Career
He was a contemporary of Lightnin" Hopkins. Jackson"s mother played gospel guitar, and he played early on in a gospel group, the Blue Eagle Four. He trained to be a mechanic and did a stint in the Army during World World War II, then decided to pursue a career in blues music
He recorded a demo and sent it to Bill Quinn, the owner of Gold Star Records, in 1946.
Quinn signed him to a recording contract and released "Freedom Train Blues" in 1948, which became a nationwide hit in the United States. He recorded for Imperial Records between 1950 and 1954, both as a solo artist and with a backing band.
His 1950 song "Rockin" and Rollin" was recast by later musicians as "Rock Maine Baby". He was hurt in a car crash in the middle of the 1950s and gave up his music career, returning to work as a mechanic.
In 1960 he released an LP for Arhoolie Records, but he did not make a major comeback in the wake of the blues revival.
He died of cancer in 1976 in Dallas, at the age of 60. B.B. King covered Jackson"s "I Got to Leave This Woman", on his 2000 album, Makin" Love Is Good for You. Eric Clapton covered Jackson"s "Travelin" Alone", on his 2010 album, Clapton.