found:My home is in the Delta. [Phonodisc] 1965?
found:His Levee camp blues [SR] 1980?:container (Fred McDowell; b. ca. 1906, Rossville, Tenn.)
found:His A dose of double dynamite [SR] p1985:label (Mississippi Fred McDowell)
found:Santelli, R. Big book of blues, 2001(McDowell, Mississippi Fred; b. Jan. 12, 1904, Rossville, Tenn., d. July 3, 1972, Memphis, Tenn.)
found:Social Security death index on Ancestry.com, Aug. 23, 2001(Fred McDowell; b. Jan. 12, 1906, d. July 1972)
found:Information from 678 converted Dec. 15, 2014(Mississippi blues singer and guitarist; d. 7/3/72)
found:American National Biography Online, accessed March 03, 2015, via Oxford African American Studies Center database:(McDowell, Mississippi Fred; Fred McDowell; songwriter, blues musician, singer, guitarist, jazz musician; born 12 January 1904 in Rossville, Tennessee, United States; attended country dances, where he would sing rather than play guitar; moved to Mississippi for good sometime around 1940; made his festival debut at the University of Chicago Folk Festival (1963); recorded extensively for both American and European labels, including Capital which produced his 1969 Grammy-nominated album I Do Not Play No Rock and Roll; toured briefly with the Rolling Stones; widely considered the most important new rural blues discovery of the 1960s; died 03 July 1972 in Memphis, Tennessee, United States)
found:Wikipedia September 19, 2023:(McDowell was born in Rossville, Tennessee, United States. Seeking a change from plowing fields, he moved to Memphis in 1926, where he worked in the Buck-Eye feed mill... He finally settled in Como, Mississippi, in 1940 or 1941 (or maybe the late 1930s), where he worked as a full-time farmer for many years while continuing to play music on weekends at dances and picnics.) -https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mississippi_Fred_McDowell