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Biography:Bob Walters

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Revision as of 03:13, 23 March 2025 by Andrew (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)


Bob Walters


     
 Given name:     Robert ("Uncle Bob")
 Middle name:     E.
 Family name:     Walters
 Place of birth:     Decatur, Burt County, Nebraska
 Place of death:     Tekamah, Nebraska
 Year of birth:     1889
 Year of death:     1960
 Profile:     Musician
 Source of information:     
     

Biographical notes


BOB WALTERS (bio by Bill Shull). Robert E. “Uncle Bob” Walters was born on June 16, 1889, in Decatur, Burt County, east Nebraska. Bob’s grandfather, Ike Walters, and his dad William Wilson “Wilse” Walters were both noted fiddlers. Fiddling was an integral part of Bob’s life from early childhood. His brothers Sant, Harold and Hiram all played fiddle as well as rhythm instruments. The entire family spent many hours honing the craft of old-time music. Bob married Goldie Brockway in 1910 and their home was soon filled with music. All of Bob’s children were instrumentalists: Elna Mae played piano, Steve played banjo, and Eunice played piano. Goldie also accompanied Bob for many years, toting a pump organ by horse drawn wagon back and forth to the dances. Walters had a long career playing over the radio. He took his first job around 1935 at station KFAB in Lincoln, Nebraska. He had won a contest sponsored by the radio station and was asked to stay on, which he did for about two years. Bob also won a number of contests sponsored by KFNF in Shenandoah, Iowa – so many in fact that the other contestants protested and Bob was finally hired as a judge and “guest artist”. He competed in radio contests in a number of other cities, including Omaha and Sioux City. His last regular radio stint was on KMMJ out of Grand Island, Nebraska, where he played from the mid-1940s until around 1954. Bob was a consistent winner in local contests, at one point having won 34 out of the 38 he had entered. Perhaps his biggest win was in the 1931 Tri-State Championship held in Sioux City, Iowa, where he took first prize, along with a silver cup. Walters had an extensive repertoire of tunes learned from many different sources. At one time he had written down over three hundred tunes for which he knew the names and he played many others, for which there were no titles. In 1941 after Bob retired, he and Goldie moved from Grand Island to Tekamah. His retirement was full of music and many fiddlers graced his parlor, including Casey Jones and Cyril Stinnett. He was the regular fiddler for the big square dances in Ralston, Nebraska, in the late 40s and early 50s. Bob Walters died on December 26, 1960.

Mormon fiddler Bob Walters' family roots were from Kentucky, though the influences that informed his vast repertory came from many sources. He was an strong influence on a younger generation of fiddlers, including Dwight Lamb, who lived just across the state line in Iowa. his father’s American



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