A name can outlive a person. For Gretna Van Fleet, that is now literally true. The 95-year-old Michigan woman whose identity inspired Grammy-winning rock band Greta Van Fleet passed away on May 18, 2026, at Winter Village, a senior living facility in Frankenmuth. She never shared a stage with the band, but the connection she left behind will last forever.
A Name Born from a Casual Conversation
It was the summer of 2012. Four young musicians from Frankenmuth, Michigan, were gearing up for their very first public performance at the town’s annual Auto Fest on Main Street. They had the talent, the energy, and the songs. But they were missing one essential thing: a name.
Twin brothers Josh and Jake Kiszka, their younger brother Sam, and original drummer Kyle Hauck were running out of ideas fast. Sam Kiszka later recalled they were “coming up with all kinds of horrible names” during rehearsal after rehearsal in the family garage.
Then came the moment that changed everything.
When Hauck arrived at practice one day, he mentioned that his grandfather had dropped him off after stopping to help a neighbor, Gretna Van Fleet, cut wood. The name stopped everyone in the room.
Frontman Josh Kiszka immediately suggested dropping the “n” from Gretna, figuring “Greta Van Fleet” would roll off the tongue far more naturally, and a global rock identity was born right there in a small-town Michigan garage.
Gretna was never formally asked before the band adopted a version of her name. But she later gave them her full blessing with warmth, wit, and a sharp sense of humor.
“I think they checked out my background to make sure I wasn’t on the Ten Most Wanted list or something, and they went ahead with it,” she joked to MLive in 2019. Her first reaction to hearing the news? “I thought he was kidding. I thought it was kind of funny, and I laughed.”
A Life Far Richer Than a Band Name
The world came to know the name Greta Van Fleet through rock music and Grammy stages. But the real Gretna Van Fleet lived a life that was rich, musical, and deeply rooted in community long before any of that ever happened.
Born Gretna Sanford on October 19, 1930, in Branch County, Michigan, she married Dale Van Fleet on July 17, 1949. They spent 76 years together as husband and wife.
She was a genuinely talented musician herself, not just a name on a concert poster.
In her 20s, she formed a dance band called the Allenaires with her brothers. Over the decades, she mastered a remarkable range of instruments:
- Drums and tuba
- Cornet and saxophone
- Standup bass
- Violin and dulcimer
- Psaltery, organ, and piano
Her obituary described her as having led “a full life with many talents.” That was not an overstatement.
Gretna was also a founding member of the Bag Ladies at Frankenmuth United Methodist Church, a community group known for projects ranging from handcrafting wedding dresses to crocheting helmet warmers for soldiers serving overseas. After she and Dale sold their farm in 1967, the couple moved to Frankenmuth, where she worked as office manager at the Saginaw County Farm Bureau and later at Weiss Farm Equipment.
She spent the rest of her life as a wife, mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother in the same small Michigan town that would eventually make her name globally famous.
From a Frankenmuth Garage to Grammy History
The band that borrowed her name wasted no time making it iconic.
Greta Van Fleet was signed to Lava Records in March 2017. Their debut single, “Highway Tune,” topped both the Billboard Mainstream Rock and Active Rock charts for four straight weeks in September 2017.
In 2019, the band won the Grammy Award for Best Rock Album with their EP “From The Fires,” beating out established veteran acts including Alice in Chains and Fall Out Boy to claim the honor.
They also picked up three other Grammy nominations that year, including Best New Artist. Their debut full-length album, “Anthem of the Peaceful Army,” debuted at number three on the Billboard 200, selling 80,000 copies in its opening week.
By January 2019, they were performing on Saturday Night Live as the season’s first musical guest. Elton John personally invited them to perform at his annual Oscar party. Robert Plant himself called them one of his favorite young bands.
The band has since sold over 3.5 million records worldwide and more than one million concert tickets. Their 2023 album “Starcatcher” earned a Grammy nomination for Album of the Year in 2024.
All of it, tracing back to a name overheard in a small-town Michigan driveway.
Gretna did keep up with the band’s rise, even if their sound was not quite her style. Her favorite song by the band was “Flower Power.” “There’s a couple others that I like,” she said in 2019, “but that’s not really my style. It’s not my era that they’re making popular come back.”
A Farewell Timed with Quiet, Unplanned Poetry
The timing of Gretna Van Fleet’s passing added an emotional weight no one could have scripted.
Just days after her death, Greta Van Fleet announced a return concert at the Bowery Ballroom in New York City on May 27, 2026. It marks the band’s first live performance in almost two years, their last show having taken place on September 29, 2024.
The woman who unknowingly gave the band its name passed away just days before the band she inspired was set to return to the stage for the first time in nearly two years.
Fan communities on social media responded immediately. A widely shared tribute posted by a Greta Van Fleet fan account read: “Before the music and the crowds, the name belonged to Gretna Van Fleet. The woman who unknowingly inspired a piece of rock history. Rest easy, Gretna.”
As of this writing, the band’s official accounts on Instagram, Facebook, and X had not yet posted a formal public response to her passing.
Funeral services for Gretna Van Fleet are scheduled for 11 a.m. on May 27 at Frankenmuth United Methodist Church. Family and friends may visit the evening before at Cederberg Funeral Home of Frankenmuth from 5 to 7 p.m. Those wishing to pay tribute may consider memorials to Frankenmuth United Methodist Church or the Bag Ladies charity.
Gretna Van Fleet spent 95 years building a life filled with music, family, faith, and community. She never sought the spotlight, never chased fame, and never asked to be remembered by millions. But a single overheard name in a Frankenmuth driveway put her identity on stages across the world, on Grammy night, on Saturday Night Live, and on more than 3.5 million records. The woman is gone, but the name plays on in every riff, every sold-out show, and every fan who ever sang along without knowing the story behind it. Now they do, and the least they can do is remember her for who she truly was: a musician, a community pillar, a wife of 76 years, and the quiet soul behind one of rock’s most beloved names.
What does the story of Gretna Van Fleet mean to you? Drop your thoughts in the comments below and share this tribute with a fellow rock fan who deserves to know the real story behind the name.































