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Programs & Activities
Music & Dance
Lois Bettesworth
Flushing, Michigan
Old-time Fiddling
Lois Bettesworth was introduced to fiddling by
her father, Burt Hutchinson, who used to play for house parties in Michigan.
Born in Minnesota in 1925, Lois and her family moved to Michigan soon
after. Lois attended her first house party at age one, began playing fiddle
at age nine, and played twin fiddles together with her father for many
years thereafter. Her formal music instruction with other teachers lasted
for ten years. Steeped in the music tradition of her father and grandfather,
however, her dedication to and perpetuation of the old-time Missouri fiddling
style has not waned.
Accolades for Lois call attention to her musical ability, her generosity
and encouragement to others, and her commitment to fiddling. Stephen Williams,
fellow fiddler and director of the Port Huron Museum of Art and History,
credits her with inspiring him to become a musician more than 25 years
ago. "She showed me the rudiments of bowing and fingering and she
gave me her own recordings of tunes played the way her father had played
them. When she felt confident that I was serious about this venerable
tradition, she handed me her father's instrument and charged me with the
awesome responsibility of keeping both the tradition and the fiddle alive."
Lois has played for dances through the years with a number of bands. In
1951 she organized her first dance band that played for square dances.
She plays at various statewide fiddlers' jamborees, including the one
she established in Flushing. In 1978 she organized an old-time band, Shades
of Blue, for which she is the lead singer and fiddler. The band plays
without a fee at senior centers, schools, churches, care homes, class
reunions, round and square dances, community events, festivals, and jamborees
in the region. In addition to her dedication to old-time music, Lois plays
a key role in the Flushing Area Historical Society and is active in many
ways in her community. She continues to have a profound influence on many
individuals who all agree, "she is one of a kind." Lois was
honored with a Michigan Heritage Award in 2002.
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