Country singer Stonewall Jackson dies 89 after undergoing a ‘long battle’ with vascular dementia

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Stonewall Jackson, a Grand Ole Opry member, and country music singer, has died at the age of 89.

 

Jackson died on Saturday following a “long battle” with vascular dementia, the Grand Ole Opry confirmed in a statement obtained by PEOPLE.

 

The Opry, the longest-running radio show in history, announced Jackson’s death in a news release. Jackson, a guitarist, performed on the Opry beginning in 1956 and was still appearing on the show in 2010. His real name was Stonewall, after Confederate Gen. Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson.

 

According to WSMV-TV, the late Porter Wagoner would introduce Stonewall on his show by saying he came to the Opry “with a heart full of love and a sack full of songs.” “Waterloo” was a hit on the country and pop charts in 1959.

 

His other hits, mostly in the 1960s, included “Don’t Be Angry,” “B.J. the D.J,” “Why I’m Walkin’,” “A Wound Time Can’t Erase” and “I Washed My Hands in Muddy Water.”

 

In 1971, he recorded his version of Lobo’s “Me and You and a Dog Named Boo.”

 

Over the course of his career, Jackson landed 44 singles on the Billboard country chart.

 

Jackson first joined the Grand Ole Opry in November 1956, longer ago than any other current Opry member, the organization noted (The musician became a member of the Opry without having a record deal, per Billboard).

 

In 2008, at age 75, he settled a federal age discrimination lawsuit against the Opry. He claimed Opry officials had cut back his appearances starting in 1998, and sought $10 million in compensatory damages and $10 million in punitive damages.

 

Jackson’s mentor in his early career was country legend Ernest Tubb, who bought him his first stage clothes and hired him as his opening act. He was presented with the Ernest Tubb Memorial Award in 1997 for his contributions to country music, according to the Grand Ole Opry website.

 

In 1991, he privately published his autobiography, “From the Bottom Up.”

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