Obituary of Herschel R. Brown, originator of the canjoe

Onslow loses relentless advocate
September 22, 2008 – 12:31AM
CAROLE MOORE
SPECIAL TO THE JACKSONVILLE DAILY NEWS of ONSLOW COUNTY, NC

The people of Onslow County have lost a formidable advocate. Herschel R. Brown was a former Onslow County commissioner and school board member known as a champion for open government, a critic of wasteful spending and a public servant never afraid to speak his mind. He died Saturday evening in his home, surrounded by relatives and friends. He was 87. Brown served on the Board of Commissioners from 1976 to 1980 following two consecutive terms on the Board of Education. He also held a seat on the Onslow County Department of Social Services advisory board.
A building contractor by trade, Brown earned a reputation as a feisty, knowledgeable public figure who asked tough questions and demanded straight answers. A vocal critic of closed-door sessions, Brown championed open and transparent government.
Brown was noted for speaking his mind, even if his opinion wasn’t necessarily popular. In recent years, he joined forces with a watchdog group that kept tabs on the expenditure of local tax dollars. He often expressed his dismay at wasteful spending with letters to the editor of The Daily News.
In his professional life, Brown constructed private homes and commercial buildings. He was known to many of his customers for a relentless dedication to quality. Billy Humphrey, who with his brother owned a service station at Pumpkin Center, said Brown built that station for them in 1962 at a cost of $27,000. The 60-by-60-foot building now serves as a GMC dealership.
Humphrey remembers his old friend as honest and hard working.
“He would always pull his end of the saw,” Humphrey said.
Over the years, Brown dabbled in a number of hobbies, most notably as the creator and manufacturer of a small, simple instrument known as the canjoe. Constructed of a piece of wood embedded with frets, an empty soft drink can and metal strings, the canjoe be played by anyone, Brown often said.
He had a habit of seeing something and trying to come up with a better way to do it.
On a trip the North Carolina mountains, he saw some mountain dulcimers and knew he could make better ones. He came home and did just that. After spying a cruder form of the canjoe, Brown’s immediate reaction was to go home and try to improve on it. His version soon became his biggest hit.
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Brown particularly enjoyed sharing them with school children and provided many music teachers with the instruments, which could be played by virtually anyone. He donated canjoes to kids in schools like one in Washington, D.C., that had no budget for musical instruments.
Brown loved the idea that children would get a chance to enjoy music, but often wryly remarked that of all of his life’s accomplishment, he would probably be remembered mostly for his canjoe.
In his office hung a photograph of which Brown was particularly proud: It showed a group of Mexican children holding their canjoes.
His son, Raeford Brown, said his father, who refused to copyright his design and freely gave the plans to anyone who wanted them, recently sent canjoes to a group of servicemen in Iraq.
“He loved the military and was very supportive of them, but the kids were his biggest love,” Raeford Brown said.
His father and his canjoes were featured in an article that appeared in “Our State Magazine,” as well as on a PBS show.
“He thought the world needed a canjoe,” Raeford Brown said.
He described Herschel Brown as “compassionate, loving and infectious,” and said he was out in his workshop building canjoes only three weeks before his death.
“He had promised them, and he didn’t break promises,” Raeford Brown said.
Although Herschel Brown held public office, his son said he never liked to be called a politician.
“He didn’t take donations; he listened to folks, but made up his own mind and campaigned the same way. He became educated before he became involved in anything,” Raeford Brown said.
A native of Wilmington, Herschel Brown came to Jacksonville in 1952 and formed Brown Brothers, a construction company, with two of his brothers, Norman and Irving, both now deceased.

About CanJoe*John

CanJoe*John began making and marketing the authentic 'canjoe' instruments from their origin. Introduced to them by their creator, Herschel R. Brown, in the early 1990s, John, from the beginning, helped Herschel manufacture them in Herschel's shop. John relocated back to his home state of TN in 1993 and continued, initially with Herschel's direct assistance, to make and market them, establishing the licensed sole proprietorship, the CanJoe Company, in 1994. As a professional musician CanJoe*John became billed as the "world's most unique musician, playing the world's most unique musical instrument, the canjoe" (aka, canjo). Always with his own personal canjoe instrument in hand he was awarded the adult "2007 Male Bluegrass Instrumentalist of the Year" by the North American Country Music Association International (NACMAI), and now having the distinction of being the first and only canjoe picker to ever perform on the Grand Ole Opry, has literally taken the one-stringed thing to the outer limits! CanJoe*John is a master craftsman and artist who designs, creates and crafts these instruments as custom works of musical fine art for those who respect and require the best of the best, truly genuine, original one-stringed musical instruments. He can be reached via email at canjoe@canjoe.com, or by phone at 423-612-4320.
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One Response to Obituary of Herschel R. Brown, originator of the canjoe

  1. CanJoe*John says:

    Herschel R. Brown was a dear friend and strong advocate of mine who helped me start the CanJoe Company. He supplied the parts that I first used to get the company started and he built a jig for me to use in my shop to help me assemble and to build all subsequent CanJoe Company instruments. Herschel and I collaborated on many instrument design changes and on ideas over the many years that we were friends. He and I shared our knowledge of woodworking and our common love of and our goals in getting canjoe instruments into the world market. He and I once collaborated on and supplied a medical mission to communist Cuba to “smuggle” 25 canjoe instruments into that country for use by kids with cancer. Herschel was always one of the first to always be updated or notified about any achievements in either the music industry or in the business I experienced concerning canjoes. He was one of my most vocal “cheerleaders” and he, himself, had several of my custom built instruments in his own collection. I spoke with him often on the phone and spoke with him several times during his illness with cancer. He strongly supported the developing “Tour of Smiles” and had agreed to be on the board of directors but his opportunity to be on the board was never to occur as he passed away just prior to seeing the official plans finalized. I attended Herschel’s funeral and with great honor, I played “Wayfaring Stranger” on my canjoe at his funeral after giving my own brief eulogy of this wonderful friend at his service. Herschel will always be an inspiration to the Tour of Smiles and his friendship will forever be missed.

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