
Singing on the Mountain

84th Annual Singing on the Mountain - June 22, 2008
The "Singing" is a day-long gathering held out-of-doors in a meadow
at the base of Grandfather Mountain. Music begins at 8:30 a.m. and continues
throughout the day, with a break at mid-day for the sermon. Many families
bring lawn chairs and picnics and make a day of seeing old friends and
enjoying performances by top Southern Gospel groups.
Korean
evangelist and broadcaster Dr. Billy Kim will again bring the message
to the Grandfather gathering. Kim brought the crowd to their feet in
2004 when he preached about the greatness of America as a place where
all people can worship God without fear. Joining Dr. Kim will be the
beautiful Korean Children's Choir that engaged and delighted the audience
in 2004.
The Greenes from Boone, NC, serve as the host group and will be joined
by a dozen top Gospel groups including Grand Ole Opry member George
Hamilton IV, The Primitive, Michael Combs, The Gospel Enforcers, The
Cockman Family, Wings of Grace and The Praise Men.
Admission to the "Singing on the Mountain" is free, and camping (without hookups) is available on the grounds on a first come basis. The "Singing" grounds are located on US Highway 221, two miles north of Linville and one mile from the Blue Ridge Parkway.
84 Years of Memories
June 2008 marks the 84th year that the faithful will climb the ridge
to the "Singing on the Mountain" to participate in the oldest ongoing
old time gospel convention left in the Southern Appalachians.
Founded in 1924 by Joe Hartley, Sr. as his family's reunion, the Grandfather
"Singing" is always held on the fourth Sunday in June (June 22, 2008).
The history of the "Singing" is the history of country gospel music,
and even today the spontaneous happening continues almost unchanged
in 84 years.
The event features a dozen top Southern Gospel groups playing on the
outdoor stage throughout the day, breaking at midday for the preaching.
Admission is free with the motto remaining the same for 84 years: "Whosoever
will may come."
Old timers can remember the time when Little Betty Johnson of the Johnson
Family Singers led the crowd in a stirring sing-a-long that could be
heard over a mile away on Grandfather Mountain's Mile High Swinging
Bridge.
And
the time when thunderstorms threatened to drown out the event on the
day that Billy Graham was scheduled to speak. No one who was there will
ever forget how the clouds parted as Graham stepped up to the microphone
and the sun shone brightly on the gathering while he shared his message
of God's amazing grace.
Or when Roy Acuff said of Grandfather Mountain, "what a glorious place to praise the Lord. It is like being lifted right up there with your prayers."
Everyone relishes memories of Arthur Smith and the Crackerjacks, music masters of the event from the 1950s through the early 1980s. Brother Ralph Smith would keep the crowd laughing with his country humor while Arthur inspired the gathering with dozens of his classic hymns, including "Acres of Diamonds." Other crowd favorites who performed with Smith were Tommy Faile, Maggie Griffin, Don Ainge, the Shuler twins, and George Hamilton IV.