A community in North Carolina is in mourning after a high school baseball star was killed in an early-morning car crash.

Gary ‘Landyn’ Jacobs, 17, was driving to work at 4am on Thursday, when authorities say he slammed into a tree on Canal Cove Road in Lake Waccamaw.

Jacobs received medical care at the scene, but ultimately succumbed to his injuries. 

His uncle, Josh Simmons, told WECT the teenager was on his way to work at the family’s logging business at the time – hoping to save up some money before heading back to East Columbus High School for his senior year.

‘What he was going to do that morning… he wanted to be in the logging woods, he was going to work,’ Simmons said.

‘Without a shadow of a doubt, anybody wo knows Landyn knew he was gong to be running a crew in the logging woods with his brother and daddy.’ 

Jacobs’ family now says he had hoped to finish out the baseball season.

‘He was dynamic, he was a go-getter, a clown on the baseball field that made everybody laugh,’ Simmons said, calling his nephew a ‘gem at second base’ who had recently won the Most Valuable Player Award in the eastern tournament. 

Gary ‘Landyn’ Jacobs, 17, was driving to work at 4am on Thursday, when he slammed into a tree on Canal Cove Road in Lake Waccamaw and was pronounced dead 

Jacobs recently won the Most Valuable Player Award in the eastern tournament

Jacobs recently won the Most Valuable Player Award in the eastern tournament

He was also a member of the Riegelwood team that won the Dixie Youth Baseball Division II Majors Dixie World Series in 2021.

Despite being smaller in stature than some of the other players, North Carolina Dixie Youth Baseball District II Director Frankie Burney said he remembered Jacobs as a ‘scrappy little fella’ who worked hard and respected his elders.

Outside of baseball, Simmons said Jacobs enjoyed riding four-wheelers.

‘They put snorkels on their four-wheelers and they go into ponds with them and they loved it,’ he recounted, adding that the family is ‘going to be there’ for Jacobs’ parents, Greg and Heather.  

‘We are all about family, and if one of us hurts, all of us hurt. We got each other back, and we are going to be there for each other, his Momma and Daddy, Aunt. We are so supportive, the community members are really supportive,’ he noted.

More than 300 community members showed up on Saturday to attend a candlelight vigil for the teenager, where they lit candles spelling out his name and shared their memories of the fun-loving baseball player.

‘He always kept somebody laughing, always,’ relative Margaret Jacobs shared. ‘He was so humble.’

Another relative, Brandi Jacobs, said she will miss Jacobs’ ‘loving hugs that he would give you and just that look that he would give, just to know he loved you.

‘Regardless if he didn’t say anything to you, you still know that you were loved by him when you were in his presence.’ 

Family members said they would be there for the teenager's parents, Greg and Heather

Family members said they would be there for the teenager’s parents, Greg and Heather

More than 300 community members showed up on Saturday to attend a candlelight vigil for the teenager

More than 300 community members showed up on Saturday to attend a candlelight vigil for the teenager 

East Columbus Junior-Senior High School baseball coach Brad Smith also described to The News Reporter how Jacobs had a ‘happy outlook’ on life and was ‘always a pleasure to be around and talk to on the field and off the field.’

Similarly, retired teacher Fuller Royal said that from Jacobs’ first day as a freshman in his English class, he remembered the teenager as ‘always friendly. Always cordial. Always good humored and even tempered.

‘He was the same way every time you saw him,’ Royal wrote on social media. 

‘I know his family, friends and the community and the school will hurt a long time with the loss of this kind, hard-working, baseball-loving fellow,’ he continued, adding that he is ‘fortunate  to have had the chance to teach him, to know him and to be friends with him.’