
By 1987, it seemed solidified: The late Van Zant was replaced by brother Johnny, while Rossington, Pyle, Powell, and Wilkeson resumed their former duties. Three years later, an intoxicated Collins crashed his car in Jacksonville, killing his girlfriend Debra Lizama Watts and rendering him paralyzed from the waist down and with limited use of his upper body.Īt this point, talk of a Skynyrd-proper reconfiguration had been in the works for some time. Collins made another attempt by starting the Allen Collins Band, which included Wilkeson and Powell and released one album in 1983 to lukewarm response. The tragedy effectively splintered the band by 1982 and threw the grieving Collins into a spiral of substance abuse. Shortly before they were slated to embark on their debut tour in 1980, Collins’s wife, Kathy, died unexpectedly from a miscarriage-related hemorrhage.

The Rossington-Collins Band lineup eventually was doomed as well. The new project did not include drummer Artimus Pyle, who - in another stroke of Skynyrd misfortune - had badly shattered his leg in a motorcycle accident. The remaining band members continued to make music through the ’80s under various configurations, most notably the Rossington-Collins Band, who took special pains to distance the new outfit from a “reborn” Skynyrd tag by recruiting a female lead singer, Dale Krantz.

He survived the incident and admitted he was under the influence at the time, prompting bandmates Ronnie Van Zant and guitarist Allen Collins to write “That Smell” - an ominous tune warning, “Say you’ll be all right come tomorrow, but tomorrow may not be here for you.” (Ironically, Rossington, now 65, is the sole member of the original lineup still performing in the band.) Trouble began for the hard-partying band a year before the plane crash, when guitarist Gary Rossington plowed his brand-new car into a tree along a Jacksonville, Fla., road. It is indisputably the creepiest prediction, but the fiery Street Survivors cover wasn’t the first prediction of deadly events for Skynyrd. In fact, Lynyrd Skynyrd have managed to earn the dubious distinction of “ unluckiest band in history” over the years. (Photo: AP)Īlthough the crash remains now and forever the darkest centerpiece in Lynyrd Skynyrd’s legend - as well as a breeding ground for gruesome urban legends surrounding the demise of various members - fans know quite well it’s far from the first or last tragedy the definitive Southern rockers endured. The small plane had 26 people onboard, and six were killed in the crash, including three members of Lynyrd Skynyrd. In 2006, the band was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.The wreckage of a twin-engine Convair 240 plane lies in a wooded area near McComb, Miss., on Oct. The band continues to perform and record music in memory of those who died. In 1987, Van Zant’s younger brother Johnny helped resurrect the band as its lead singer. In the aftermath of the tragedy, their album Street Survivors went platinum and No. The band went on indefinite hiatus for 10 years after the crash. Many thought the crash was the end of Lynyrd Skynyrd. They then had to hike through the wooded area until they found help from a local farmer.

Artimus Pyle, the drummer for the band, escaped the plane with two others. The others survived but were severely injured. The Band Took a 10 Year Hiatus After the Crash Additionally, road assistant Dean Kilpatrick, pilot Walter McCreary and co-pilot William Gray were among the casualties. Guitarist Steve Gaines and his sister, back-up vocalist Cassie Gaines, also were killed in the crash. He often told his family he didn’t believe he’d live past 30. In another bit of eeriness, Van Zant was three months shy of his 30th birthday.
