THEY HELD HIS FUNERAL AT FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH IN HENDERSONVILLE. MORE THAN 1,000 MOURNERS FILLED THE PEWS — IN THE SAME CHURCH WHERE, FOUR MONTHS EARLIER, HE HAD SAID GOODBYE TO JUNE. He was buried in a black coffin with silver handles. No other color was ever considered. The service ran two and a half hours. Kris Kristofferson stood and said: “He represented the best of America. We’re not going to see his like again.” He paused, then added that Johnny Cash was “Abraham Lincoln with a wild side.” In the front rows sat Vince Gill, Hank Williams Jr., George Jones, Kid Rock, Emmylou Harris, Sheryl Crow, and former Vice President Al Gore. No cameras were allowed inside. His daughter Rosanne delivered the eulogy. Reporters who were there said they had covered many celebrity funerals — and had never felt heartbreak quite like that moment. Two months after the funeral, the CMA Awards handed out three trophies bearing his name. Each time his children walked to the stage to accept, the room rose to its feet. Every single time. He had finished recording his last song one week before he died. He left more than thirty unreleased songs behind — enough for Nashville to keep hearing his voice for years after it was gone.
Johnny Cash’s Funeral at First Baptist Church in Hendersonville: A Final Goodbye Nashville Will Never Forget On a quiet day…