And it was “Rose Garden,” released in 1970, that sealed her country music legacy, earning her a Grammy and Country Music Association’s female vocalist of the year award in 1971. It topped the country charts five straight weeks and peaked at No. 3 on the Billboard Hot 100. The song reached No. 1 in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Ireland and Norway.
“It was popular because it touched on emotions,” she told the AP. “It was perfectly timed. It was out just as we came out of the Vietnam years and a lot of people were trying to recover.
She made television appearances with such stars as Lucille Ball, Bing Crosby, John Wayne and Tom Jones and performed for presidents Richard M. Nixon, Gerald R. Ford, Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan. She was also in episodes of the TV show “Starsky and Hutch” and in the 1982 TV movie “Country Gold.”
Ms. Anderson’s other hits included, “Rocky Top,” “You’re My Man,” “How Can I Unlove You?,” “What a Man, My Man Is” and “Top of the World” (also recorded by the Carpenters).
She returned briefly to the country Top 10 in 1983 with a duet with Gary Morris, “You’re Welcome to Tonight.”
Lynn Rene Anderson was born Sept. 26, 1947, in Grand Forks, N.D., and grew up in Sacramento. The daughter of country songwriters Casey and Liz Anderson, she started performing at the age of 6.
An award-winning equestrian as a teenager, Ms. Anderson was named California Horse Show Queen in 1966.
In her later years, she lived in Taos, N.M., where she faced a number of legal problems. A Taos judge issued a restraining order in 1995 against Ms. Anderson after her boyfriend said she had threatened him following the end of their 12-year relationship.
In 2005, Ms. Anderson was accused of shoplifting a “Harry Potter” DVD from a Taos supermarket and then punching a police officer as she was being put into a patrol car. She later pleaded no contest to obstructing an officer and was given a conditional discharge, court records show.
The year before, Ms. Anderson was arrested on drunken-driving charge in Texas, the same week she was nominated for a Grammy for a bluegrass album.
Her marriages to Grammy Award-winning songwriter Glenn Sutton and businessman Harold Stream III ended in divorce.
Survivors include her father; her partner, Mentor Williams; a daughter from her first marriage; and two children from her second marriage.
