THE LAST THING PATSY CLINE SAID TO DOTTIE WEST WASN’T GOODBYE — IT WAS A WARNING NO ONE TOOK SERIOUSLY On March 3, 1963, Patsy Cline performed her final show at a benefit concert in Kansas City for the family of DJ Cactus Jack Call. After the show, Dottie West offered to drive Patsy back to Nashville. Patsy almost said yes. But she decided to fly instead with her manager Randy Hughes. Before leaving, she turned to Dottie and said: “Don’t worry about me. When it’s my time to go, it’s my time to go.” Two days later, the plane crashed in a forest near Camden, Tennessee. Patsy was gone at thirty. What most people don’t know is that Patsy had a fear of flying her entire life. She had survived a near-fatal car accident in 1961 that left her with a scar across her forehead. After that crash, she started telling friends she didn’t think she’d live long. She gave away her belongings. She made sure the people she loved knew it. Dottie West carried those last words for the rest of her life. She repeated them in every interview, every time someone asked about Patsy. Everyone remembers how Patsy Cline died. But it was the way she lived her last months — like someone saying goodbye without ever using the word — that haunts the people who knew her most. Dottie West wasn’t the only person Patsy said something strange to that week — and what she told Loretta Lynn the night before was even harder to hear.
THE LAST THING PATSY CLINE SAID TO DOTTIE WEST WASN’T GOODBYE — IT WAS A WARNING NO ONE TOOK SERIOUSLY…