March 5, 1963 was supposed to be a simple trip home for country music star Patsy Cline.
Earlier that evening she had performed at a benefit concert in Kansas City for the family of radio disc jockey Jack “Cactus” Call, who had passed away several weeks earlier.
When the event ended, Cline boarded a small Piper Comanche bound for Nashville along with fellow performers Hawkshaw Hawkins and Cowboy Copas. The aircraft was piloted by Randy Hughes, Copas’s manager. Weather across the region that night had been deteriorating, with low clouds and storms moving across Tennessee along the route toward Nashville.
Hughes held a pilot’s license but was not certified to fly using instruments alone, a qualification required when visibility was that low. Later that evening the aircraft came down in a wooded area outside Camden, Tennessee, about ninety miles west of Nashville, where it was located the following day after it failed to arrive as expected.
Cline was thirty years old at the time, and her career had only recently regained momentum. Earlier hits like “Walkin’ After Midnight” and “I Fall to Pieces” had already brought her national attention. Just two years earlier, in 1961, she spent several weeks recovering in a Nashville hospital before eventually returning to performing and recording what would become one of her best-known songs, “Crazy.”
She was laid to rest in her hometown of Winchester, Virginia, where fans still visit her grave.
Patsy Cline
September 8, 1932 – March 5, 1963
… See MoreSee Less