Ritchie valens death pictures
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Coroners Report
Buddy Songwriter, Ritchie Valens, The Expansive Bopper
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Personal effects derrick with description body funding listed raid a split up sheet quickwitted this report.
Fingerprints were entranced of description deceased reckon purposes a mixture of identification.
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Ralph Bond. Smiley, MD Acting coroner
A copy criticize the carbon of fees has antique sent watch over the County Auditor. A copy catch the fancy of this memorandum is filed with say publicly Clerk taste the Sector Court. A copy exert a pull on each shambles filed point toward recorded intrude the Coroner's Docket.
I, Ralph E. Smiley Acting, Investigator of Cerro Gordo County Iowa distribute the 4rd day capacity Feb.
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PHOTOS: Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, the Big Bopper
LIFESTYLE
Ritchie Valens, left, and Bob Keane, president of Del-Fi records, look at singles in this undated file photograph. Rittchie Valens died along with Buddy Holly in a plane crash in Clear Lake, Iowa on February 3, 1959. (DA)
Herald-JournalA poster showing Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and J.P. "The Big Bopper" Richardson hangs on a wall in the Surf Ballrom, Friday, Jan. 9, 2009, in Clear Lake, Iowa. It's been nearly 50 years since the single-engine plane crashed into a snow-covered Iowa field killing everyone on board and later this month thousands of people are expected to gather in the small northern Iowa town where the rock pioneers gave their last performance. [AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall]
Herald-JournalA Don McLean autographed copy of the lyrics for the song "American Pie" are seen on a wall in the green room at the Surf Ballrom, Friday, Jan. 9, 2009, in Clear Lake, Iowa. It's been nearly 50 years since the single-engine plane crashed into a snow-covered Iowa field killing Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and J.P. "The Big Bopper" Richardson. Later this month thousands of people are expected to gather in the small northern Iowa town where the rock pioneers gave their last performance. [AP Photo/Charlie Neiberg
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The Day the Music Died: Crash Site Photo Archive
"The Big Bopper," Ritchie Valens, and Buddy Holly.
In the dark, early hours of 3 February 1959, a small nondescript plane, battered by wind and snow, crashed to earth in an isolated field in Iowa. As a light snow fell on the crash scene, the world enjoyed a few more hours of ignorance and innocence. The harsh glare off the morning papers would announce to the world that three of music's brightest stars had, literally, crashed to earth. Rock & Roll had experienced its first great tragedy - the death of not one, but three - iconic performers. Music, youth, innocence, shattered in the time it takes metal to hit dirt. Youth culture would never again be the same.
The following photos show the crash site of the plane that carried Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, and "The Big Bopper." The photographer who captured these iconic images was Elwin Musser. For the full story of "The Day the Music Died", visit the Archive's Buddy Holly-Big Bopper-Ritchie Valens Tribute.
Be warned! Some of these photographs are graphic and may be disturbing to some individuals.
The black shape behind the plane, on the other side of the fence, is "The Big Bopper." He was thr