Guthrie’s wife dies

Associated Press file photo -- Arlo Guthrie sings 'Amazing Grace' to his bride Jackie Hyde at their 1969 wedding ceremony on Guthrie's farm in Washington, Mass. Jackie Guthrie had inoperable cancer and died Sunday at the couple's winter home in Sebastian, Fla. She was 68 and they had recently celebrated their 43rd wedding anniversary. Show caption
Associated Press file photo -- Arlo Guthrie sings 'Amazing Grace' to his bride Jackie Hyde at their 1969 wedding ceremony on Guthrie's farm in Washington, Mass. Jackie Guthrie had inoperable cancer and died Sunday at the couple's winter home in Sebastian, Fla. She was 68 and they had recently celebrated their 43rd wedding anniversary.

WASHINGTON, Mass. — Folk singer Arlo Guthrie announced the death of his wife, Jackie, at age 68.

Jackie Guthrie had inoperable cancer and died Sunday at the couple’s winter home in Sebastian, Fla., according to an obituary released by Arlo Guthrie’s record label. The couple had recently celebrated their 43rd wedding anniversary.

In a Facebook posting, Guthrie said his relationship with his wife was “a very great love.”

“We didn’t always like each other,” he wrote. “From time to time there were moments when we’d have our bags packed by the door. But, there was this great love that we shared from the moment we met — a recognition — It’s YOU! And we would always return to it year after year, decade after decade and I believe life after lifetime.”

Jackie Guthrie was from Salt Lake City and grew up in Malibu, Calif. She met Arlo Guthrie in 1968 while working as a cashier at the Troubadour, the Hollywood nightclub that was an epicenter for folk music at the time. Before they’d even met, Jackie walked into the dressing room and told Arlo’s stepbrother that she would marry Arlo, according to the obituary, released Monday by Guthrie’s label, Rising Son Records.

The next year, the couple purchased a 250-acre property called “The Farm” that the family still owns in Washington, in western Massachusetts. They were married on the front lawn in October of that year.


Please log in to comment on this story

Comments (0)