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A. P. Carter
A. P. Carter
American country musician.
1
Carter Family
Carter Family
traditional American folk music group
2
Sara Carter
Sara Carter
American musician
3
Elaine Hoffman-Watts
Elaine Hoffman-Watts
American musician
4
Etta Baker
Etta Baker
American Piedmont blues guitarist and singer
5
Del McCoury
Del McCoury
American musician
6
Cephas & Wiggins
Cephas & Wiggins
American blues duo
7
John Jackson
John Jackson
American blues musician, born 1924
8
Michael Doucet
Michael Doucet
American musician
9
Queen Ida
Queen Ida
American musician
10
Warner Williams and Jay Summerour
Warner Williams and Jay Summerour
American folk music duo
11
Ralph Stanley
Ralph Stanley
American singer
12
Mike Auldridge
Mike Auldridge
American Dobro player
13
Barbara Lynn
Barbara Lynn
American rhythm and blues and electric blues guitarist and singer
14
Mac Wiseman
Mac Wiseman
American musician
15
Edwin Duhon
Edwin Duhon
American musician
16
Inez Catalon
Inez Catalon
American Creole singer
17
Albertina Walker
Albertina Walker
American singer (1929-2010)
18
Ali Akbar Khan
Ali Akbar Khan
Hindustani musician
19
June Carter Cash
June Carter Cash
American singer, songwriter and actress (1929-2003)
20
Birmingham Sunlights
Birmingham Sunlights
American gospel group
21
Hazel Dickens
Hazel Dickens
Activist, singer
22
Treme Brass Band
Treme Brass Band
American brass band
23
Mike Seeger
Mike Seeger
American singer
Janette Carter
Child of the Carter Family

Janette Carter

Intro
Child of the Carter Family
Music

Janette Carter (July 2, 1923 – January 22, 2006) was the last surviving child of A.P. and Sara Carter, of Carter Family musical fame.

In 1976, she and community members built an 880-seat amphitheater, the Carter Family Fold, beside the store her father operated in Southwestern Virginia. The Carter Family Fold attracts more than 50,000 visitors a year.

She had three children from her first husband: Donald William (deceased), Rita Janette, and James Delaney (Dale). The surviving two reside in her hometown of Maces Spring, (Scott County) Virginia, which is nestled in Poor Valley at the foot of Clinch Mountain. She died in 2006 and was buried next to her mother, Sara Carter Bayes, and her brother, Joe, at the Mount Vernon United Methodist Church Cemetery in Maces Spring.

Grave of Janette Carter between her mother and brother, Joe

Carter is a recipient of a 2005 National Heritage Fellowship awarded by the National Endowment for the Arts, which is the United States' highest honor in the folk and traditional arts, in recognition for her lifelong advocacy for the performance and preservation of Appalachian music.