Mellie Dunham Musical artist

Mellie Dunham (July 29, 1853 - September 27, 1931) was an American fiddler during the early twentieth century. Dunham was born in Norway, Maine, the son of Alanson Mellen Dunham and Christiana Bent. He came to prominence after he was invited to play for Henry Ford at his house in Dearborn, Michigan. Ford sent a Pullman car for Dunham and his wife, Emma "Gram" Dunham (née Richardson), because of Ford's love of country music. While Ford had invited 38 other fiddlers before Dunham, none received as much attention as Dunham did.He was also a snowshoe maker, supplying 60 pairs of snowshoes to Commodore Robert Peary for an Arctic expedition.Dunham died on September 27, 1931, in Lewiston, Maine, after a two-week illness, and was buried in Pine Grove Cemetery, South Paris, Maine.

Personal facts

Mellie Dunham
Birth dateJuly 29, 1853
Date of deathSeptember 28, 1931

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Musical artist

BackgroundNon vocal instrumentalist

Mellie Dunham on Wikipedia

External resources

  1. http://www.archive.org/details/MellieDunhamAndHisOrch-MountainRangers1926
  2. http://www.mpbn.net/Television/LocalTelevisionPrograms/MaineExperience/tabid/532/Default.aspx