Sunday, August 25, 2019

VictoriaAdvocate.com: Victoria woman gives gift of piano music to church for 6 decades

Linda Ross
(Shelby Miller samiller@vicad.com)

Victoria Advocate

[Victoria, Texas]

Linda Grant Ross was a little girl in the 1950s when she first set eyes on a piano.

At the time, her mother was a cook for Myrtle Braman, who lived at 206 W. Stayton St., which is today a historic Victoria home. Ross’ father also worked for the Bramans as a chauffeur, and the couple occasionally brought their children to the home.

“We lived in the country and Mom and Dad would go to work in town, so it was a real treat to go with them,” Ross, 69, remembered.


One of reasons she enjoyed visiting the Braman home, from which she can still recall the sweet pungency of magnolias, was the opportunity to play the old piano.                     
“Mrs. Braman didn’t fuss,” Ross recalled, remembering the first time she banged loudly on the upright’s keys as a curious 5-year-old. “She was happy I was playing because it was just sitting there.”

As Ross grew a few years older, the late Braman, who was a retired teacher and blind, paid for the young prodigy to take piano lessons at St. Mary’s Catholic Church, which then cost 75 cents a lesson.

Before Ross was 10 years old, she was playing at Mt. Nebo Baptist Church for Bible study classes, then the worship choir, with many adults realizing she had a gift for the keys.

“She had such a talent, a God-given talent, and it was obvious she was something special,” said Laura Sanders, who was a teenager at Mt. Nebo when she first remembers the 9-year-old Ross performing at the church. “There’s nothing she can’t play.”

Braman’s investment in those childhood lessons were the catalyst of a lifelong love of music and piano performance in the African-American churches in South Texas, where today she’s known as one of the best.

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