was still smoldering
this morning, preventing firefighters from gaining access to the ruined
house.
Cars streamed by the Caudill Drive property on Old Hickory Lake, pausing
as passengers leaned out the windows to snap photographs with their cell
phones.
Joanne Cash, Johnny Cash’s sister, said none of the family’s memorabilia
remained in the house, which was sold two years ago to singer Barry Gibbs
and was under renovation.
She asked people to pray for the children who are upset by the loss, her
brother Tommy and herself.
“This house held precious memories, nothing can take away those precious
memories. It housed a family but it also housed precious memories,” Joanne
Cash said.
“We are going to keep singing we are going to keep on going. We are going
to leave all the questions people have about what happened to God.”
A family spokesperson said a flood of well-wishers, by email and phone,
have offered to place flowers at the site as a memorial to its place in
music history.
"Camelot."
That's what June Carter liked to call the Hendersonville
home she shared with her husband, Johnny Cash.
"She thought of it as her and dad's private kingdom,"
wrote the couple's son, John Carter Cash, in his Anchored In Love:
The Life and Legacy of June Carter Cash, a book slated for June release.
The Cashes' Camelot is in ruins, the victim of a Tuesday
afternoon fire that destroyed the more than 13,000-square-foot property.
Its new owner, Barry Gibb of Bee Gees fame, bought the house for $2.5
million in early 2006, and he and wife Linda were renovating it for use
as a summer home.
Built in the late 1960s, the home had 18 rooms, including
a signature round living room and a bedroom that overlooked Old Hickory
Lake. It was important for reasons that had nothing to do with size, architecture
and design. Like the Cashes' Virginia home — the one that used to belong
to June's mother, legendary guitarist Maybelle Carter — this was a house
of music.
Cash wrote here, of course. He placed acoustic guitars
in most rooms, so that he could pluck out chords and melodies as inspiration
struck. In the 1970s, he and June often opened the house for guitar pulls
that included luminaries such as Bob Dylan, Kris Kristofferson and Mickey
Newbury. They'd also often invite up-and-coming writers that Cash respected
and encouraged, including Vince Matthews and Larry Gatlin.
When the house wasn't open to visitors, it was seemingly
impenetrable. As an aspiring songwriter, a down-and-out Kristofferson
wanted to hand a tape of his music to the by-then-legendary Cash, but
he figured he wouldn't be able to get past guards. He landed a helicopter
in the yard, and Cash ended up recording "Sunday Morning Coming Down"
and other Kristofferson songs.
June Carter Cash also worked on her music at the house,
and she played a private concert on the grounds to celebrate the release
of her Press On album in 1999.
For the most part, Johnny and June did not record at
the home, though beginning in the late 1990s they recorded many tracks
at Cash's small cabin studio located across the street and down a winding,
unpaved road.
Johnny Cash recorded some vocal tracks in the house,
after June died in 2003. He was grief-stricken, and in such poor health
that it was difficult for him to make it to the cabin studio. Sessions
were arranged in his round bedroom.
"It was a sanctuary and a fortress for him," singer
Marty Stuart said of the house. Stuart lives next door to the Cash estate
in Hendersonville, and he was married to Johnny Cash's daughter, Cindy,
in the 1980s. "So many prominent things and prominent people in American
history took place in that house," Stuart said, name-checking Dylan and
evangelist Billy Graham as two of the most notable.
When Cash first bought the house, he used it as a place
of healing. His body ravaged by drug abuse, he retreated to that round
bedroom to rid his system of toxic substances. He and June were not yet
married, but she and her parents were a near-constant presence.
"June and her mother and father formed a circle of faith
around me caring for me and insulating me from the outside world, particularly
the people, some of them close friends, who'd been doing drugs with me,"
Cash wrote in Cash: The Autobiography.
After Johnny and June married in 1968, June — a shopper
and a collector of art and furniture — lavishly furnished the interior.
The result could be seen in the video for Cash's 2002 release "Hurt,"
some of which was filmed in the house.
"I found photos of the lake house from late 1967, before
dad and mom married," wrote John Carter Cash, who was born in 1970. "They
showed wide open rooms with very little furniture, and only a few scattered
mementos. I have a few of those items still. … These things remind me
of how my father changed to bring my mother into his life."
After June's death, Johnny Cash sought to remove many
of the items his wife had
collected because the reminders saddened and depressed him.
After Cash's death in September 2003, it was left to
relatives to sift through the belongings. Many of their paintings, clothes
and musical instruments were sold at a Sotheby's auction in 2004. The
family hung onto the home until 2006, when it was sold to the Gibbs. John
Carter Cash kept the cabin studio, where he regularly records (including
a tribute album to June Carter Cash that will be released in June).
Johnny Cash's daughter, singer-songwriter Rosanne Cash,
wrote about the painful process of parting with the home on her 2006 Black
Cadillac album.
"There's nothing left to take," she sang in "House on
the Lake." "There's nothing left to take/ But love and years are not for
sale/ In our old house on the lake."
Barbara Orbison, a neighbor of the Cashes for many years
and the widow of Roy Orbison, spent many days at the house on the lake.

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| Other reactions to the Cash house fire |
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Oak Ridge Boys bass singer Richard Sterban was eating
lunch in his restaurant Cheddar’s when his road manager called
him on the phone to tell him “Johnny Cash’s house is burning
to the ground.”
Sterban lives on the same road as the house; he moved in 20
years ago when it was all country music stars down street,
including Roy Orbison. “Back then, it was just a nice quiet
community, with a beautiful lake, somewhere they could get
away from it all,” Sterban said.
He has memories of house: Johnny Cash took the Oak Ridge Boys
under his wing. “He made us part of his show and paid us more
than we were worth,” Sterban said.
Sterban shared this memory on Tuesday: The Oak RidgeBoys had
just finished a gig, and Johnny Cash invited them back to
his house and told them, “‘I can tell there’s something special
about your group, but if you give up now no one else is going
to know that. If you hang in there, good things are going
to happen to you.”
When the group won its first CMA, Cash gave it to them.
“We’ve been there for parties, we have a lot of fond memories.
They’re all going up in smoke,” Sterban said on Tuesday.
— Jennifer Brooks, Staff Writer
• “They both
are saddened and devastated by the news. At this time, we
don’t have any further comment,” said Paul Bloch, publicist
for the house’s new owner, Barry Gibb of Bee Gees fame
and his wife, Linda. They bought the house for $2.5
million in early 2006 and were renovating it for use as a
summer home.
— Beverly Keel, Staff Writer
• Barbara
Orbison, music executive and widow of music legend Roy
Orbison who lived next door to Johnny and June Carter Cash,
talked about the home after Tuesday’s fire.
“I feel really sad because it was like the house had been
there forever. The first day when I got to Tennessee, when
I was 17. Roy took me straight over to Johnny and June's to
meet them. Part of my life for 20 years was very much in that
house, whether it was baby showers or births or marriages
or divorces or just having breakfast. It was always there.
I am really saddened it went. In a way, it was so associated
with Johnny and June that it never really felt right for me
that anybody else should ever be in that house.”
Roy moved there in 1963 and she joined him 1968: “Johnny and
June got married 1968, and we married in 1969. For the first
years it was like a little neighborhood; it was sleepy.”
“I remember when Roy’s house burned (in 1968) — it was right
next to it —Johnny and June came straight off the road to
be with Roy. It is just strong sense of history there.
After Roy's house burned, he built another one right next
to it, Barbara said. The Orbisons moved to Malibu in 1985
and Roy died in 1988. “That house and our house was part of
my safety in life.”
About two months ago, Barbara spoke about the house with Reese
Witherspoon, who won an Oscar for her portrayal of June in
Walk the Line. “When she came down, that was before the house
sold and June had a collection of this and that. It’s a sense
of tragedy and a sense that it belonged to Johnny and June.
It was Johnny and June. There was never a day that that house
didn’t represent them. They lived there the whole time they
were married.
“That house had a really strong scent of Johnny and June.
It was built on rock. It had to be a strong house to have
survived right there at the lake.
“If you thought about Johnny and June, you thought about that
house. I guess it will be forever their house.”
— Beverly Keel, Staff Writer
• “I can't
give you the words I felt when I was walking through my orchard
and watched it go down. My heart melted alongside it for a
minute,” singer Marty Stuart told The Associated Press
about the house. Stuart lives next door to the Cash estate
in Hendersonville, and he was married to Johnny Cash’s daughter,
Cindy, in the 1980s.
• Johnny Cash’s
sister Joanne Cash released the following statement
after the fire on Tuesday: “Of course we are all in a state
of shock. I feel that an era has passed. Just today in prayer,
I had decided to move on, even discarding old newspaper clippings
not realizing that this terrible thing would happen. My prayers
are with the Cash family and especially the Gibb family during
this time.”
• Andy Griffith
Show actor George Lindsey remembers some wonderful
times spent at the home of John and June Carter Cash:
“The atmosphere was some-thing like you were living in one
of his songs. One night it was Rev. Billy Graham, Buford Pusser,
(Hee Haw producer) Sam Lovullo and June and John and
Mother Maybelle. It was an interesting evening. When we talked
about something, Dr. Graham would talk about it in reference
to the Bible. It was terrific to be on that invitation list.
“It’s not the house of so and so on something street, it was
the house of Cash.”
— Ken Beck, Staff Writer |
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