| HENDERSONVILLE,
Tenn. -- According to Hendersonville's Fire Chief Jamie
H. Steele, Johnny Cash’s former home burned to the ground
on Tuesday.
Steele said he thought a wood treatment used on
the inside and outside the house had ignited and started the fire.
"Something ignited it and
we pretty much had fire from one end to the other," Steele
said.
A large renovation project that
has been occurring at the home since it was purchased by former
Bee Gees member and brother Barry Gibb.
Dispatchers said all but one of
Hendersonville's engines had responded to the fire in the suburb
northeast of Nashville.
Steele said what the house was
built with contributed in the blaze.
"A lot of heavy, heavy timber
in house and once that got burning, there's not much you can do,"
he said.
Steele said the fire department
was also called to the home in the 1980s for a chimney fire.
Cash and his wife June Carter
Cash lived at the home until their deaths in 2003.
Gibb bought the lakefront property
in January 2006.
No one was injured during the
blaze, according to authorities.
residents, Musicians, Fans Among Home's Visitors
While the Cashes lived there,
the home was visited by everyone from U.S. presidents to ordinary
fans.The Oak Ridge Boys are among that got their start at the
Cash's home. Singer and songwriter and Country Music Hall of Fame
member Kris Kristofferson landed a helicopter in the backyard
to get the attention of Cash. Kristofferson was trying to get
Cash to record one of his songs. Kristofferson's effort finally
worked.
"I don't have any word
for this. My heart is just gone," said Country Music artist,
neighbor and long-time friend Marty Stuart. "I called (son)
John Carter, he's in Oregon. He didn't know anything about it,
so. ... This just happened so fast, there's nothing you can say
at this point, it's unbelievable. It's a big piece of the family
gone."
"There probably would not
be an Oak Ridge Boys today if it weren't for the help that Johnny
and June gave us. I can recall many fun times and memories spending
time in this house, you know. It was a landmark here in this neighborhood
where we all live. It's a terrible tragedy to see something like
this," said Oak Ridge Boy member Richard Sterban.
"Well, it's a very sad
day for our family and I'm sure for the Gibb family as well. This
house was a historic house. There was not another house like it
anywhere in the country. We're just devastated not only for our
memories and the great times we had in the house with John and
June and the whole family, my Momma and Daddy lived here until
they both passed away. There's so many memories in that house
and it's just difficult to see it burn," said realtor and
brother of Johnny Cash, Tommy Cash.
Billy Graham, Jane Seymour and
Robert Duvall were among other famous visitors to the home.
The Cash family's possessions were not
in the home at the time of the fire.
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