It was 50 years ago today that the world lost a treasure.
On March 5, 1963 ,
the music world was stunned by the deaths of country music stars Patsy Cline,
Cowboy Copas, and Hawkshaw Hawkins, along with Patsy’s manager, Randy Hughes, who was also the pilot of the plane.
The four had been flying back home to Nashville
in the midst of inclement weather, and crashed in the forest outside Camden ,
Tennessee .
She may have died (at the age of 30) five years before I was
born, but the legacy of Patsy Cline has had an impact on my life. I consider her
the greatest musical voice to ever grace this planet. Some may not know just
how short her musical career actually was (1955-1963), considering how well her
musical legacy has stood the test of time.
That legacy includes: “Crazy,” “walkin’ after midnight,” “I fall to
pieces,” “a church, a courtroom, and goodbye,” “she’s got you,” “crazy dreams,”
“just a closer walk with thee,” and a few of my all-time favorites – “Yes, I
understand,” “back in baby’s arms,” and “three cigarettes in an ashtray.”
If you want to hear the true Patsy Cline
experience, take a listen to one of her “live” albums, specifically, “Live at
the Cimarron Ballroom,” which was recorded live only about a month after her
serious auto accident in 1961.
In 2004, I had the chance to visit the Willie
Nelson Museum
in Nashville and saw the wristwatch
that Patsy was wearing when she died. It had been stopped/broken at 6:35pm – presumably at the time of the crash
that ended her life.
In 2011, I visited Patsy’s hometown of Winchester ,
Virginia , where she was born Virginia
Patterson Hensley. I saw the house where she grew up (608. S
Kent Street ), and the house where she married
Charlie Dick (720 S. Kent Street ),
as well as Patsy’s grave site at Shenandoah
Memorial Park (“Death can not kill
what never dies. Love”)
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