
The Accidental Fame and Lack of Fortune of West Tennessee’s David Crockett
In this biography, experience the thrilling journey of West Tennessee’s David Crockett as he rises from frontier to fame to international icon.
Using his wits, humor and common sense, Crockett rose from the West Tennessee frontier during the divisive Jacksonian Era to become the first American celebrity.
Using his wits, humor and common sense, Crockett rose from the West Tennessee frontier during the divisive Jacksonian Era to become the first American celebrity.
Early newspaper editors quickly found that his name and exploits — often exaggerated — led to increased sales, while the first biography about his life, printed while he was still living, became an instant bestseller. He even brokered some of the first licensing deals that reproduced his image and signature on prints and made them available to his fans.
Talented men and women who were creating the American arts from scratch found in Crockett a muse who reflected how many in the country wanted to see themselves. They put him in books, plays, songs and poems. Then, Americans made him a superhero.
And there was substance to his style. As a member of Congress, he had a front-row seat as second and third generations of Americans took the torch of Democracy from the country’s founding fathers and mothers and struggled to keep it burning. His list of friends and enemies was long and included notables like Andrew Jackson, Sam Houston, Henry Clay and James K. Polk.
As with celebrities who would come later like James Dean, Marilyn Monroe and Elvis Presley, Crockett’s tragic death would occur too early and fuel his transition from celebrity to icon. Decades later, Walt Disney introduced his own version of “Davy” and ignited a licensed product phenomenon unlike anything that had ever been seen before and rarely since.
In “The Accidental Fame and Lack of Fortune of West Tennessee’s David Crockett,” R. Scott Williams uncovers what propelled this meteoric rise from frontier to fame, while also examining the birth of Tennessee during one of the most fascinating periods in American history.
Reader Reviews
*****
Well researched and written in lively prose.
“Davy Crockett comes to life along with all the characters of this expanding nation alive during his time. . . . This book is a lot of fun. Hey. I had a coonskin cap as a kid. And I still like Davy Crockett.”
*****
Maybe the best book ever on Crockett.
“My mother was raised in Obion County, and of course, I am the age influenced by Fess Parker. I have collected every book on Davy Crockett that I could, and this may be the best yet.”
*****
A stunning, definitive book on Crockett.
“In this 2021 book, Williams has done an excellent job of careful researching and referencing Crockett’s formative years in West Tennessee, through his political career and celebrity status, until his heroic death at the Alamo.”
More about “The Accidental Fame and Lack of Fortune of West Tennessee’s David Crockett“
Scott Talks with Joey Sulipeck about David Crockett
The Real David Crockett: An Evening Lecture with Scott Williams, East Tennessee Historical Society
Other Biographies by R. Scott Williams

The Forgotten Adventures of Richard Halliburton: A High-Flying Life from Tennessee to Timbuktu

An Odd Book: How the First Modern Pop Culture Reporter Conquered New York

The Accidental Fame and Lack of Fortune of
West Tennessee’s David Crockett

Townmania:
Marcus Winchester and
the Making of Memphis
