Tom Quinn wrote:
Here is an e-mail from Tommy Auldridge (Mike's brother and a great player himself) concerning the guitar.
"Tom: I guess you didn't get my email concerning the history on your black Emmons. So I'll tell you all about it again. On Wednesday, I got a phone call from Dale Wood. He used to take Dobro lessons from my brother Mike. He tells me that the original owner of that black Emmons was Buddy Charleton.
Buddy did a lot of recording with that steel, and so Mike traded Dale a Dobro for it, because Mike was about to do a recording session, and wanted to use that same steel. Dale bought that steel from another local player named Curry Coster. Curry had been taking lessons from Buddy Charleton, and that's how he came across the chance to buy it from Buddy.
So, Buddy Charleton was the first owner, he sold it to Curry, and Curry sold it to Dale Wood, and Dale traded it to Mike, and Mike gave it to me. I think if I had known all that history, I would not have sold it.
Curry is a friend of mine and he always told me it was the best sounding steel, and that I should keep it. I never got around to changing it over to the Day set-up.
And that's really cool, because now you can brag about the fact that you have the Buddy Charleton steel that made all those Ernest Tubb records from the time that Buddy first got that steel from Ron Lashley. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Tommy"
Here is a link to the entire posting that I got the above quote from:
viewtopic.php?t=311412
I have a couple of questions to ask in order to get some opinions from the Forum Members:
1) The existing original white lined fret boards are in almost perfect condition, so I'm inclined to reuse them rather than replace them with new ones. What should I do?
2) How much value do you think the provenance of Buddy Charleton's ownership adds to the price of a guitar like this?
Here are a few photos I took of the guitar before I disassembled it for deep cleaning and restoration. I sent the brightwork out for repolishing and reflocked the cabinet before reassembling the guitar. I had to plug a bunch of holes in the cabinet due to knee levers and such being installed and then moved around. I put a fairly standard Emmons setup on it with five knee levers.


