The Carroll County Accident

"The Carroll County Accident"
Single by Porter Wagoner
from the album The Carroll County Accident
B-side "Sorrow Overtakes the Wine"[1]
Released October 1968
Format 7" single
Recorded September 18, 1968[2]
Genre Country
Length 2:48
Label RCA Records
Songwriter(s) Bob Ferguson
Producer(s) Bob Ferguson
Porter Wagoner singles chronology
"Jeannie's Afraid of the Dark"
(1968)
"The Carroll County Accident"
(1968)
"Yours Love"
(1969)

"Jeannie's Afraid of the Dark"
(with Dolly Parton)
(1968)
"The Carroll County Accident"
(1968)
"Yours Love"
(with Dolly Parton)
(1969)

"The Carroll County Accident" is a 1968 country song written by Bob Ferguson, and recorded by Porter Wagoner that year. It was a hit for Wagoner and became one of his signature songs. "The Carroll County Accident" won CMA's Song of the Year in 1969.[3] It has been covered by numerous musicians.

Content

The singer tells the story of a single-car accident that occurred just inside the county line near his hometown. The passenger, Walter Browning, an upstanding member of the community and seemingly happily married man, dies; while the driver, Mary Ellen Jones, a woman not his wife but also well respected, survives to testify that she was taking him to town on an errand of mercy.

The narrator singer describes examining the wreckage and finding evidence of an extramarital affair between the two. He disposes of the evidence and swears himself to silence. He does this in order to preserve their reputations in the county because, as he reveals in the last verse, Walter Browning was his father.

Because there are thirteen states in the United States which contain a Carroll County, the apparent specificity of the named location is offset by its ambiguity. According to an interview that Bob Ferguson gave to Steve Eng for his Porter Wagoner biography, A Satisfied Mind, Ferguson wrote the song while driving from Nashville, Tennessee to a concert for Choctaw Indians in Philadelphia, Mississippi. He recounted that he passed a sign for Carroll County, Tennessee, which inspired the song's title, and by the time he saw a sign for Carroll County, Mississippi, the song was a finished work.

Covers

Wagoner's frequent musical collaborator Dolly Parton covered "The Carroll Country Accident" in 1969, including it on her In the Good Old Days (When Times Were Bad) album.

Chart performance

The song reached number 2 on Billboard's Hot Country Songs and number 92 on the Billboard Hot 100.[1]

Chart (1969) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard Hot Country Singles 2
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 92
Canadian RPM Country Tracks 1
Canadian RPM Top Singles 80

References

  1. 1 2 Whitburn, Joel (2008). Hot Country Songs 1944 to 2008. Record Research, Inc. pp. 441–442. ISBN 0-89820-177-2.
  2. The Essential Porter Wagoner (CD insert). Porter Wagoner. RCA Records. 1997. 66934-2.
  3. "CMT : CMA Awards : Archives : 1969".
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