Weeks later she was on a date with Allison, who introduced her to his friend.
"And he started laughing," Gerron said. "Jerry asked him what was so funny, and he said 'I've already overwhelmed your Peggy Sue'."
Image caption Joe Maulden, left, Buddy Holly, centre, and Jerry Allison, right, as The Crickets
It is widely reported the song was initially called Cindy Lou, and that Allison asked Holly to change the title to win back Gerron after a break up - a claim she denies.
She first heard the hit song in a school auditorium, with hundreds of screaming teenagers.
"I was just delighted, I thought it was a fascinating song," she said. "It's really hard to stand still when you're listening to Peggy Sue."
Gerron and Allison divorced in 1964 and she moved to California to attend Pasadena Junior College.
Gerron returned to Lubbock in 1995 to care for her mother and stayed there for the rest of her life.
"Peggy Sue was always just plain good to people," friend Bryan Edwards told local paper the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal.
Mr Edwards knew her as a ham radio user, and said they would have an annual radio event "so that people would get on a certain frequency and talk to Peggy Sue".
"That was a great thrill to those people to talk to her," he said.
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