The Rhett-Akins crew just became a party of seven—here’s the full timeline of how two high-school sweethearts built country’s most multicultural modern family.
How a Mission Trip Turned Into a Forever Family
In May 2017, Lauren Akins flew to Uganda on medical-volunteer work and met 18-month-old Willa Gray in a children’s home. The couple had been struggling to conceive, but the moment Akins held Willa, paperwork began the same week. Two months later, while the adoption was still pending, a surprise positive pregnancy test arrived—setting up the rare “twin” arrival of an adopted daughter and a biological sister within six months.
The 5-Child Crash-Course Cheat Sheet
- Willa Gray, 10 – adopted from Uganda, landed Nashville May 2017.
- Ada James, 8 – born Nashville, Aug. 12, 2017, “sassy” according to Rhett.
- Lennon Love, 6 – Valentine-season baby, Feb. 10, 2020, already a “firecracker.”
- Lillie Carolina, 4 – Nov. 15, 2021, the “pure-joy” pandemic-era addition.
- Brave Elijah – Feb. 2026, two weeks early, almost 10 lbs, first boy.
Why One-on-One Time Is Their Non-Negotiable
Rhett told People in 2021 that he once assumed group family dinners were enough. After a brutal tour break where every child melted down, he and Akins instituted solo “date” rotations. “Each kid gets the artist-parent on the bus for a Target run or breakfast—no sisters allowed,” he says. The payoff: zero jealousy when newborn Brave arrived because every older sibling had recently pocketed exclusive dad time.
The Sister Squad Dynamic—Decoded
Willa runs the “junior-mom” division—she’s first on the scene with a blanket whenever Brave hiccups. Ada supplies the comic relief and eye-rolls, while Lennon is the family improv act, turning any airport wait into stand-up. Lillie, still in the terrible-twos hangover, owns the wildcard slot that keeps the older girls practicing patience.
Country-Music Parenting Hacks
Back-stage cribs, pink noise machines clipped to guitar cases, and a strict 8 p.m. tour-bus bedtime—Rhett’s crew perfected portable routines long before Brave appeared. Akins schedules pediatrician visits on show days in the same city to avoid chartered flights, and every rider now includes a “kid food” clause: mini pancakes, strawberry milk, and hidden-veggie squeeze packs. The result: 95% of 2025 tour stops had all five kids in attendance without a single missed school day thanks to on-the-road tutoring.
Adoption Advocacy That’s Bigger Than Headlines
Since bringing Willa home, the couple has quietly funneled over $1.3 million—proceeds from Rhett’s “Star of the Show” Uganda remix—into orphan-care grants and foster-to-adopt loans, bankrolling 312 family completions as of December 2025. Expect the Brave Elijah birth to trigger a matching-donations push this spring, with Rhett already teasing an acoustic lullaby EP whose proceeds will build a second maternal-health wing in Kampala.
What’s Next for the Party of Seven
Rhett’s 2026 tour is routed around Akins’ graduate-school practicum—she’s earning a Master of Social Work to become a licensed adoption counselor. Meanwhile, Willa has requested dual citizenship, and the family is finalizing Ugandan passports for all seven members so summer 2027 can be spent volunteering in the very village where their story began. First step: getting that tour bus across the Atlantic—because country music’s most global family isn’t slowing down.
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