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Wilson success puts Pocahontas on the map
Jim Suhr
POCAHONTAS
(Ill.)—In the rough-and-tumble roadhouse called Big O’s, a teenage
Gretchen Wilson felt at home with a microphone in hand, belting out
renditions of old-school Patsy Cline or Loretta Lynn that sliced through
the smoky haze. The diminutive blonde dreamed of being a big star, and
those who heard her believed she had the chops for it.
“She would just knock everybody out,” Leta Jones recalled of Wilson in
the late 1980s. “She was this little girl with the big voice.” That big
voice has carried Wilson from dirt-poor beginnings to the big time of
country music. And this sleepy, no-stoplight community that locals
lovingly call “Pokey” is singing its connection to Wilson loud and
proud.
The wooden sign near the Powhatan restaurant on the edge of this outpost
east of St. Louis greets travellers, “Welcome to Pocahontas, a small
town with a lot of heart,” noting that this is the “Hometown of Gretchen
Wilson, country music star.” A spray-painted sign tacked to a utility
pole reads, “Pocahontas is proud of Gretchen Wilson,” and several
hand-stenciled yard signs exhort similar messages of pride.
The Grammy-winning Wilson, 32, released her debut album “Here for the
Party” in May 2004, and sold more than 4 million copies. She was born in
Granite City but grew up in Pocahontas and knows the town is glad to
call her one of its own. In her song “Pocahontas Proud,” she sings: “I’m
the biggest thing that ever came from my hometown, and I’ll be damned if
I’m gonna let ‘em down. If it’s the last thing I do before they lay me
in the ground, you know I’m gonna make Pocahontas proud.”
Mission accomplished.
Last June she even got a key to the town when she helped dedicate a new
pavilion she donated $15,000 to erect what is now “Gretchen Wilson
Park,” a grassy stretch with a baseball diamond and lake. Pocahontas -
population “850 if you count the cats and dogs, about 800 otherwise,”
one local submits - had nothing really to lay claim to until Wilson
struck gold. And the attention toward the town is being stoked as Wilson
promotes her new album, “All Jacked Up” - already a Billboard
best-seller.
“We’re all happy for her,” Don Hawley said as he washed his 1994 Mercury
Tracer outside his home. “You can’t listen to country music without
hearing her music.” To Hawley and others around here, the self-professed
“Redneck Woman” - the title of her breakthrough, defiant, beer-swigging
anthem that spent weeks atop the country charts - is bona fide.
“When she talks about small-town roots, she really has them. When she
talks about singing in taverns, she really has,” Hawley said. Village
trustee Karen Heilig calls Wilson “the best darned thing to ever happen
to this town,” home to a couple of antique shops and gas stations, a few
single-level motels, a funeral home and plenty of pickup trucks and
trailer homes. |