PATSY CLINE WALKED INTO A RADIO STATION IN 1957 WEARING COWBOY BOOTS AND A DRESS HER MOTHER SEWED THE NIGHT BEFORE… Hilda Hensley had stayed up past midnight at the kitchen table in Winchester, Virginia, stitching by lamplight. The fabric was cheap. The pattern was her own. Patsy was 24. She’d been singing in honky-tonks since she was 16, and Nashville kept telling her to wait her turn. She walked onto Arthur Godfrey’s stage in New York and sang “Walkin’ After Midnight.” The crowd wouldn’t stop clapping. Godfrey had to wave them down twice. Six years later, a plane went down in a Tennessee forest. She was 30. The dress is still folded in a box somewhere — and what Hilda did with it after the funeral is the part that breaks people. If you were Hilda that night at the sewing machine — would you have known you were stitching a legend, or just a daughter’s first big break?
The Dress Hilda Hensley Sewed Before Patsy Cline Became a Legend In Winchester, Virginia, in 1957, Hilda Hensley sat at a kitchen table long after the house had gone quiet.…