Some losses shake a community to its core, and the passing of KeAaron Jones is one of them. The 15-year-old Franklin County High School student from Frankfort, Kentucky, died on June 9th after fighting one of the rarest and most aggressive forms of cancer a young person can face.
He was surrounded by the people who loved him most, and according to his grandmother, he left this world with an abundance of love filling the room around him.
KeAaron was a sophomore who had barely scratched the surface of the life waiting for him. He played volleyball and basketball, sang in the school choir, and performed in the band program, earning selection to the Kentucky Music Educators Association All-State Choir.
He was also the recipient of the Paul Wyler Spirit Award for Resiliency, a recognition that speaks volumes about the character he carried into every room he entered. Teachers remembered him as humble. Teammates remembered him as funny and kind. His coach said simply that everyone who knew him walked away a better person.
His mother, Keana Jones, was his constant companion through every hospital visit, every treatment, and every difficult moment that came with his diagnosis.
She stepped away from work entirely to be by his side, and in doing so, faced the double burden of emotional devastation and financial strain that so many caregiving parents know all too well. A GoFundMe campaign launched in April raised more than $11,000 from nearly 200 donors who wanted to help carry some of that weight.
How a Simple Knee Pain Led to a Life-Changing Diagnosis
The story of how KeAaron came to be diagnosed is one that his family has chosen to share openly, hoping it might help another family avoid a delayed diagnosis. It started with knee pain, the kind that doctors initially suspected could be a torn MCL.
When imaging showed only inflammation, the family felt a measure of relief. Physical therapy began. But the symptoms kept worsening. Numbness spread through his lower limbs. Tingling and weakness followed. Walking became difficult. Balance became unreliable.
By December 2025, the full picture had emerged, and it was devastating. KeAaron had a spinal cord tumor, later confirmed as Diffuse Midline Glioma with the H3K27M mutation, a fast-moving cancer with no known cause and no way to have predicted or prevented it. He completed five weeks of radiation therapy, but the disease continued its relentless course.
The Franklin County school community did not stand at a distance. When word spread about his diagnosis, students, staff, and local supporters organized a volleyball tournament called “Turn it Up!” at the high school in April 2026. The event raised more than $10,000 for the Jones family, surpassing every expectation organizers had set.
Principal Joey Thacker called KeAaron a light to everyone around him and said his legacy of kindness and humility at Franklin County High School would not be forgotten. His volleyball coach noted that even knowing the weight of his diagnosis, KeAaron chose to smile and make others feel comfortable rather than burdened.
He dreamed of becoming an architect one day. He had plans, talent, and a future full of possibilities. Frankfort lost far too much when it lost KeAaron Jones.



