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  1. Bertha Lee Pate, known more commonly as Bertha Lee (June 17, 1902 – May 10, 1975) [1] [better source needed] was an American classic female blues singer, active in the 1920s and 1930s. She recorded with, and was the common-law wife of Charley Patton .

  2. Jan 25, 2017 · Bertha Lee Pate Patton was an African American blues singer from the Mississippi Delta who came to prominence during the 1920s and 1930s. She was born to Ella Johnson and Nels Pate on June 17, 1902, in Flora, Madison County, Mississippi, and moved with her family to Lula, Mississippi, when she was a child. Lula was a hot spot for blues activity ...

  3. Bertha Lee Pate, known more commonly as Bertha Lee (June 17, 1902 – May 10, 1975) [1] [better source needed] was an American classic female blues singer, active in the 1920s and 1930s. She recorded with, and was the common-law wife of Charley Patton .

  4. Bertha Lee Pate, known more commonly as Bertha Lee was an American classic female blues singer, active in the 1920s and 1930s. Career She recorded with, and was the wife of, Charlie Patton.

  5. Jan 4, 2016 · In 1930, just four years before his death from a heart problem, he met and married Bertha Lee Pate. In their brief time together, she recorded a dozen songs with him. She lived into the 1970s, but after Patton’s death, she never again recorded, which is a damned shame, because she was a great blues singer. In 1965, Sam Charters tracked her ...

  6. Patton settled in Holly Ridge, Mississippi, with his common-law wife and recording partner, Bertha Lee, in 1933. His relationship with Bertha Lee was a turbulent one. In early 1934, both of them were incarcerated in a Belzoni, Mississippi, jailhouse after a particularly harsh fight. [16] W. R.

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  8. Apr 28, 2024 · In fact he died in his bed, probably from an infection, in Indianola, Mississippi – not far from where he grew up – where he lived with his final common-wife, Bertha Lee. As Francis Davis notes in his excellent 1995 book The History of the Blues: The Roots, The Music, The People from Charley Patton to Robert Cray, his death certificate listed him as a “farmer” and that was very far ...

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