HIS SONG STAYED ON THE CHARTS FOR 25 WEEKS — BUT HE DIED IN THE VERY FIRST ONE. On March 2, 1963, Hawkshaw Hawkins released “Lonesome 7-7203.” The song was already climbing the country charts. Everything was finally going his way. Three days later, he boarded a small Piper Comanche with Patsy Cline and Cowboy Copas. They’d just finished a benefit show in Kansas City for the family of a DJ who’d died in a car crash. They could’ve driven back to Nashville. But the pilot said he could handle the weather. He couldn’t. Ninety miles from home, the plane went down near Camden, Tennessee. All four on board were gone. Hawkshaw was 41. And “Lonesome 7-7203” kept climbing — 25 weeks on the Billboard chart, four of them at number one. The biggest hit of his life came after he was no longer here to hear it.
Hawkshaw Hawkins, “Lonesome 7-7203,” and the Song That Outlived Its Singer On March 2, 1963, Hawkshaw Hawkins released “Lonesome 7-7203.”…