On March 8, 1963, Anglin veered off New Due West Avenue, down a ditch twelve foot deep into a tree in
Madison, Tennessee. Jack Anglin's death was a blow to the country music community. Earlier that week, four other members of the
Grand Ole Opry perished in a plane crash. On the morning of his death, Anglin first attended the joint services of
Cowboy Copas and Randy Hughes then the memorial for
Hawkshaw Hawkins before heading to the barbershop to prepare for
Patsy Cline's memorial service. It was the hair-cut that made Jack Anglin late and put him in a rush to get to Cline's service on time, causing him to speed and lose control of his vehicle. Jack Anglin died on impact of a fractured skull. Anglin was buried in
Goodlettsville, Tennessee, in the same cemetery as Cowboy Copas. In his 1993 memoir,
By The Seat of my Pants, musician
Buddy Killen claimed Jack Anglin was headed the opposite direction of the funeral and did not die in the crash. No evidence has ever been produced to support his outlandish claim, except for the conversation between Buddy and Johnnie Wright, where Johnnie told Buddy to let it go at the funeral. Jack left behind his young son Terry and wife Louise. Two weeks prior to his death, Jack Anglin and Johnnie Wright had released two new songs they hoped to soon take on the road. Following his death, in 1983 his family opened a museum in honor of his musical legacy on Old Hickory Boulevard. In the late twentieth century, two of Jack Anglin's songs were used as soundtracks to the television shows The Marty Stuart Show and God's Bloody Acre- Kitty Wells. ==References==