Thursday, September 4, 2014

Austin, Pennsylvania's Connection to Willie Nelson



This month's AARP Magazine contains a What I Know Now article with Willie Nelson who happens to be one of my all-time favorite singers and songwriters. In the article, we learn that Willie is 81 years old and still on the road.  Willie states that the longest he has ever been off the road is one month.   Ironically, one of Willie's greatest hits is entitled On The Road Again.

If you have visited or are familiar with the history of Austin, Pennsylvania, then you know of the 1911 Flood which destroyed the town, and, in which, 78 known people lost their lives.  One of those people was a Willie Nelson, who was a grocer and Democrat Party leader in the community.  Willie was also an outspoken critic of the unsafe manner in which the concrete dam was being built and was often referred to as The Jeremiah of Austin.

Professor Gale Largey from Mansfield University grew up in St. Marys, Pennsylvania.  During his youth, he would ride up to Austin with his grandfather to view the dam ruins which still stand today.  When Professor Largey decided to put together a documentary on The Austin Flood, Willie Nelson, the singer from Austin, Texas, was the obvious choice to narrate the documentary.  Gale and a contingent of people from Austin, Pennsylvania, traveled to Austin, Texas, and after a number of meetings spanning a number of days, Willie agreed to do it.  The documentary is named The Austin Disaster, 1911: A Chronicle of Human Character.  A DVD of this entertaining and interesting doucmentary can be purchased at The Austin Dam Gift Shop, E.O. Austin Home/Historical Society, local businesses or by calling 800-577-6798.


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