<P> Vaughan received several music awards during his lifetime and posthumously . In 1983, readers of Guitar Player voted him Best New Talent and Best Electric Blues Guitar Player . In 1984, the Blues Foundation named him Entertainer of the Year and Blues Instrumentalist of the Year, and in 1987, Performance Magazine honored him with Rhythm and Blues Act of the Year . Earning six Grammy Awards and ten Austin Music Awards, he was inducted posthumously into the Blues Hall of Fame in 2000, and the Musicians Hall of Fame in 2014 . Rolling Stone ranked Vaughan as the twelfth greatest guitarist of all time . In 2015, Vaughan and Double Trouble were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame . </P> <P> Vaughan's ancestry has been traced back to his great - grandfather, Robert Hodgen LaRue . Robert LaRue had a daughter named Laura Belle, Vaughan's paternal grandmother . She married Thomas Lee Vaughan and moved to Rockwall County, Texas, where they lived by sharecropping . On September 6, 1921, they had a son named Jimmie Lee Vaughan . </P> <P> Steve's father Jim Vaughan, also known as Big Jim, dropped out of school at age sixteen, and enlisted in the United States Navy during World War II . After his discharge, he married Martha Cook on January 13, 1950 . Stephen Ray Vaughan was born on October 3, 1954, in Dallas, Texas; he was three - and - a-half years younger than his brother Jimmie (born 1951). Big Jim secured a job as an asbestos worker, an occupation that involved rigorous manual effort . The family moved frequently, living in other states such as Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Oklahoma before ultimately moving to the Oak Cliff section of Dallas . A shy and insecure boy, Vaughan was deeply affected by his childhood experiences . His father struggled with alcohol abuse, and often terrorised his family and friends with his bad temper . In later years, Vaughan recalled that he had been a victim of his father's violence . His father died on August 27, 1986, exactly four years before Vaughan's own death </P> <P> In the early 1960s, Vaughan's admiration for his brother Jimmie resulted in him trying different instruments such as the drums and saxophone . In 1961, for his seventh birthday, Vaughan received his first guitar, a toy from Sears with Western motif . Learning by ear, he diligently committed himself, following along to songs by the Nightcaps, particularly "Wine, Wine, Wine" and "Thunderbird". He listened to blues artists such as Albert King, Otis Rush, and Muddy Waters, and rock guitarists such as Jimi Hendrix and Lonnie Mack, as well as jazz guitarists including Kenny Burrell . In 1963, he acquired his first electric guitar, a Gibson ES - 125 T, as a hand - me - down from Jimmie . </P>

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