A MAN NAMED RABBIT KNOCKED ON HIS CELL AND ASKED HIM TO RUN — SAN QUENTIN, 1959. Merle Haggard was twenty-two. His wife had just written him to say she was carrying another man’s child. Jimmy “Rabbit” Kendrick had a plan to break out in a packing crate. He invited Merle to come. Then Rabbit looked at the kid with the guitar and said something nobody else in that prison had ever said to him: “You can sing and write songs and play guitar real good. You can be somebody someday.” Merle stayed. Rabbit got out. Two weeks later he shot a California highway patrolman dead. They brought him back to San Quentin and walked him to the gas chamber. Merle stood in the yard and watched the puff of smoke rise from the chimney — the signal that the cyanide had been dropped. Eight years later, sitting on a tour bus, he wrote “Sing Me Back Home.” It hit #1. He said it for the rest of his life: “Even now when I sing the song, it’s still for Rabbit.” But there was one thing Rabbit handed him through the bars the night before the escape — and Merle carried it in his guitar case until the day he died. – Country Music
A Man Named Rabbit Knocked on His Cell and Asked Him to Run — San Quentin, 1959 A Man Named Rabbit Knocked on His Cell and Asked Him to Run — San Quentin, 1959 In the harsh environment of San Quentin Prison in 1959, dreams were rare and hope flickered like a candle in a … Read more