Sheet music for "Get Off the Track!", 1844 |
As the first celebrity musical act in American history, the Hutchinson Family Singers used their fame to advance progressive causes. They sang about women’s suffrage, abolitionism, temperance, Native American causes, and worker’s rights. They are most famous for their Civil War Era songs. Their most famous song was probably “Tenting Tonight on the Old Campground”. Their most controversial performance was on 17 January 1862 at the Fairfax Courthouse in Virginia, when some of the troops protested the anti-slavery lyrics of a musical version of John Greenleaf Whittier’s poem “We Wait Beneath the Furnace Blast” sung to the Lutheran hymn tune “Ein Feste Burg Ist Unser Gott” (“A Mighty Fortress is Our God”, from Psalm 46).
I have heard the Hutchinson Family Songs performed on stage and in recordings. Unfortunately, there is no recording of their actual voices since they lived before this was possible. I only recently found the lyrics of their songs. I’m posting the lyrics here for the Third American Civil War Blog Challenge hosted by Bill West.
Get Off The Track!
by Jesse Hutchinson, Jr.
Ho!
the car, Emancipation,
Rides majestic thro' our nation
Bearing on its train, the story
Liberty! a nation's glory.
Roll it along! Roll it along!
Roll it along! thro' the nation
Freedom's car, Emancipation
Roll it along! Roll it along!
Roll it along! thro' the nation
Freedom's car, Emancipation.
Men
of various predilections,
Frightened, run in all directions;
Merchants, editors, physicians,
Lawyers, priests and politicians.
Get out of the way! Get out of the way!
Get out of the way! every station,
Clear the track of 'mancipation.
Get out of the way! Get out of the way!
Get out of the way! every station,
Clear the track of 'mancipation.
All true friends of emancipation,
Haste to freedom's rail road station;
Quick into the cars get seated,
All is ready, and completed.
Put on the steam! Put on the steam!
Put on the steam! All are crying,
And the liberty flags are flying.
Put
on the steam! Put on the steam!
Put on the steam! All are crying,
And the liberty flags are flying.
Hear
the mighty car wheels humming!
Now look out! the engine's coming!
Church and statesmen! hear the thunder!
Clear the track! or you'll fall under.
Get off the track! Get off the track!
Get off the track! all are singing,
While the liberty bell is ringing.
Get
off the track! Get off the track!
Get off the track! all are singing,
While the liberty bell is ringing.
See
the people run to meet us;
At the depots thousands greet us;
All take seats with exultation,
In the car, Emancipation.
Huzza! Huzza! Huzza! Huzza!
Huzza! Huzza! Emancipation
Soon will bless our happy nation.
Huzza! Huzza! Huzza! Huzza!
Huzza! Huzza! Emancipation
Soon will bless our happy nation.
Huzza!
“Get off the Track” was sung to the tune of “Dan Tucker”. The 1844 lyrics were written by Jesse Hutchinson, Jr. and published Boston: Henry Prentiss, April 1844. The cover shows a train labeled with the names of three well known abolitionist newspapers “Herald of Freedom”, “American Standard” and “Liberator”. In the background two trains have crashed, labeled “Clay” and “Van Buren”, two Democratic (pro-slavery) candidates. You can find this song also in the book The Anti-Slavery Harp; A Collection of Songs for Anti-Slavery Meetings. Compiled by William W. Brown, A Fugitive Slave (Boston: Bela Marsh, 1848)
You can
see and hear the song at this YouTube video presentation
In 2011 I visited the Smithsonian Museum of American History and was surprised to see the sheet music for the Hutchinson Family song "Get Off the Track!" on display. We were excited to find a bit of family history in our nation's most famous history museum!
------------------
The Slave’s Appeal
by Jesse Hutchinson, Jr.
Over the mountain, and over the moor,
Comes the sad wailing of many a poor slave;
The father, the mother, and children
are poor,
And they grieve for the day their freedom to have.
Pity, kind gentlemen, friends of
humanity,
Cold is the world to the cries of God's poor,
Give us our freedom, ye friends of
equality,
Give us
our rights, for we ask nothing more.
Call us not indolent, vile and
degraded,
White men have robbed us of all we hold dear;
Parents and children, the young and
the aged,
Are scourged by the lash of the rough overseer.
Pity, kind gentlemen, friends of
humanity,
Cold is the world to the cries of God's poor,
Give us our freedom, ye friends of
equality,
Give us
our rights, for we ask nothing more.
And God in his mercy shall crown
your endeavors,
The glory of heaven shall be your reward;
The promise of Jesus to you shall be
given,
"Enter, ye faithful, the joy of the Lord."
Pity, kind gentlemen, friends of
humanity,
Cold is the world to the cries of God's poor,
Give us our freedom, ye friends of
equality,
Give us
our rights, for we ask nothing more.
The song “The
Slave’s Appeal” was adapted by Jesse Hutchinson, Jr. from H. Piercy’s “The
Beggar Girl” circa 1798. The original
music score can be found at the website of the Levy Collection of Sheet Music
at Johns Hopkins University http://levysheetmusic.mse.jhu.edu/
Both of
the songs “The Slave’s Appeal” and “Get off the Track” were often greeted with
mob violence. The Hutchinson Family
friend, Francis Bicknell Carpenter (1830 – 1900) said that Abby “would look
directly into the eyes of the mob leaders, invariable with the effect of
subduing the unruly spirits” [ Frank
Carpenter, New York Home Journal,
December 7, 1892] Frank Carpenter also
did a portrait of Abby Hutchinson which hangs in the collections of the Lynn,
Massachusetts Historical Society.
See the webpage for Abby Hutchinson Patton
(1829-1892) at this link: http://www.oocities.org/unclesamsfarm/abby.htm
or see Alan Lewis’s entire website on
the Hutchinson family at http://www.oocities.org/unclesamsfarm/abby.htm
(formerly a Geocities website, now archived at Oocities.org)
I've written many blog posts about the Hutchinson
Family Singers. You can find this tag
listed in the right hand column and click on it to read all these posts. These three blog posts about the Hutchinson Family
Singers give the most genealogical information:
The
Hutchinson Family Singers
The
Illiterate Colonel (my 5x great grandfather Joshua Burnham, who sold his house
to the Hutchinson Family Singers) http://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2010/01/illiterate-colonel.html
Hutchinson
Family - The Saga Continues!
--------------------------
Copyright
2013, Heather Wilkinson Rojo
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