![]() While in high school in Britain, he saw a classmate named Catherine and knew immediately that she was the girl he would marry. Nonetheless, Dan was still immensely blessed with Biblical wealth. However, this required sacrifice as he lost income from America, especially from the forthcoming contract increase, and soon his mansion burned to the ground in a forest fire while it was temporarily, accidentally uninsured. He quit the drugs and alcohol and lived a true life for Christ. Instead of reluctance and foot-dragging I wanted to run through the streets and shout it from the mountain tops.”ĭan’s conversion soon led to his departure from the band. It had taken 7 years to break my heart and spirit and make me ready to share Christ with the rest of the world. He continues, “That night in Malibu, I felt God saying that now was the time to live up to my end of the covenant. “In my spirit I heard God accept my prayer and heard Him say, ‘Now you can fulfill that other promise you made to me.’” I said aloud, ‘I don’t need any of this stuff, the house, the career, the money or the trappings of success. Finally, he desperately kneeled down in his million-dollar mansion on the Pacific Coast in Malibu, California.ĭan writes, “I cried out to God for relief, told Him how miserable I was, what a wretch I’d become and how deeply I longed for Him. But Dan had everything he wanted in life except happiness. After seven years as the highest-earning band for Warner Brothers, America was going to sign a huge new contract. Millions of their albums were sold, including 5 million of their Greatest Hits album, and they will have a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. He later warned young people about the dangers of substance abuse, discussing his own struggles with drugs and alcohol, which were necessary to survive the intense pressures to succeed.ĭan and his bandmates wrote many hits which most Americans have heard, such as their first, A Horse with No Name, which became #1. So for the next 7 years I lived a double life.”ĭan then plunged into all the vices associated with rock music stardom. I was also terrified because I was sure that to make that proclamation would spell the end of that success. Terror seized my heart when I realized the magnitude of what had happened and what I had committed to. According to Dan’s autobiography, Dan Peek: An American Band, he was saved and baptized at age 12 but lived “a lukewarm Christian existence.” Then at age 19 he prayed, “God, if you’ll make this band a success I’ll use it as a platform to tell others about you, to proclaim you to people everywhere.ĭan writes, “Within nine months…America had our first hit single and album…I knew in my heart that God had heard and honored my prayer. He and two fellow military brats formed America in Britain.ĭan had one of the most incredible Christian testimonies, and his life offers us so many lessons. Dan was the son of an Air Force officer and lived all over the world, even in Sumter, S.C. America was one of the most successful rock bands in the world in the seventies. Although a majority of the files consist of between two to four pages, a few contain up to four linear inches of material.Dan Peek, co-founder of the rock group America, died unexpectedly in his sleep on Sunday, July 24, 2011, at the young age of 60 in his home in Farmington, Missouri, from an infection of the membrane surrounding the heart. Materials continue to be added to these files. Additional material consists of newspaper clippings, journal articles, change of command/retirement brochures, and biographies printed from the websites of the Navy Chief of Information and Arlington National Cemetery. Many of the files consist of individual officer biographies produced during the 1950s through the 1970s by the Navy Office of Information, Internal Relations Division the Navy Office of Information, Biographies Branch and the Division of Naval Records and History (OP 29). ![]() Also see Navy Personnel: A Research Guide. For biographical information from the late 18th through the early 20th centuries, see the Navy Department Library's ZB files and Officers of the Continental and U.S. Navy officers who served during the Second World War and the Cold War-era, though their contents range from the Interwar period (1919-1939) through the War on Terrorism. The files are particularly noted for biographical coverage of senior U.S. These files have been accumulated since the early 20th century by the Navy Department Library to provide historical information to US Navy personnel and other researchers, both official and unofficial. They are a combination of files collected by the Library and a ready reference collection of duplicate flag officer files formerly housed in the Archives Branch of the Naval History and Heritage Command. The Modern Biographical Files are located in the Navy Department Library's Rare Book Room.
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