HE WROTE A SONG FULL OF NAMES. BUT FOR 59 YEARS, ONE NAME WAS NEVER JUST A LYRIC. In 1972, Harold Reid helped write “The Class of ’57,” a song about old classmates and the lives they drifted into. Some got jobs. Some got lost. Some disappeared into the kind of ordinary trouble people rarely talk about. The song won a Grammy. And for a lot of listeners, those names didn’t feel fictional at all. They sounded like people they once knew. But one name carried a different weight for Harold. Brenda. She met him when she was 14. They married in 1960. Five children came. Then grandchildren. Then great-grandchildren. And here is the quiet part people miss: the man who sang about people scattering never really ran from home. He and Brenda stayed in Staunton, Virginia, on their farm, close to family and church. After 59 years of marriage, Harold died in 2020 surrounded by his wife and children. He wrote about where everybody ended up. His own answer was simple. Back home, with Brenda.
He Wrote a Song Full of Names. But For 59 Years, One Name Was Never Just a Lyric. In 1972,…