Ulys R "Red" Turner - Renfro Valley Performer

Red Turner was born on March 17th, 1916 in Middleboro, Kentucky. Turner, a county music performer and a Baptist Minister, was the son of James Franklin and Jane Rose Turner of Franklin, Kentucky. Friends said that Turner seemed to be born with musical talent, and he always dreamed of becoming a professional performer. He mastered the banjo, fiddle, piano and rhythm guitar despite never having a formal music lesson in his life. Turner married Emma Munday on August 25th, 1936, and they had two children.  

He began his musical career singing over Cincinatti radio station WLW, shortly after World War II. In 1948 he began performing on the Renfro Valley Barndance show, which aired on WLW from Cincinatti's Music Hall during its first year and from Memorial Auditorium in Dayton, Ohio, in its second year. The show then moved to its permanent home at the Old Barn in Renfro Valley, Kentucky.  Also, in 1948, Turner joined the cast of WLW's Midwestern Hayride which was a popular show in the late 1940s and early 1950s. He and his brother Lige became local television celebrities, singing and playing country music while performing comedy routines. Red also made some country gospel recordings at King Records in Cincinatti, with Grandpa Jones and the Delmore Brothers, and part of the Brown's Ferry Four. Turner was later inducted into the Renfro Valley Hall of Fame, and his favorite guitar was displayed in the Renfro Valley Museum.  

After retiring from show business, Turner became an evangelist. He spoke at many churches in the greater Cincinatti area, and founded the Covington Baptist Temple where he served as pastor for 17 years. He was an avid golfer, often playing with fellow pastors. Red died at the age of 79 in 1995 in Covington Kentucky.  
 

          The guitar you are viewing was Red's favorite guitar that was on exhibit at the Renfro Valley Museum, and is now on permanent display here at the Kentucky Music Hall of Fame and Museum. It is a 1945 Martin D-18, one of several prized and valuable instruments here at the Kentucky Music Hall of Fame.

Off the Shelves
  1. Introduction
  2. Replica of King Tutankhamen’s Throne, pre-1980s
  3. Horse Model, c. 1870s
  4. Replica Radio-Controlled Model Airplane “Big Guff,” 1937
  5. Dutch Merchantman Model, Handmade, c. 1949
  6. Carrom Board, The Carrom Company, manufactured 1914-1939
  7. Flexible Flyer Sled, S.L. Allen and Company, Inc.
  8. Pieter Van Peenen’s Trunk, c. 1863
  9. Wheelchair, circa 1940s-1950s
  10. Child’s Ladder-Back Chair, 1840-1860
  11. Child’s Rocking Chair, mid-19th century
  12. Baby’s Highchair, 1830-1839
  13. Bassinet, Vermeulen Furniture Company, 1930
  14. Rocking Horse, Pony Boy Manufacturing Company, 1947-1948
  15. Edgars Krasts’ Trunk, c. 1951
  16. Work Table, date unknown
  17. Bicycle, “Mini Miss,” Stelber Bicycle Corporation, c. late 1960s
  18. Electric Stove, Kalamazoo Stove & Furnace Company, 1948-1950
  19. Electro Hygiene Vacuum Cleaner, c. 1940
  20. Pump Organ, Star Organ, c. 1870s
  21. Electric Phonograph Company, 1916-1918
  22. Regina Music Box, c. 1895
  23. Console Television, Model 2U172L Run 2, Magnavox, c. 1960
  24. Radio, Zenith Radio Company, 1940-1941
  25. Bass Drum, Barbour Hall Military Academy Band, c. 1950s-1979
  26. Chickering Piano, 1864
  27. Florentine Table, c. 1875
  28. Panama Pacific Exposition of 1915
  29. Carved Chair, purchased 1915
  30. Table, Hinoki Wood, 1915
  31. Settee, c. 1870
  32. Writing Desk and Chair, c. 1880
  33. Singer Sewing Machine, 1927
  34. Underwood Standard Bookkeeping Machine, post-1923
  35. Permanent Wave Machine, c. 1937
  36. Hoekstra’s Hardware Store Sign, 1940s-2017
  37. Test 'Ur Own' Radio and TV Tube Tester, c. Late 1950s - Early 1960s
  38. Telephone Switchboard, 555 PBX (Private Branch Exchange) model, 1955-1969