skip navigation
News section page-top image
Subscribe online to the Biblical RecorderBR Day
Updated Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Dottie Rambo killed in bus accident

Dottie Rambo speaks to the Gospel Music Association in 2001 when The Rambos were inducted into the Hall of Fame.
Photo by Morris Abernathy

NASHVILLE, Tenn. - Gospel music legend Dottie Rambo died early May 11 when her tour bus veered from a Missouri highway and struck an embankment.

Seven others aboard the bus suffered severe or moderate injuries in the accident on Interstate 44 near Mount Vernon in southwest Missouri and were hospitalized in Springfield, the Associated Press reported.

Rambo's entourage was en route to a Mother's Day performance at a Dallas-Fort Worth-area church. The AP noted that officials were uncertain whether the crash was related to storms in the area.

Rambo, 74, published an estimated 2,500 songs, with entries in nearly every hymnbook. Included in the 1991 Baptist Hymnal, for example, are "We Shall Behold Him" and "Behold the Lamb." The two songs and a third, "Holy Spirit, Thou Art Welcome," are included in the 2008 hymnal to be released this summer by LifeWay Christian Resources.

Rambo, of Nashville, Tenn., won a Grammy for a 1968 solo album, "It's the Soul of Me," and Dove awards in 1999 for her song, "I Go to The Rock," sung by Whitney Houston in the motion picture "The Preacher's Wife," and in 1982 for "We Shall Behold Him."

She was a member of the Gospel Music Hall of Fame, the Southern Gospel Music Association Hall of Fame and the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame. Among the artists who have recorded her songs: Elvis Presley, George Beverly Shea, dcTalk, Johnny Cash, Dolly Parton, Bill Gaither and Steve Greene.

Rambo was a native of Morganfield, Ky., who began writing songs at age 8 and as a teen was signed to a songwriting contact by Gov. Jimmie Davis of Louisiana.

Funeral arrangements had not been published at press time.

 
Hot Off The Web
  • Hot off the Web storyThird World faith: The new center of Christianity: During the last few years, Christian scholars like Philip Jenkins, author and professor of religion at Pennsylvania State University, have noted the center of Christianity has shifted to the Southern Hemisphere, leaving the United States and Europe and heading to Latin America, Africa and Asia, where churches have seen unprecedented growth despite persecution and opposition.
    - Virginia Religious Herald
  • Hot off the Web storyOhio Town Split Over Teacher Accused of Preaching: Demonstrations on the town square show how divided people are over the school board's decision to fire a science teacher accused of preaching his Christian beliefs in the classroom and burning crosses on students' arms.
    - Washington Post
  • Hot off the Web storyMinistry To Retirees By Retirees: Sharing the Gospel in older adult communities
    - Christianity Today