
“Jesus Take the Wheel” Songwriter Brett James’ Wife and Stepdaughter Among Victims in Heartbreaking North Carolina Plane Crash
The plane crash that took the life of Brett James also stole away his wife and stepdaughter, which made a tragic loss even heavier for the country music world.
James, the Grammy-winning songwriter behind “Jesus, Take the Wheel,” “The Truth,” “I Hold On,” and hundreds more, died on September 18 when his Cirrus SR22T went down in Franklin, North Carolina. He was 57. With him on board were his wife, Melody Carole Wilson, and her daughter, Meryl Maxwell Wilson. None of them survived.
The crash happened around 3 p.m. just west of Iotla Valley Elementary School. No students or staff were harmed, but three lives were gone in an instant, and a piece of Nashville’s heart went down with them.
Melody and Brett married in August 2021 and honeymooned in Tulum. On Instagram, she often shared glimpses of their life together, including her pride in her daughter. Just two days before the crash, she posted a birthday tribute to Meryl, who had turned 28 and was celebrating milestones of her own, including 142 days sober. Melody wrote, “How blessed am I to be your momma.” That post is now a haunting final message of love from a mother to her daughter.
James himself spoke about Melody’s influence on him when he released his I Am Now EP in 2020. At the time, they were only engaged, but he credited her with inspiring his music. “She’s also a deep soul and a real musical human,” he said. “She doesn’t make music, but she’s got amazing taste in music.” It was clear that she grounded him and gave him a new spark later in life.
For fans, Brett James will always be remembered for his songs. He wrote “Jesus, Take the Wheel,” which became Carrie Underwood’s defining anthem and earned him a Grammy. He gave Jason Aldean “The Truth,” Dierks Bentley “I Hold On,” Kenny Chesney “When the Sun Goes Down,” and Rascal Flatts “Summer Nights.” In all, more than 800 songs of his were recorded, and over 25 of them hit number one. He was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame and built a legacy that stretched from Music Row to arenas around the world.
Behind the hits, he was a husband, a father, and a stepfather. He raised four children with his first wife, Sandra Cornelius-Little. With Melody, he found love again and blended his family with hers. Their story was not just about music, because it was about second chances, family ties, and faith. Carrie Underwood said her comfort was knowing Brett “loved the Lord.” His wife’s posts and his stepdaughter’s sobriety journey echoed the same spirit of hope and belief in something bigger.
Now, all three are gone, and the hole left behind feels impossible to measure. Friends and artists across Nashville, including Jason Aldean, Dierks Bentley, and Sara Evans, are posting tributes. Each one says the same thing, that Brett James was more than a hitmaker. He was a friend, a mentor, and the kind of man who gave back as much as he created.
The cause of the crash is still under investigation. For now, the only certainty is that country music lost not just one of its greatest writers but a family who carried love and faith with them until their final flight.
It is hard to believe that Brett, Melody, and Meryl are gone. Yet in every chorus Brett wrote and every life they touched, the story of that family will keep on singing.