A Brief Biographical Chronology of General Secretaries

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Baltimore Shape Note Singing

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Jan 28, 2025, 2:29:11 PM1/28/25
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I wrote this this morning. It should be flushed out with other stories from the lives of the editors, but it has a beginning, middle and end. I'm learning nearly all of this for the first time. I don't know if this has been compiled/ detailed before, but I couldn't find it. I write here because I welcome feedback.

Kevin Isaac
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A Brief Biographical Chronology of General Secretaries

In 1951, J.J. Akers Jr. of Cullman, Alabama, served as the General Secretary of the Sacred Harp Minutes book. Reflecting on the challenges of that year, he wrote on page one of the Minutes: "This has been a long, lonesome year for me. To each of you who have been so kind and tried so hard to help me pass the time, I do thank you." That year’s Minutes documented singings across three states: Alabama, Mississippi, and Tennessee. Earlier that January, Akers had lost his wife to illness. Just a few years prior, he had celebrated his golden wedding anniversary on the same day as the annual Cullman Courthouse singing.

Akers had been singing shape-note music all his life. The son of a Primitive Baptist elder, he was a regular attendee of the Cullman Courthouse singing, with records of his participation going back at least to 1908. He carried this deep connection to the tradition into his work as General Secretary.

Akers continued editing the Minutes until 1955, when he passed the responsibility to I.M. Heatherly. In 1962, Heatherly announced that he was stepping down, passing the role to L.L. Welborn. Welborn served as General Secretary for only a few years before Walter A. Parker took over in 1965. Walter, along with his wife Nora (Childers) Parker, brought a shared passion for Sacred Harp singing and organizing to the role. Nora’s name was soon included in the letters from the General Secretary, which had become a standard feature on the first page of the Minutes. Their sign-off, "Walter and Nora Parker," conveyed a casual and warm partnership. Together, they became the longest-serving General Secretaries, remaining deeply involved in every aspect of Sacred Harp singing and organization.

The Parkers also contributed to Sacred Harp’s broader legacy. They appeared on the first LP issued by the Sacred Harp Publishing Company, and Walter served as President of the organization for at least part of the mid-1980s. In the 1989 Minutes book, Nora noted that while she was still diligently editing the Minutes, she was no longer able to attend singings, as she was caring for Walter full-time due to his Alzheimer’s disease. Walter Parker passed away on April 1, 1991, at the age of 101. Outside of Sacred Harp, he had dedicated his life to education, serving as a school principal, including at Pinson Elementary School.

Nora continued to serve as General Secretary and edit the Minutes for four more years before Shelbie Sheppard assumed the role. Eventually, the Sacred Harp Musical Heritage Association was established as a 501(c)(3) organization, and the task of editing the Minutes became a collaborative effort. Over time, a new style for the Minutes was developed, refined, and ultimately standardized into the format we see today.

Kevin Isaac from Baltimore

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Feb 21, 2025, 10:43:11 AM2/21/25
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I have published this short essay on my new website. Some of the blogs and projects that I was posting on the Baltimore website have been moved here as well: 
https://www.singloud.org/2025/02/this-has-been-a-long-lonesome-year-for-me/

The essay has a photo of the first named General Secretary, and I've noted that Judy Caudle is in the role of a General Secretary now.

Additionally I have released the first episode of what I'd like to be a monthly podcast that features "archival recordings". The first episode I extracted most of the interviews from a three hour long radio show about the 2002 Western Massachusetts All Day singings. 
https://www.singloud.org/podcasts/sing-loud-a-shape-note-podcast/

Kevin Isaac

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