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Gillsburg in Pike County, Mississippi — The American South (East South Central)
 

Lynyrd Skynyrd Crash Site Memorial

 
 
Lynyrd Skynyrd Crash Site Memorial image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Cajun Scrambler, March 14, 2020
1. Lynyrd Skynyrd Crash Site Memorial
Inscription.
Pre Crash: Rise of the Simple Man
In 1964 Lynyrd Skynyrd began humbly in Jacksonville, Florida. The founding members jokingly named the band after a gym coach, Leonard Skinner. Eventually, after numerous police interruptions of the band's loud and rowdy practice sessions, the group moved their rehearsals outside the city limits, to an unairconditioned one-room cabin they nicknamed the "Hell House". In the sweltering Southern heat the band solidified as a tight musical unit. Guitarists Gary Rossington, Allen Collins, and Ed King formed what became known as "the three-guitar attack". Billy Powell provided keyboard and piano accompaniment. Bassist Leon Wilkeson and drummer Bob Burns established a backing for it all. Helming the show, Ronnie Van Zant sang about fighting or loving with equal passion.

In 1973 their debut album "Lynyrd Skynyrd (Pronounced: Leh-nerd Skin-nerd)" announced the group to the world. Like other albums to come, this introductory work contained well-crafted yet musically unpretentious songs for and about the common man. Tracks like "Simple Man," "Tuesday's Gone," "Gimme Three Steps," and what would become an anthem for fans across the globe, "Free Bird," demonstrated the band's ability to mix melody with hard-driving rock and roll.

In the few short years leading up to the crash
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Lynyrd Skynyrd released music that has become a permanent part of the rock lexicon: their self-titled debut, followed by four other studio albums, "Second Helping," "Nuthin' Fancy," "Gimme Back My Bullets," and "Street Survivors". This last album, released just three days before the plane crash, would eventually reach the highest record chart ranking of all their work.

"All I saw was treetops" (Billy Powell, keyboardist for Lynyrd Skynyrd)
The flight was doomed. But that autumn day had otherwise been beautiful, with the late afternoon light slowly fading to dusk in the sky from which the plane fell. In the warm early evening of October 20, 1977, a chartered twin-engine prop plane carrying members and crew of the popular musical group Lynyrd Skynyrd crashed in the forest near this marker. Several passengers were killed, including the charismatic front man and founder, Ronnie Van Zant.

Eyewitnesses on the ground had sighted a plane flying low, much too low, over the treetops. By the time the plane hit the trees word was already spreading in this corner of Amite County, Mississippi. Within moments after the crash, as evening descended, farmers, hunters, and other volunteers converged on this area, carrying blankets, flashlights, and other tools for what they reckoned would be a grim, urgent undertaking.

The tragedy occurred
Lynyrd Skynyrd Crash Site Memorial image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Cajun Scrambler, March 14, 2020
2. Lynyrd Skynyrd Crash Site Memorial
Panel 2
If I Leave Here Tomorrow, Would You Still Remember Me?
because the plane had run out of fuel, so there was no fire or smoke to signal to the rescuers the crash's exact location in the wooded obscurity. However, a helicopter had been dispatched to the emergency, and it was from this chopper hovering above the trees that the volunteers were able to track to the downed plane. In the darkness the main light available to the first responders was the giant spotlight beaming eerily down from this helicopter that floated above the wreckage for a long time while rescuers worked below.

The absence of fire, plus the speedy actions of the volunteers on the ground and the medical staff who assisted them at local hospitals, were factors behind most of those aboard the plane surviving. But among the dead were lead singer Ronnie Van Zant, guitarist Steve Gaines, back-up singer Cassie Gaines (sister of Steve Gaines), assistant tour manager Dean Kilpatrick, pilot Walter McCreary, and co-pilot William Gray. Twenty of the twenty-six passengers survived, most with serious injuries.

Last Flight of Free Bird
On October 20, 1977, the band were in the early stage of an ambitious tour to promote "Street Survivors". Flying from Greenville, South Carolina, where they had played a show the night before, to Baton Rouge, Louisiana, to a scheduled concert that would never be, the members of Lynyrd Skynyrd had every
Lynyrd Skynyrd Crash Site Memorial image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Cajun Scrambler, March 14, 2020
3. Lynyrd Skynyrd Crash Site Memorial
Panel 3
Cause I'm As Free As A Bird Now, And This Bird You Cannot Change
reason to feel elated. They now performed for larger audiences throughout the United States and beyond. The checks were bigger. Assistants attended to them like royalty. They were in their twenties. They must have seemed invincible.

While the group were in top form, their chartered air transportation was tragically not. The day before the doomed flight suspicions about the plane, a Convair CV-240, were apparent. The company that owned the ailing aircraft had scheduled it for maintenance soon, and some band members had considered taking a commercial flight to their next performance. But alternate flight arrangements were never made, and repairs would never come.

On its final flight, above the thick green canopy of trees that cover this part of the state, the aircraft began to run out of fuel. Thinking they would never make the airport at Baton Rouge, the pilots aimed the sputtering machine toward a closer airfield in McComb, Mississippi, but even that emergency objective was too far. When the aircraft stalled and glided lifelessly down into the trees, one witness reported the sound it made was like the boom-boom-booming of railroad cars colliding during hook up. Near the tree-thick site of the crash stretched an open pasture where the desperate pilots had hoped in vain to make an emergency landing.

At the accident many of the rescuers in the heated
Lynyrd Skynyrd Crash Site Memorial image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Cajun Scrambler, March 14, 2020
4. Lynyrd Skynyrd Crash Site Memorial
Center Plaque
rush of the moment did not recognize the victims among the wreckage were members of the band Lynyrd Skynyrd. One of the rescuers recalls wondering, "What's a bunch of hippies doing on an airplane? They don't look like they can afford a ticket." Even some who recognized the band may have been confused in their excitement. One of the witnesses at the scene informed others nearby, "That's Lynyrd Skynyrd's plane, but don't worry, I think 'Leonard' made it out okay.

Reunion and Legacy
The best of Lynyrd Skynyrd's songs never faded in the years since the crash. The music speaks to life in the American South but touches on the universal themes of nonconformity, freedom, love, loyalty, betrayal, and loss -- transcending geography to reach fans across time and location.

In 1987, on the 10th anniversary of the crash, the band members who survived the accident- Gary Rossington, Allen Collins, Billy Powell, Leon Wilkeson, and Artimus Pyle — reunited for a tribute tour. Also on the tour were guitarists Randall Hall and earlier member Ed King. Collins, unable to perform on stage due to a prior car accident, acted as maestro to the group. No on-could completely fill the absence created by Ronnie Van Zant's untimely death, but his musical younger brother, Johnny Van Zant, would ably take on the duties of lead singer for the reformed band.

In
Panel 1 Reverse image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Cajun Scrambler, March 13, 2020
5. Panel 1 Reverse
addition to the timeless music they made during the bands classic era from 1973 to 1977, the group has recorded more studio albums and many live compilations with a changing roster of musicians since the accident Lynyrd Skynyrd was inducted into the Rock and Roll of Fame in 2006. As of this marker's dedication the band has sold over 28 million records in the United States alone. That number will surely continue to rise.
 
Erected 2019.
 
Topics. This historical marker and memorial is listed in these topic lists: Arts, Letters, MusicDisastersEntertainmentNotable Events. A significant historical date for this entry is October 20, 1977.
 
Location. 31° 4.746′ N, 90° 35.654′ W. Marker is in Gillsburg, Mississippi, in Pike County. Marker is on Easley Road, half a mile east of State Highway 568. Touch for map. Marker is at or near this postal address: 7364 Easley Road, Osyka MS 39657, United States of America. Touch for directions.
 
Other nearby markers. At least 8 other markers are within 10 miles of this marker, measured as the crow flies. Sherman Line Rosenwald School (approx. 4.6 miles away); T. Tommy Cutrer (approx. 8.2 miles away); Thirty-First Parallel (approx. 8.3 miles away in Louisiana); Jerry Clower (approx. 8.6 miles away); Confederate Soldiers 1861-1865 (approx. 8.7 miles away); Old Natchez District
Panel 2 reverse image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Cajun Scrambler, March 13, 2020
6. Panel 2 reverse
Ronald Wayne Van Zant, Jan. 15, 1948 - Oct. 20, 1977
Dean Arthur Kilpatrick, May 30, 1949 - Oct. 20, 1977
(approx. 8.9 miles away); Pike County Courthouse (approx. 9.1 miles away); Magnolia Hall (approx. 9.1 miles away).
 
More about this memorial. The actual crash site is located on private property, 300-400 yards south of the memorial, at the furthest tree line visible. That property owner has donated this land for the erection of this memorial.
The crash site is not accessible to the public.
NO TRESPASSING.
 
Related marker. Click here for another marker that is related to this marker.
 
Also see . . .  Official Monument Website. (Submitted on July 3, 2022, by Cajun Scrambler of Assumption, Louisiana.)
 
Panel 3 Reverse image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Cajun Scrambler, March 13, 2020
7. Panel 3 Reverse
Steven Earl Gains, Sept. 14, 1949 - Oct. 20, 1977.
Cassie LaRue Gaines, Jan. 9, 1945 - Oct. 20, 1977
Lynyrd Skynyrd Crash Site Memorial image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Cajun Scrambler, March 14, 2020
8. Lynyrd Skynyrd Crash Site Memorial
Dean Arthur Kilpatrick image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Cajun Scrambler, March 14, 2020
9. Dean Arthur Kilpatrick
Notice guitar-shaped pupil in eye.
 
 
Credits. This page was last revised on November 3, 2023. It was originally submitted on March 18, 2020, by Cajun Scrambler of Assumption, Louisiana. This page has been viewed 3,816 times since then and 319 times this year. It was the Marker of the Week October 18, 2020. Photos:   1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9. submitted on March 18, 2020, by Cajun Scrambler of Assumption, Louisiana.

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Apr. 18, 2024