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Frank Napolean Brierton

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Frank Napolean Brierton

Birth
Santo, Palo Pinto County, Texas, USA
Death
6 Jul 1973 (aged 74)
Houston, Harris County, Texas, USA
Burial
Mineral Wells, Palo Pinto County, Texas, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Willie Nelson’s sad ‘Pretty Paper’ is a real story. And it’s set in downtown Fort Worth
By Bud Kennedy
[email protected]
Adapted from columns Dec. 25, 2004; Dec. 24, 2010; and Dec. 24, 2016.
December 19, 2017 10:40 AM
UPDATED December 21, 2017 08:23 PM
FORT WORTH —

The mystery of Fort Worth’s Christmas song is solved.
It took help from readers in Palo Pinto County, plus one surprised family near Houston.

Since 1963, we’ve heard songwriter Willie Nelson’s sad ballad “Pretty Paper,” plucking heartstrings with a lyric about holiday shoppers rushing past a disabled street vendor selling “pretty paper, pretty ribbons” for pennies while crawling “all alone on a sidewalk” downtown.

Readers who shopped at the old Leonard's Department Store downtown remember that vendor. So did Nelson, a Fort Worth country music radio personality, door-to-door vacuum salesman and Southern Baptist Sunday school teacher until he moved to Nashville in 1963. “You could always hear him in town, dragging himself along the gravel street,” Neely said. We now also know that Brierton declined a wheelchair. He chose to crawl.

That’s what he learned growing up after his legs were weakened by childhood spinal meningitis, said his daughter, Lillian Compte of Conroe, near Houston. She couldn’t figure out why anybody would be asking about her father. Frank Napolean Brierton died in 1973 at 74 and is buried in Mineral Wells. “It’s a pretty song,” she said. “I just never thought of it being about my father.”

Former downtown store clerk Ernestine Wakefield of Amarillo has written online about how she watched the man from her job in W.C. Stripling’s, across the then-busy 200 block of Houston Street. That block is now the Renaissance Worthington hotel.“I was just a West Texas girl in the big city then, and here was this poor man who had nothing,” she said by phone in 2004. “I cried every time I looked out that store window.”

Nelson has often told how “Pretty Paper” is based on trips to Leonard's, America’s first supercenter. It was twice the size of a modern-day Wal-Mart, covering four blocks smack in the middle of downtown. Nelson had come to Leonard's since his childhood days in the Hill County town of Abbott. It was one of the busiest department stores in America and also the biggest grocery store in the Southwest. (When the banks ran short of money during the Depression, Leonard's printed its own currency.)

Singer Roy Orbison, who made the song a hit, also knew Leonard's from his childhood years in north Fort Worth in the 1940s as the son of two defense workers at the “bomber plant,” now Lockheed Martin Aeronautics.

In the 1950s and ’60s, Leonard's and Stripling’s were so busy at Christmas that up to 200 people would cross Houston Street every time the light changed. The crowd was so thick that some pedestrians had to wait through two lights. Brierton positioned himself on that corner, along with a vision-impaired couple, Herman and Sylvia Douglas, who sang hymns and sold pencils.

In a 2004 interview, former store manager Charlie Ringler said the Leonard family let street vendors and missionaries stay even when other downtown landlords protested. “Some people wanted them moved out, but we never moved them,” he said. “We couldn’t turn them away. As long as they were selling pencils or something, that was fine.”

Brierton worked as a street vendor in Fort Worth, Dallas and Houston, Compte said. Besides Leonard's, he also sold pencils at the Fort Worth Stock Show, at the State Fair of Texas in Dallas and on Main Street in downtown Houston, she said. He earned a living without government assistance, Compte said. “He was my father — that’s all I knew,” she said. “He sold pencils. He crawled around on his hands and knees. But we never did without.”

Her son, Rick Compte, said he admires his grandfather. And Rick Compte spilled one more secret: Brierton was married seven times. “You might say,” Rick Compte said, “that he really liked attention.” They say Brierton never knew he was the man in the song.
Article link sent to me by Find A Grave contributor, Irememberu:
http://www.star-telegram.com/opinion/opn-columns-blogs/bud-kennedy/article190507394.html
Willie Nelson’s sad ‘Pretty Paper’ is a real story. And it’s set in downtown Fort Worth
By Bud Kennedy
[email protected]
Adapted from columns Dec. 25, 2004; Dec. 24, 2010; and Dec. 24, 2016.
December 19, 2017 10:40 AM
UPDATED December 21, 2017 08:23 PM
FORT WORTH —

The mystery of Fort Worth’s Christmas song is solved.
It took help from readers in Palo Pinto County, plus one surprised family near Houston.

Since 1963, we’ve heard songwriter Willie Nelson’s sad ballad “Pretty Paper,” plucking heartstrings with a lyric about holiday shoppers rushing past a disabled street vendor selling “pretty paper, pretty ribbons” for pennies while crawling “all alone on a sidewalk” downtown.

Readers who shopped at the old Leonard's Department Store downtown remember that vendor. So did Nelson, a Fort Worth country music radio personality, door-to-door vacuum salesman and Southern Baptist Sunday school teacher until he moved to Nashville in 1963. “You could always hear him in town, dragging himself along the gravel street,” Neely said. We now also know that Brierton declined a wheelchair. He chose to crawl.

That’s what he learned growing up after his legs were weakened by childhood spinal meningitis, said his daughter, Lillian Compte of Conroe, near Houston. She couldn’t figure out why anybody would be asking about her father. Frank Napolean Brierton died in 1973 at 74 and is buried in Mineral Wells. “It’s a pretty song,” she said. “I just never thought of it being about my father.”

Former downtown store clerk Ernestine Wakefield of Amarillo has written online about how she watched the man from her job in W.C. Stripling’s, across the then-busy 200 block of Houston Street. That block is now the Renaissance Worthington hotel.“I was just a West Texas girl in the big city then, and here was this poor man who had nothing,” she said by phone in 2004. “I cried every time I looked out that store window.”

Nelson has often told how “Pretty Paper” is based on trips to Leonard's, America’s first supercenter. It was twice the size of a modern-day Wal-Mart, covering four blocks smack in the middle of downtown. Nelson had come to Leonard's since his childhood days in the Hill County town of Abbott. It was one of the busiest department stores in America and also the biggest grocery store in the Southwest. (When the banks ran short of money during the Depression, Leonard's printed its own currency.)

Singer Roy Orbison, who made the song a hit, also knew Leonard's from his childhood years in north Fort Worth in the 1940s as the son of two defense workers at the “bomber plant,” now Lockheed Martin Aeronautics.

In the 1950s and ’60s, Leonard's and Stripling’s were so busy at Christmas that up to 200 people would cross Houston Street every time the light changed. The crowd was so thick that some pedestrians had to wait through two lights. Brierton positioned himself on that corner, along with a vision-impaired couple, Herman and Sylvia Douglas, who sang hymns and sold pencils.

In a 2004 interview, former store manager Charlie Ringler said the Leonard family let street vendors and missionaries stay even when other downtown landlords protested. “Some people wanted them moved out, but we never moved them,” he said. “We couldn’t turn them away. As long as they were selling pencils or something, that was fine.”

Brierton worked as a street vendor in Fort Worth, Dallas and Houston, Compte said. Besides Leonard's, he also sold pencils at the Fort Worth Stock Show, at the State Fair of Texas in Dallas and on Main Street in downtown Houston, she said. He earned a living without government assistance, Compte said. “He was my father — that’s all I knew,” she said. “He sold pencils. He crawled around on his hands and knees. But we never did without.”

Her son, Rick Compte, said he admires his grandfather. And Rick Compte spilled one more secret: Brierton was married seven times. “You might say,” Rick Compte said, “that he really liked attention.” They say Brierton never knew he was the man in the song.
Article link sent to me by Find A Grave contributor, Irememberu:
http://www.star-telegram.com/opinion/opn-columns-blogs/bud-kennedy/article190507394.html


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