Doc Williams (singer)

Country singer
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroCountry singer
PlacesUnited States of America
wasSongwriter
Work fieldMusic
Gender
Male
Birth26 June 1914, Cleveland
Death31 January 2011Wheeling (aged 96 years)
The details

Biography

Doc Williams (June 26, 1914 – January 31, 2011) was an influential American country music band leader and vocalist.
Born as Andrew John Smik, Jr. in Cleveland, Ohio, and raised in Kittanning, Pennsylvania, he got his professional start playing with the Kansas Clodhoppers during the early 1930s. Doc eventually formed his own band, Doc Williams and the Border Riders. The group went on the air on WWVA Wheeling in 1937; soon, with the addition of comedian Froggie Cortez and cowboy crooner "Big Slim the Lone Cowboy", and became one of the station's most popular attractions.
In 1939, Williams married Jessie Wanda Crupe, a singer who soon adopted the stage name Chickie Williams (February 13, 1919 – November 18, 2007). The Williams' were popular performers. Although the couple and their band the Border Riders recorded, performed live and appeared on the radio for over five decades, they never had a national hit. Doc Williams founded Wheeling Records in 1947 and through it released all of his and his wife's albums; occasionally, they sang together, and sometimes with their three daughters. Among his best-known songs are "Willie Roy the Crippled Boy" and "My Old Brown Coat And Me".
Williams died on January 31, 2011 in Wheeling, West Virginia, aged 96.

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