Henry Simms ran over a little girl in a pickup truck outside of Farrell, MS.
Charley Patton's guitar playing brother, Son Patton, was shot in Mound Bayou in 1919.
Clarence Johnson, the younger brother of Tommy Johnson, was killed at a juke near Crystal Springs, MS.
Many blues artists, after living less than pious lives, met with a fitting end. Having supposedly made a deal with the devil at the crossroads, Robert Johnson seemed to have hellhounds on his trail in mid-August 1938 at age twenty-seven, when his condition steadily worsened over the course of three days until he died in a convulsive state of severe pain near Greenwood, Mississippi. Willie Bunch, better known as Peetie Wheatsraw, the Devil?s Son-in-Law, the High Sheriff of Hell, was a passenger in the back seat of a friend?s Buick on his 39th birthday, December 21, 1941, when some friends decided to take a drive and struck a standing freight train, instantly killing both men in the front seat and dealing out a fatal head injury to Bunch who died in a St. Louis hospital some hours later. Both John Lee ?Sonny Boy? Williamson and Memphis Piano Red were beaten to within an inch of their lives and later died from their injuries. Having supposedly lived an easy life of secular pleasure outside of the church, the brutal violence of their last moments contrasted sharply with lives not devoted to hard work and thrift. In the minds of God-fearing church folks, their violent deaths only served as a gateway for an eternity that awaited them in the fires of hell. Most folks never had to sell their souls, only pick up a bottle or an instrument, perhaps even an accordion?
The blues artist who fell victim to the most violent death was rumored to have been an accordion player named Walter ?Pat? Rhodes, who, in fact, was the first blues artist from the Delta to record for a major label. In 1927, he recorded four tunes with Richard ?Can? and Mylar ?Pet? Harney, including one later covered by Charley Patton called ?The Crowing Rooster,? for Columbia Records in Memphis, Tennessee. Less than a year later, Mylar Harney had been killed outside a juke joint in Arkansas and several informants of Memphis Blues author Bengt Ollsson reported that Rhodes died later in the 1940s ?after being struck by lightning.? The informants of Stephen Calt and Gayle Dean Wardlow, moreover, recalled that the lightning had struck and killed him in Alligator, Mississippi. Indeed, the accounts of several people seemed to suggest that the life of the Delta musician who had first put the blues on record had been abruptly taken from him in a flash of light come down from the heavens seemingly out of the hand of God himself.
But did it really happen? Did the first ever blues musician from the Delta to make a recording meet such a vicious end? And who in the world was Rhodes?