Lew DeWitt, “Flowers on the Wall,” and the Quiet Goodbye That Changed The Statler Brothers Forever
Before The Statler Brothers became one of country music’s most beloved vocal groups, before the awards, the television appearances, the long tours, and the Country Music Hall of Fame, there was a young man from Virginia with a sharp ear, a fragile body, and a song that sounded like nothing else on the radio.
Lew DeWitt was the original tenor of The Statler Brothers. His voice helped give the group its bright edge, but his songwriting gave them something even more powerful: a doorway into history.
That doorway was called “Flowers on the Wall.”
The song was strange in the best possible way. It was playful, lonely, clever, and a little unsettling. A man sits alone, counting flowers on the wall, playing solitaire, smoking cigarettes, and watching Captain Kangaroo. On paper, it almost sounds too odd to become a country classic. But in the hands of The Statler Brothers, it became unforgettable.
Released in 1965, “Flowers on the Wall” helped put The Statler Brothers on the national map. It sold more than a million copies and became one of those songs that kept finding new lives long after its first success. Decades later, audiences would hear it again through pop culture moments in films like Pulp Fiction and references that carried it far beyond the country music world.
The Song That Almost Did Not Fit Anywhere
Part of the magic of “Flowers on the Wall” was that it did not behave like an ordinary country song. It was not a simple heartbreak ballad. It was not a drinking song. It was not a clean-cut gospel number, even though The Statler Brothers carried that deep gospel influence in their harmonies.
Lew DeWitt wrote something more unusual. The song had humor, but it also had loneliness hiding underneath the smile. It sounded light, but the character in the song seemed trapped inside his own quiet room, trying to convince everybody that he was fine.
That may be why the song lasted. People remember catchy lines, but they hold on to songs that feel true in a way they cannot always explain.
There is a fascinating detail about the earliest version of “Flowers on the Wall.” Lew DeWitt reportedly first shaped the melody with a different feel before the final arrangement became the version listeners know today. In its first form, the song could have sounded too unusual, too hard to place, maybe even too risky for a group still trying to break through. The final version found the perfect balance: just strange enough to stand out, just polished enough to become a hit.
That small creative turn may have saved the song from disappearing before the world ever heard it.
The Voice Behind the Breakthrough
For The Statler Brothers, success did not come from one man alone. Harold Reid, Don Reid, Phil Balsley, and Lew DeWitt had a blend that felt warm, funny, sincere, and deeply rooted. But “Flowers on the Wall” gave the group something every artist needs: a song that made people stop and ask, Who are these guys?
Lew DeWitt gave The Statler Brothers that moment.
But while the group was rising, Lew DeWitt was fighting something most fans could not see from the audience. Lew DeWitt had lived with Crohn’s disease since his teenage years. Touring, recording, performing, and traveling city to city took a heavy toll. By the early 1980s, the road was no longer just tiring. The road was becoming impossible.
For a singer, leaving the stage is not simply leaving a job. It is leaving a piece of identity. For a founding member, it is even more painful. Lew DeWitt was not someone hired after the dream was built. Lew DeWitt helped build the dream from the beginning.
The Hardest Recommendation
In 1982, Lew DeWitt stepped away from The Statler Brothers. What made the decision even more remarkable was what Lew DeWitt did next. Lew DeWitt recommended Jimmy Fortune as the man who could take his place.
Jimmy Fortune was also from Virginia. Jimmy Fortune did not come in as a stranger to the spirit of the group. Jimmy Fortune stepped into one of the most difficult positions in country music: replacing a beloved original member while trying not to erase him.
And Jimmy Fortune did more than survive the pressure. Jimmy Fortune became a major part of the group’s next chapter, eventually writing three of The Statler Brothers’ four number one hits.
That fact makes Lew DeWitt’s choice even more emotional. Lew DeWitt did not just leave. Lew DeWitt helped protect the future of the group.
Sometimes love for the music means staying onstage. Sometimes it means knowing who should stand there when you no longer can.
Watching the Group Continue
Lew DeWitt attempted a solo career during a period when his health briefly improved. But the illness remained, and the comeback could not last the way fans wished it had. Lew DeWitt died in his sleep on August 15, 1990. Lew DeWitt was only 52 years old.
The Statler Brothers continued for years after that. For some fans, it was bittersweet. The harmonies were still there. The songs were still strong. Jimmy Fortune brought his own gifts and helped create unforgettable music. But somewhere inside the story of The Statler Brothers, there was always the shadow of the man who wrote “Flowers on the Wall.”
Lew DeWitt had been forced to leave the stage, but Lew DeWitt never truly left the group’s history.
The Name on the Plaque
In 2008, The Statler Brothers were inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame. By then, Lew DeWitt had been gone for nearly eighteen years. But when the honor came, Lew DeWitt’s name was there where it belonged, beside the other founding members.
That detail matters.
Because country music history can sometimes remember the people who stayed visible and forget the people who had to step away. But Lew DeWitt’s story cannot be separated from The Statler Brothers. Without Lew DeWitt, there is no “Flowers on the Wall.” Without “Flowers on the Wall,” the road to everything that followed looks very different.
So was Lew DeWitt giving up when Lew DeWitt handed his spot to Jimmy Fortune?
Maybe the better question is this: how many artists would have loved the group enough to help choose the voice that would replace them?
That is not giving up. That is sacrifice. That is loyalty. That is a founding member understanding that the music was bigger than one man, even when that one man had given the music one of its most important songs.
Lew DeWitt wrote the song that opened the door. Then, when illness forced Lew DeWitt away from the stage, Lew DeWitt held the door open for someone else.
And somewhere every time “Flowers on the Wall” plays, that quiet act of grace still echoes between the harmonies.
