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A Brief History of John William "Blind" Boone
Compiled by Lucille Salerno
The "war between the states" would not be over for another year when
Rachel Boone gave birth to John William Boone on May 17, 1864 at a federal
army camp near Miami, Missouri. Rachel, a runaway slave owned by the
decendants of pioneer Daniel Boone, had taken refuge with the regiment
of the Union Army as a cook. The regiment's bugler fathered the child,
but they were never to know each other. Shortly after John William was
born, Rachel moved to Warrensburg, Missouri where she earned a living
by cleaning the homes of prominent families. At six months of age, the
baby became very ill. The diagnosis was one for which there was no cure:
"brain fever". Only a very radical surgical procedure offered a chance
to save the child's life. His overall functioning might be saved if
the pressure from the swelling brain could to be lessened. There was
one way to accomplish that - by surgical removal of the eyes. The operation
was performed. John William lost his sight - but not his very considerable
intelligence.
Greatly loved, John William is remembered as a very happy, musically
gifted child. At age three, he was capable of beating out rhythms. He
had a tin whistle at age five with which he could play tunes and immitate
sounds in nature --like birds. Soon John organized a band with instruments
that included tin whistle, drum, and tambourine. Rachel, who cherished
her son, sought ways to have John educated. Impressively capable, she
succeeded in recruiting the town's assistance in her quest. Warrenberg's
city fathers purchased the railroad ticket that brought John William
to the Missouri School for the Blind in St. Louis.
Well-received in the first year, John William attended the School
for the Blind for two and one-half years. He quickly demonstrated his
ability to reproduce on the piano any musical piece he heard. Despite
his musical giftedness, the school was teaching him to make brooms.
Driven to find outlets for his interests and talents, John would steal
away to the 'adult' area of town to hear the good local piano playing.
A Ragtime underground was beginning in St. Louis which allowed the child
prodigy to experience ? and subsequently contribute to ? that very first
truly American music. School officials finally penalized John's truancy
by expelling him from school. A conductor befriended the boy by allowing
him to ride the train home in exchange for entertaining passengers by
playing his harmonica.
In Warrensberg again, John lived in the Black community for the first
time in his life. Rachel had married widower Harrison Hendrix, the father
of five, when John was eight years old. Wanderlust gripped him, however,
and he strayed from home repeatedly --at times, with regretable consequences.
For example, John William was taken into bondage by a gambler, Mark
Cromwell, who exploited him and treated him poorly. It was necessary
for his stepfather --and later, ministers from the Missouri towns of
Fayette and Glasgow-- to rescue the young man.
The Christmas holidays of 1879 were to bring dramatic positive change
to John's life that would endure for all of his remaining years. The
gifted young musician was invited to participate in a festival at the
Second Baptist Church in Columbia. The event was an annual gift to the
community by a very successful builder and contractor, John Lange, Jr.
John William was a hit. He was invited back for a concert in March,
1880 --one in which he was featured with a second sightless Black pianist,
Tom Bethune --known as 'Blind Tom'. John William Boone's professional
career was launched with the event. John Lange, Jr. took on the role
of his manager. It proved to be a superbly successful, profitable relationship.
Lange began by sending John William to Christian College in Columbia
to further his musicianship. And, it was here that John was introduced
to the European classical composers. Further, Lange's organizational
skills were outstanding. To transcend the stigma of disability, Lange
adapted the motto, "Merit, not sympathy, wins" for the J. W. Boone Music
Co. To make salient John William's capacity to reproduce anything he
heard, Lange made it known that one thousand dollars would be given
to anyone who could stump Boone by playing something the artist could
not play back exactly. Lange never had to make good on the offer. Lang
also hired advance men, who would travel to towns to advertise Boone's
abilities and make the necessary arrangements prior to the arrival of
the great man. These were the days when the piano for each concert had
to be hauled in by horse and wagon --by the Boone Music Company.
The1880 Marshfield Tornado killed 105 people. As Lange read the account
aloud, Boone composed the programmic piece - never notated. The piano
roll machine broke down because it could not track so many notes. This
piece became one of his 'signature' compositions and audiences loved
to hear it because it replicated a natural disaster through music. His
career peaked from 1885-1916. By 1885 the troupe earned $150 - $200
per night - $600 on the best nights. His company was training ground
for young singers. The best known was Melissa Fuell who would eventually
write a biography of the company from its beginning until 1916. It was
also training ground for advance agents - men who went ahead to publicize
and make arrangements.
By 1916, Boone was so popular, he could not keep up with all of the
requests for his performances. He toured US, Canada, and Mexico - and
reportedly England, Scotland and Wales but no documentation has yet
been found for the overseas events. John Lange wrote about the period
from 1880 - 1915: a continuous period of 39-years, where they would
travel 10 months each year, with 6 concerts per week - a total of 8,
650 concerts. Distance traveled averaged 20 miles per day or 216,000
miles and they slept in 8,250 beds. Boone played mainly in churches
and concert halls - and to segregated audiences. After he became popular,
piano companies provided the pianos so he did not have to haul them
by horse and wagon. He wore out 16 pianos by 1915.
Fuell's book documents the close and personal relationship between
Boone and his manager. Boone married Lange's youngest sister in 1889.
Boone never recovered from Lange's death in 1916; other managers were
not as effective.
Besides a classical repetoir, Boone played plantation melodies, religious
songs and Ragtime. He excited audiences about both realms of music and
bridged the gap between classical and popular and also brought White
and Black culture together by his appeal. He sang minstrel tunes/plantation
songs. Wrote and sang 'coon' songs as all Black performers did that
came out of the minstrel stereotypes of earlier years. Religious songs
included "Nearer My God to Thee" and this has been preserved on piano
roll. In 1912, he was contacted by the QRS Piano Roll Company and became
one of the first Black artists to cut piano rolls. Boone did not receive
very much royalty from the piano rolls. His Ragtime stuck very close
to the origins of Ragtime --piecing together the Black folk songs into
medleys as was typical of the early Ragtime period. We know that he
was acquainted with some of classic Ragtime composers a newspaper article
describes his visit to James Scott. Charlie Thompson of St. Louis played
his "Lily Rag" for Boone. We know that he played the rags but he may
have used the rags as encores. Concert programs do not list rags.
Boone gave generously to Black churches and schools ? and he used
them for performances. He claimed to have put more roofs on churches
in Columbia than anyone else. Because of this he had little estate --even
though at one time he had had an income of $17,000 per year. He moved
into a permanent home in Columbia when he married Eugenia Lange in 1889
which is now on the national register. Boone gave many benefit concerts
to further Black schools and churches in the Columbia area.
He was just 5 feet tall but was a very impressive figure. Becasue
he could not walk without guidance, he frequently carried a child upon
his shoulders as a navigator. He had an astounding memory and was called
a walking encyclopedia. He could remember people and tunes many years
later - i.e., 30 years after he had met someone or had played a tune.
He could tell a child's age by putting his hand upon a child's head.
Boone had very happy and warm personality and children loved him - and
he they. He would tell them stories. He had a great big pocket watch
with a chime effect - children loved that. He belonged to fraternal
organizations. His only family was his wife and his mother. His mother
died in 1901.
Lange was the only person he could trust and depend upon. Boone never
got over Lange's death. After 1920, competition from movies and radio
made it very difficult to secure bookings. So he did most of his work
in small towns and public schools. The states he covered then were those
adjacent of Missouri. He did a final big tour in the East in 1919 and
1920. Wayne Allen, a Columbia music publisher, unofficially became Boone's
manager in the 1920s but Allen really could not help Boone that much
even though Allen promoted him greatly by writing letters to record
companies. Boone almost recorded for the OK Record Co. but it did not
materialize Other piano rolls were cut for the Vocal Style Co. in Cincinnati
but these were apparently never issued.
After the 1919-1920 season, the tours declined. The routine $100 nights
with Lange reduced to less than half that; he sometimes played for a
flat fee of $40. But he remained optimistic. His last concert was on
May 31, 1927. He died of a heart attack on October 4, 1927. The funeral
was a major event in the Black community in Columbia. But the grave
remained unmarked until 1971. He left little estate because he had sold
some important real estate holdings. He used his house as a collateral
for loans. One thing that did survive the ages was the "Big U". The
piano made for him specially by the Chickering Co. in 1891. The piano
has been restored and is here in Columbia, Missouri. There has been
a revival of interest in Boone. In 1961, Blind Boone Memorial Foundation
was formed. A concert was arranged to help stimulate more interest in
Boone. Trebor Tichenor attended the concert at the Brewer Field House
at the University on the 15th of March, 1961. The featured artist was
Bob Darch. It was for this concert that Boone's piano was fully restored.
Despite the enthusiasm, the concert failed financially. Unable to meet
his performance fee, concert organizers were forced to give Bob Darch
teh "Big U" as "promissory note." The Boone County
Sesquicentennial Commission of 1971 commemorated Boone and, finally,
raised money for Boone's grave and that of his wife Eugenia. In September,1960,
the Boone County Housing Authority voted to designate the new federal
public housing project in the Black community the John William Boone
Housing Project. The Project contained a community center: the Blind
Boone Center established in 1963. Boone County Historical Society acquired
Maplewood, the former home of a prominent Columbia family for a museum
and park and established the Blind Boone Room there. Years later, the
Boone piano was retrieved and placed. There is a special events room
at the University that bears his name. In 1980, five structures tied
to Boone were put on the National Register of Historic Places - including
his home.
In 1997, in response to the news that the then owner of the Boone
home intended to place the home on the market, the John William Boone
Heritage Folundation was formed with the goal of assisting the City
of Columbia to acquire and preserve the home. On November 17, 20000,
Columbia purchased the home, which is now being restored.
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