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Clifton Clowers

"Wolverton Mountain"
Single by Claude King
from the album Meet Claude King
B-side "Little Bitty Heart"
Released March 1962
Genre Country
Length 2:59
Label Columbia
Songwriter(s) Merle Kilgore
Claude King
Producer(s) Don Law
Frank Jones
Claude King singles chronology
"The Comancheros"
(1961)
"Wolverton Mountain"
(1962)
"The Burning of Atlanta"
(1962)
"The Comancheros"
(1961)
"Wolverton Mountain"
(1962)
"The Burning of Atlanta"
(1962)

"Wolverton Mountain" was a hit that established Claude King's career as an American country singer/songwriter in 1962. The song was a rewrite of the original version by Merle Kilgore, which was based on a real character named Clifton Clowers who lived on the mountain (the mountain's actual name being spelled Woolverton.), north of Morrilton, Arkansas. The song spent nine weeks at the top of the Billboard country chart in the US in 1962. It was also a giant crossover hit, reaching number six on the pop chart and number three on the easy listening chart.

The song's storyline deals with the narrator's desire for Clowers' daughter and his intention to climb the titular mountain and marry her. It opens with the recounting of a legendary warning to the listener not to "go on Wolverton Mountain", as its inhabitant Clifton Clowers, who is "handy with a gun and a knife", poses a lethal threat to anyone who tries to approach his beautiful daughter, whose "tender lips are sweeter than honey". If a stranger attempts to enter, Clowers is alerted by "the bears and the birds". The narrator has decided to defy Clowers and climb the mountain despite the acknowledged danger. What will eventually happen to him is not revealed in the lyric, but the positive tone suggests optimism.

Clifton T. Clowers was born on 30 October 1891, at Center Ridge, Arkansas, son of Thomas Jefferson Clowers and Mary Prince Clowers. In July 1919 he married Esther Bell. He was a veteran of World War I and a deacon in the Mountain View Baptist Church. He was immortalized by the success of "Wolverton Mountain." He lived most of his life on a farm located on the northern edge of Woolverton Mountain.

On his 100th birthday Clowers was visited by both writers of the song, King and Kilgore. He died at the age of 102 on 15 August 1994 at his home in Clinton, Arkansas, and was buried at the Woolverton Mountain Cemetery.

Country singer Dickey Lee, who was still emerging on the music scene at the time, covered the song just months after it was released.


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