Willie Nelson, Rosanne Cash, Dierks Bentley, Civil Wars perform to benefit Johnny Cash childhoom home (10/5/2012)

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by: Vernell Hackett, EnStarz |

(Photo : Reuters) The boyhood home of country music star  Johnny Cash is shown in this undated publicity photo released to Reuters October  3, 2012. Cash’s humble home in the tiny town of Dyess, Arkansas, was acquired in  2011 by Arkansas State University, which is spearheading the drive to repair and  furnish the 1930s era house where the “Ring of Fire” singer grew up with his six  brothers and sisters.

NASHVILLE, Tenn (Reuters) – Country stars Willie Nelson, Dierks Bentley, the  Civil Wars and Rosanne Cash join forces this week in a fund-raising concert for  the restoration of the boyhood home of late legend Johnny Cash.

Cash’s  humble home in the tiny town of Dyess, Arkansas, was acquired in 2011 by  Arkansas State University, which is spearheading the drive to repair and furnish  the 1930s era house where the “Ring of Fire” singer grew up with his six  brothers and sisters.
“It’s been a long process,” Cash’s song-writer  daughter, Rosanne, told Reuters, referring to purchasing the home and getting  the restoration underway. “There are a lot of Johnny Cash projects out there,  but this is the one that captured my heart.”

Cash, an icon of country  music whose hits spanned more than 50 years, died in 2003 at age  71.
Bentley, 36, who has had eight number one hits including ” “Home,”  and “5-1-5-0,” said he wanted to take part in Friday’s fundraiser out of respect  for the veteran performers who have paved the way for his new generation of  singers.

“I don’t know anyone who doesn’t love Johnny Cash,” Bentley told  Reuters. “It’s pretty cool to be part of that show.”
“To have the chance  to be part of a unique festival always excites me, especially when you are  raising money for a great cause and it’s tied to a guy that this town  (Nashville) really respects a lot,” Bentley added.

Cash’s family moved to  rural Dyess in 1936 because they were given 20 acres of land under President  Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal plan to boost agriculture.
Arkansas  State University is working to save the Cash house, and other historic buildings  in Dyess, as heritage sites and to develop them as tourist  destinations.

An initial fundraiser in 2011 raised $300,000 for the Cash  home, and Bill Carter, who is producing Friday’s Johnny Cash Music Festival  event, hopes it will bring in another $200,000.

Local officials say work  to rebuild the Cash house and its foundations, a barn and other outbuildings,  and to construct a new visitor center and walking trails will cost about $1.9  million.

“The restoration is pretty far along. We are hoping we can raise  enough funds from this year’s concert so that we can open in the fall of 2013,”  said Ruth Hawkins, director of the Arkansas Heritage Sites at Arkansas State  University.

Hawkins said family members are donating many items that were  original to the home, and the group restoring it is also acquiring replicas and  looking for furniture from the 1930s and 40s to furnish the house.

John  Carter Cash, the son of the “Walk the Line” singer and June Carter, said the  festival would benefit the whole area of Dyess, which now has a population of  under 500.

“Dyess is an area that really needs help, and this project  will help. The best thing is that it is a continuing project, and we hope it  will continue for many years to come,” Cash said.

The Johnny Cash Music  Festival concert will be held at Arkansas State University’s Convocation Center  in Jonesboro on October 5.
The proceeds will also help support a  scholarship fund established in the late singer’s name.

Read more at http://www.enstarz.com/articles/7546/20121004/johnny-cashs-boyhood-home-country-stars-willie.htm#2rlhKL0l5MbDr73R.99

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