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About Google Book Search Google's mission is to organize the world's information and to make it universally accessible and useful. Google Book Search helps readers discover the world's books while helping authors and publishers reach new audiences. You can search through the full text of this book on the web at |http : //books . google . com/| V LIBRARY OF CONGRESS REPORT ON "The Star-Spangled Banner" ''Hail Columbia'* Amenca "Yankee Doodle*' COMPILED BY OSCAR GEORGE THEODORE SONNECK CHIEF OF THE DIVI90N OF MUSIC WASHINGTON GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFnCE 1909 h '^'> P fe- «7 . fP . /■»> L. G. card, 9-36010 '^^.'^ BTTTHTT T,OEB ^■:USTC LIBy^ARY CONTENTS Pace Prbvaos 5 "Thk Stab-Spanglbd Banner." 7-42 "Hail Coluhbia." 43-72 "Amebica." 7a-78 ,» "Yankee Doodle." 7&-166 LiTEBATUBB USED FOB THIS RePOBT 157-164 Appendix: Illustrations 1G&-248 Index 24S-2&5 3 « ■ v. y PREFATORY NOTE In December, 1907, I received instructions from the Librarian of Congress to ''bring together the various versions both of text and of music with notes as to the historical evolution" of "The Star-Spangled Banner," "HaU Columbia," "America," and "Yankee Doodle." The report was to be brief and light of touch, but accin*ate enough for practical purposes. This task would have been comparatively easy had the literatin*e on the sub- ject been reliable. Unfortunately it crumbled under the slightest critical pressure, and it became imperative to devote more research and more analytical and synthetic thought to the report than had seemed advisable at first. This and the fact that the report had to be compiled without neglect of current duties accoimts for the delay in submitting it. In form the report is frankly not a histoiy of the subject, such as one would write for popular consumption. Rather, in this report data are collected, eliminated, or verified; popular theories founded on these data are analyzed, their refutation or acceptance is sug- gested, and, of course, some theories of my own are offered for critical consideration. All this is done in such a form that the reader is at no step supposed to find a locked door between himself and the argu- ment. He is not supposed to accept a single statement of fact or argument unless the evidence submitted compels him to do so. This pUin air treatment of a popular theme distinguishes the report some- what from the bulk of the literature on the subject. In short, though not intended for popular consumption, it may be used for popular consumption with reasonable assurance of accuracy. O. G. SONNECK Chief, Music Division Herbert Putnam Librarian of Congress Washington, D. C, August, 1909 THE STAI^SPANGLED BANNER Opinions differ widely on the merits of "The Star-Spangled Banner" as a national song. Some critics fail to see in Francis Scott Key's inspired lines poetry of more than patriotic value. Some look upon it merely as a flag song, a militaiy song, but not as a national hymn. Some criticize the melody for its excessive range, but others see no defects in "The Star-Spangled Banner" and feel not less enthusiastic over its esthetic merits as a national song than over its sincere patri- otic sentiment. This controversy will be decided, whether rightly or wrongly, by the American people regardless of critical analysis, leg- islative acte, or naive efforts to create national songs by prize com- petition. This report does not concern itself at all with such quasi esthetic problems, nor is it here the place to trace the political history of "The Star-Spangled Banner" beyond what is necessary for the understanding of its history as a national song. As has been well known for a long time, the first though brief account of the origin of "The Star-Spangled Banner" appeared in the Baltimore American on September 21, 1814, under the heading of: DSFXKCB OF FOBT K'hXNRT. The annexed song was compoeed under the following circiunstancee: A gentle- man had left Baltimore, in a flag of truce for the purpose of getting released from the British fleet a friend of his who had beeo captured at Marlborough. He went as far as the mouth of the Patuxent, and was not permitted to return lest the intended attack on Baltimore should be disclosed. He was therefore brought up the Bay to the mouth of the Patapeco, where the flag vessel was kept under the guns of a frigate, and he was compeUed to witness the bombardment of Fort M 'Henry, which the Admiral had boasted that he would carry in a few hours, and that the city must iaU. He watched the flag at the fort through the whole day with an anxiety that can be better felt than described, until the night provented him from seeing it. In the night he watched the Bomb Shells, and at early dawn his eye was again greeted by the proudly waving flag of his country. This account is followed by the text of Key's poem without special title, but with the indication: ''Tune: Anacreon in Heaven." As this account was printed almost inmiediately after the events therein described took place, and were in every reader's memory, the newspaper editor, of course, omitted specific dates, but it is a matter of history that the gallant defense of Fort McHenry under Major Armistead began on the morning of Tuesday, September 13, and lasted until the early hours of September 14, 1814. The gentleman 7 8 The Star-Spangled Banner. is, of course; Francis Scott Key, and either his own modesty or an editorial whim kept his authorship from the public. The first detailed and authentic account of the origin of ''The Star- Spangled Banner" practically came from Francis Scott Key himself, who narrated it shortly after the British designs on Baltimore failed, to his brother-in-law, Mr. R. B. Taney, subsequently Chief Justice of our Supreme Court. When in 1856 Mr. Henry V. D. Jones edited the "Poems of the Late Francis S. Key, Esq. . , ." (New York, 1857), Chief Justice Taney contributed Key's version from memoiy, in an introductory " letter . . . narrating the incidents connected with the origin of the song 'The Star-Spangled Banner.'" This interesting narrative has been made the basis of all subsequent accoimts. Its substance is this: When, after the battle of Bladensburg, the main body of the British army had passed through the town of Upper Marlborough, some stragglers, who had left the ranks to plunder or from some other motive, made their appearance from time to time, singly or in small squads, and a Doctor Beanes, who had previously been very hospitable to the British officers "put himself at the head of a small body of citizens to pursue and make prisoners" of the stragglers. Information of this proceeding reached the British and Doctor Beanes was promptly seized. The British "did not seem to regard him, and certainly did not treat him, as a prisoner of war, but as one who had deceived and broken his faith to them." Doctor Beanes was the leading physician of his town and so highly respected that the news of his imprisonment filled his friends with alarm. They "hastened to the head-quarters of the English army to solicit his release, but it was peremptorily refused," and they were informed that he had been carried as a prisoner on board the fleet. Francis Scott Key happened also to be one of the Doctor's intimate friends, and as Mr. Key, just then a volunteer in Major Peter's Light Artil- lery, but a lawyer by profession, was a resident of Georgetown, which means practically Washington, the other friends requested him — to obtain the auiction of the government to his going on board the admiral's ship under a flag of troce and endeavoring to procuie the release of Dr. Beanes, before the fleet sailed. . . . Mr. Key readily agreed to undertake the mission in his ibvor, and the Presi- dent [Madison] promptly gave his sanction to it. Ordeni were immediately issued to the vessel usually employed as a cartel [the Minden] in the communications with the fleet in the Chesapeake to be made ready without delay; and Mr. John S. Skinner, who was agent for the government for flags of truce and exchange of pris- oners, and who was well known as such to the officers of the fleet, was directed to accompany Mr. Key. And as soon as the arrangements were made, he hastened to Baltimore, where the vessel was, to embark; . . . We heard nothing from him until the enemy retreated from Baltimore, which, as well as I can now recollect, was a week or ten days after he left us; and we were becoming uneasy about him, when, to our great joy, he made his appearance at my house, on his way to join his family. The Star-Spangled Banner. 9 He told me that he found the British fleet, at the mouth of the Potomac, prepar- ing for the expedition against Baltimore. He was courteously received by Ad- miral Cochrane, and the officers of the army, as well as the navy. But when he made known his business, his application was received so coldly, that he feared he would fail . (General Ross and Admiral Gockbum — who accompanied the expedi- tion to Washington— particularly the latter, spoke of Dr. Beanes, in very harsh terms, and seemed at first not disposed to release him. It, however, happened, fortunately, that Mr. Skinner carried letters from the wounded British officers left at Bladensburg; and in these letters to their friends on board the fleet, they all spoke of the humanity and kindness with which they had been treated after they had fallen into our hands. And after a good deal of conversation, and strong repre- sentations from Mr. Key, as to the character and standing of Dr. Beanes, and of the deep interest which the community in which he lived, took in his fate. General Ross said that Dr. Beanes deserved much more punishment than he had received; but that he felt himself bound to make a return for the kindness which had been shown to his wounded officers, whom he had been compelled to leave at Bladens- burg; and upon that ground, and that only, he would release him. But Mr. Key was at the same time informed that neither he, nor any one else, would be per- mitted to leave the fleet for some days; and must be detained until the attack on Baltimore, which was then about to be made, was over. But he was assured that they would make him and Mr. Skinner, as comfortable as possible, while they detained him. Admiral Cochrane, with whom they dined on the day of their arrival, apologized for not accommodating them on his own ship, saying that it was crowded already with officers of the army; but that they would be well taken care of in the frigate SwprUe^ commanded by his son. Sir Thomas Cochrane. And to this frigate, they were accordingly transferred. Mr. Key had an interview with Dr. Beanes, before General Ross consented to release him. I do not recollect whether he was on board the admiral's ship, or the Siarprue, but I believe it was the former. He found him in the forward part of the ship, among the sailors and soldiers ; he had not had a change of clothes from the time he was seized; was constantiy treated with indignity by those around him, and no officer would speak to him . He was treated as a culprit, and not as a prisoner of war. And this harsh and humiliating treatment continued until he was placed on board the cartel . . . Mr. Key and Mr. Skinner continued on board of the SurpriUf where they were very kindly treated by Sir Thonuts Cochrane, imtil the fleet reached the Patapeco, and preparations were making for landing the troops. Admiral Cochrane then shifted his flags to the frigate, in order that he might be able to move further up the river, and superintend in person, the attack by water, on the fort. And Mr. Key and Mr. Skiimer were then sent on board their own vessel, with a guard of sailors, or marines, to prevent them from landing. They were permitted to take Dr. Beanes with them and they thought themselves fortunate in being anchored in a position which enabled them to see distinctiy the flag of Fort M' Henry from the deck of the vessel. He proceeded then with much animation to describe the scene on the night of the bombardment. He and Mr. Skinner remained on deck during the night, watching every shell, from the moment it was fired, until it fell, listening with breathless interest to hear if an explosion followed . While the bom- bardment continued, it was sufficient proof that the fort had not surrendered. But it suddenly ceased some time before day; and as they had no communication with any of the enemy's ships, they did not know whether4he fort had surrendered, or the attack upon it been abandoned. They paced the deck for the residue of the night in painful suspense, watching with intense anxiety for the return of day, and looking every few minutes at their watches, to see how long they must wait for it; and as soon as it dawned, and before it was light enough to see objects at a distance. 10 The Star-Spangled Banner. their glaases were turned to the fort, uncertain whether they should see there the stars and stripes, or the flag of the enemy. At length the light came, and they saw that ** our flag was still there.*' And as the day advanced, they discovered, from the movements of the boats between the shore and the fleet, that the troops had been roughly handled, and that many wounded men were carried to the ships. At length he was informed that the iattack on Baltimore had failed, and the British army was re-embarking, and that he and Mr. Skinner, and Dr. Beanes would be permitted to leave them, and go where they pleased, as soon as the troops were on board, and the fleet ready to sail. He then told me that, under the excitement of the time, he had written a song, and handed me a printed copy of ''The Star Spangled Banner." When I had read it, and expressed my admiration, I asked him how he found time, in the scenes he had been passing through, to compose such a song? He said he commenced it on the deck of their vessel, in the fervor of the moment, when he saw the enemy hastily retreating to their ships, and looked at the flag he had watched for so anxiously as the morning opened; that he had written some lines, or brief notes that would aid him in calling them to mind, upon the back of a letter which he happened to have in his pocket; and for some of the lines, as he proceeded, he was obliged to rely altogether on his memory; and that he finished it in the boat on his way to the shore, and wrote it out as it now stands, at the hotel, on the night he reached Baltimore, and immediately after he arrived. He said that on the next morning, he took it to Judge Nicholson, to ask him what he thought of it, that he was so much pleased with it, that he immediately sent it to a printer, and directed copies to be struck off in hand-bill form; and that he, lir. Key, believed it to have been favorably received by the Baltimore public. More than forty years had elapsed since Chief Justice Taney had heard this story for the first time from Francis Scott Key, and though it probably was modified or embellished in course of time, yet in substance it has the earmarks of authenticity. Exactly for this reason, if for no other, Chief Justice Taney's accoimt furnished the foundation for all further accoimts, but it should be noticed that the Chief Justice does not tell us anything beyond how the words came to be written, until struck off in handbill form. We do not learn when and under what circumstances the broadside was printed, how the poem was wedded to its music, or when and by whom the song was first read or sung. If certain writers do include such state- ments in their quotations from Taney's accoimt, they certainly did not read Taney's introductory letter, but most probably copied their quotations from Admiral Preble, who indeed but carelessly attributes such statements to the Chief Justice. The data not con- tained in Taney's account had to be supplied by others, and it is very curious that instantly this part of the history of ' 'The Star-Span- gled Banner" became confused, whereas Chief Justice Taney's accoimt remained unchallenged except in unimportant points, as for instance, the reasons for Doctor Beanes's arrest. Under this head Chief Justice Taney was rather vague; not so Mrs. Anna H. Dorsey, who in the Washington Sunday Morning Chronicle added some ''lesser facts," which were reprinted in Dawson's Historical The Star-Spangled Banner. 11 Maga2sine, 1861, volume 5, pages 282-283. According to Mrs. Dor- sey. Dr. William Beanes, the micle of her mother, was celebrating with copious libations a rumored British defeat at Washington when ''three foot-sore, dusty, and weary soldiers made their appearance on the scene in quest of water." Somewhat under the influence of the excellent pimch, Doctor Beanes and his friends made them pris- \ oners of war, and very naturally, the British resented this, to say the ' least, indiscreet act. The Beanes-Dorsey family tradition is given here for all it is worth, but if correct, then it would be a singular coincidence that an English drinking song called '^To Anacreon in Heaven" furnished the melody for a poem which had its root in an event inspired by Bacchus. Indeed Doctor Beanes and his friends might have been voicing their sentiments ''To Anacreon in Heaven." Different is the account written by Mr. F. S. Key Smith for the Republic Magazine, 1908, April, pages 10-20, on "Fort McHenry and 'The Star-Spangled Banner.' " According to Mr. Smith, a party of marauding stragglers came into the Doctor's garden and intruded themselves upon him and his little company. "Elated over their supposed victory of the day previous, of which the Doctor and his friends had heard nothing," says Mr. Smith, "they were boisterous, disorderly, and insolent, and upon being ordered to leave the prem- ises became threatening. Whereupon, at the instance of Doctor Beanes and his friends, they were arrested by the town authorities and lodged in the Marlborough jail." This version, too, is quoted here for all it is worth; but it should be noted that throughout this article, dealing elaborately only with the political history of Key's poem, Mr. Smith is conspicuously silent about his authorities, thus preventing critical readers from accepting his statements without skepticism. A case in point is his continua- tion of Chief Justice Taney's narrative: * He [Judge Nicholson, also Key's brother-in-law] took it [the draft of the song] to the printing office of Captain Benjamin Edes on North Street near the comer of Baltimore street, but the Captain not having returned from duty with the Twenty-Sixth Maryland Regiment, his office was closed, and Judge Nicholson proceeded to the newspaper office of the Baltimore American and Commercial Daily Advertiser, where the words were set in type by Samuel Sands, an appren- tice at the time. . . . Copies of the song were struck of! in handbill form, and promiscuously distributed on the street. Catching with popular favor like prairie fire it spread in every direction, was read and discussed, until, in less than an hour, the news was all over the city. Picked up by a crowd assembled about Captain McCauley's tavern, next to the Holiday Street Theater, where two brothers Charles and Ferdinand Durang, musicians and actors, were stop- ping, the latter mounted a chair, and rendered it in fine style to a large assemblage. On the evening of the same day that Mr. Charles [!I] Durang first sang ''The Star Spangled Banner,'' it was again rendered upon tiie stage of the HoUiday Street Theater by an actress, and the theater is said to have gained thereby a national reputation. In less than a week it had reached New Orleans [I] . . . 12 The Star-Spangled Banner. This is merely the hastily concocted and uncritically diluted essence of previous articles, including that by Taney. It will be more profit- able to turn to the very few original accounts than to dissect or even pay much attention to the second-hand compilations from these original sources, no matter how spirited or otherwise attractive they may be. One G. D., in the Historical Magazine of 1864, volume 8, pages 347- 348, has this to say: One of your correspondenta inquires in what form the song of the Star Spangled Banner was first printed? I think that in the History of the Philadelphia Stage you will find that subject clearly explained. The song was first printed and put upon the press by Captain Edes, of Baltimore, who belonged to Colonel Long's Twenty-Seventh Regiment of militia. He kept his printing office at the comer of Baltimore and Gay Streets. It was given him by the author, Mr. Key, of Washington, in its amended form, after the battle of North Point, about the latter end of September 1814. The original draft, with its interlineations and amendatory erasures, etc. was purchased by the late Gen. George Keim, of Reading, and I suppose his heirs have it now. It was printed on a small piece of paper in the style of our old ballads that were wont to be hawked about the streets in days of yore. It was first sung by about twenty volunteer soldiers in front of the Holliday Street Theater, who used to congregate at the adjoining tavern to get their early mint juleps. Ben. Edes brought it round to them on one of those libating mornings or matinees. I was one of the group. My brother sang it. We all formed the chorus. This is its history . . . The reference to the ''History of the Philadelphia Stage" and to "My brother" immediately implies the identity of this C. D. with Charles Durang, brother of Ferdinand Durang (both actors) , and joint author, or, rather, editor of his father John's, "History of the Philadelphia Stage," published serially in the Philadelphia Sunday Dispatch, 1854-55. Consequently we have here the testimony of a contemporary earwitness. A few years later, in 1867, Col. John L. Warner read before the Pennsylvania Historical Society a paper on "The Origin of the American National Anthem called 'The Star- Spangled Banner,'" and this paper was printed in the Historical Magazine, 1867, Volume II, pages 279-280. As will be seen from the following quotation, it does not contradict Charles Durang's accoimt, but merely supplements it. Says Colonel Warner: It was first sung when fresh from his [Captain Benjamin Edes'] press, at a small frame one^tory house, occupied as a tavern next to the Holiday Street Theatre. This tavern had long been kept by the widow Berling, and then by a Colonel MacConkey, a house where the players '' most did congregate, " with the quid nuncs of that day, to do honor to, and to prepare for, the daily military drills in Gay Street, (for every able man was then a soldier;) and here came, also. Captain Benjamin Edes, of the Twenty-seventh Regiment; Captain Long and Captain Thomas Warner, of the Thirty-ninth Regiment, and Major Frailey. Warner was a silversmith of good repute in that neighborhood. It was the latter end of September, 1814, when a lot of the young volunteer defenders of the Monumental City was thus assembled. Captain Edes and Cap- The Star-Spangled Banner. 13 tain Thomas Warner came early along one morning and forthwith called the group (quite merry with the British defeat) to order, to listen to a patriotic song which the former had just struck off at his press. He then read it to all the young volunteers there assembled, who greeted each verse with hearty shouts. It was then suggested that it should be sung; but who was able to sing it? Ferdinand Duiang, who was a soldier in the cause and known to be a vocalist, being among the group, was assigned the task of vocalising this truly inspired patriotic hymn of the lamented Key. The old air of '' Anacreon in Heaven " had been adapted to it by the author, and Mr. Edes was desired so to print it on the top of the ballad. Its solemn melody and impressive notes seem naturally allied to the poetry, and speak emphatically the musical taste and judgement of Mr. Key. Feidinand Durang mounted an old-fashioned rush-bottomed chair, and sang this admirable national song for the first time in our Union, the chorus to each verse being re- echoed by those present with infinite harmony of voices. It was thus sung several times during the morning. When the theatre was opened by Warren and Wood, it was simg nightly, after the play, by Paddy McFarland and the company. So far the historian would have plain sailing, but his troubles begin with an article written for Harper's Magazine, 1871, volume 43, pages 254-258, by Mrs. Nellie Eyster, as appears from the printed index. Under the title of "'The Star-Spangled Banner:' An hour with an octogenarian," she reports an interview held on November 20, 1870, with Mr. Hendon, of Frederick, Md., who knew Francis Scott Key personally as a boy and who moved in 1809 to Lancaster, Pa., whence both the Durangs hailed. Together with Charles and Ferdinand Durang he belonged to the Pennsylvania Volunteer Militia, which on August 1, 1814, left Harrisburg in defense of Baltimore, but, remem- bers Mr. Hendon, they "marched to the seat of war three days after the battle had been won,'' and with special reference to the defense of Fort McHenry he "was chafing like a caged tiger because [he] was not in it." He further says that " they remained upon Gallows Hill, near Baltimore, for three months, daily waiting for an enemy that never came. Then, for the first time since leaving York [Pa.], [they] took breathing time and looked about for amusement." Follows what Admiral George Henry Preble called a more fanciful version than Warner's account when he copied Mr. Hendon's words for a foot- note (p. 494) in the chapter on "Our National Songs" (pp. 490-511) in the first edition (Albany, 1872) of his industrious and popular compilation, "Our Flag:" "Have you heard Francis Key's poem?" said one of our men, coming in one evening, as we lay scattered over the green hill near the captain's marquee. It was a rude copy, and written in a scrawl which Horace Greeley might have mis- taken for his own. He read it aloud, once, twice, three times, imtil the entire division seemed electrified by its pathetic eloquence. An idea seized Ferd. Durang. Himting up a volume of flute music, which was in somebody's tent, he impatiently whistled snatches of tune after time, just as they caught his quick eye. One, called "Anacreon in Heaven", (I have played it often for it was in my book that he found it), struck his fancy and 14 The Star-Spangled Banner. livetted hia attention. Note after note fell from his puckered lips until, with a leap and shout, he exclaimed "Boys, I've hit it I" and fitting the tune to the words, they sang out for the first time the song of the Star Spangled Banner. How the men shouted and clapped, for never was there a wedding of poetry to music made imder such inspiring influences! Getting a brief furlough, the brothers [II.] sang it in public soon after . . . In the second edition of his work (1880), then called "BBstory of the Flag of the United States of America," Admiral Preble reprinted this fanciful story, together with the Charies Durang and Colonel Warner account, but again without the slightest attempt at critical comparison and apparently without noticing that we do not have to deal here with more or less fanciful differences, but with reminiscent accounts that exclude each other. What subsequent writers con- tributed in this vein to the literature on ''The Star-Spangled Ban- ner" maybe disregarded since they merely paraphrased with more or less accuracy what they found in Preble or in his sources, as for instance, when one writer in the American Historical Hecord, 1873, volume 2, pages 24-25, carelessly mentions Charles instead of Ferdi- nand Durang as the first singer of ''The Star-Spangled Banner." However, a belated version with fanciful variations of the main theme should be noticed, as it was printed sometime in 1897 in the Philadelphia Ledger and from there reprinted in substance in the Iowa Historical Record, July, 1897, page 144. According to this, "the second day after the words were written, Ferdinand Durang was rummaging in his trunk in a tavern in Baltimore, where he had his baggage, for music to suit the words, and finally selected that of 'Anacreon in Heaven.' By the time he had sung the third verse, in trying the music to the words, the little tavern was full of people, who spontaneously joined in the chorus. The company was soon joined by the author of the words, Francis Scott Key, to whom the tune was submitted for approval, who also took up the refrain of the chorus, thus indorsing the music. A few nights afterward ' The Star- Spangled Banner' being called for by the audience at the Holliday Street Theater, in Baltimore, Ferdinand Durang sang it from the stage. Durang died in New York in 1832. Durang had a brother, Charles, also a soldier in the ' Blues, ' who was likewise an actor, who died in Philadelphia in 1875. . . ." Finally an account deserves to be reprinted here in part, because it mentioned the person who set Key's poem in type, though otherwise the lines quoted are not overly accurate, as the reader of the Taney letter will notice. It appeared in the Baltimore American on Sep- tember 12, 1872, together with a facsimile of the article, etc., of September 21, 1814, and reads in part: We have placed at the head of this article this now immortal national song just as it first saw the light in print fifty-eight years ago . . . This song, as the The Star-Spangled Banner. 16 form in which it is given shows, was published anonymously. The poet, Fran- cis Scott Key, was too modest to announce himself, and it was some time after its appearance that he became known as its author . . . Mr. Skinner chanced to meet Mr. Key on the flag-of-truce boat, obtained from him a copy of his song, and he furnished the manuscript to **The American " after the fight was over. It was at once put in type and published. It was also printed in slips and extensively circulated. The ''printer's boy,'' then employed in the office of ''The Ameri- • can," who put this song in type, survives in full vigor, our. respected friend, the editor and publisher of the "American Fanner," Samuel Sands, Esq. That to Ferdinand Durang belongs the honor of having first sung Key's poem is unanimously asserted (except by those who confuse him with his brother Charles) , but it remains an open question when and where he might so have done. On this point, the two earwit- nesseS; Charles Durang and Mr. Hendon, disagree. According to the reminiscences of the latter, the event must have happened at least three months after September 14 in camp on Gallows Hill near Balti- more. Now, it has already been mentioned that the brief account of the circumstances leading to the writing of Key's poem printed in the Baltimore American on September 21, preceded the full text of the poem under the heading ''Defence of Fort M'Henry" with the remark ''Tune: Anacreon in Heaven." It may be that Mr. Hendon heard Ferdinand Durang sing the hymn in camp after September 21, but it stands to reason that at least as early as September 21 other vocally inclined readers of the Baltimore American enjoyed the com- bination of Key's "Defence of Fort M'Heniy," and the tune "To Anacreon in Heaven." If we possessed no other contemporary evidence, l^erdinand Durang's claims would rest upon veiy shaky grounds indeed, nor is the rest of Mr. Hendon's story at all of a nature as to inspire reliance upon his memory. Mr. Elson in his "National Music of America ' ' (p. 202) bluntly expressed his suspicion to the effect that "never was a bolder or more fantastical claim set up in musical history," and every musician will agree with him that the "puckered Ups" and the frantic hunt for a suitable tune in a volume of flute music is sheer joumaUstic nonsense, which verdict applies also to the Philadelphia Ledger account. And his hunt for a melody happened three months after the tune, to which the words were to keep com- pany, had been publicly announced! The suspicious character of Mr. Hendon's long-distance reminis- cences leaves those of Charles Durang to stand on their own merits, but unfortunately they do not help us in fixing the exact date of the first performance of "The Star-Spangled Banner." Charles Durang merely remembered having been one of the chorus when his brother Ferdinand and about twenty volunteer soldiers who used to con- gregate at the adjoining tavern in the morning fitrst sang the song after Ben. Edes brought it round to them on (me of those libating 16 The Star-Spangled Banner. mornings. This may have been the morning of September 15, when Samuel Sands, the apprentice, is popularly supposed to have set the poem as a broadside, or any other morning, including a morning after September 21, when the poem had appeared with indication of the tune in the Baltimore American. Nor is Colonel Warner's account, who perhaps was a descendant of Capt. Thomas Warner, which pos- sibility would give his account the strength of a family tradition, more explicit on this point. At this tavern, it being a southern Sep- tember morning, may mean practically the same as in Charles Durang's version, in front of the adjoining HoUiday Street Theater. There Captain Edes, in company of Capt. Thomas Warner, is said to have called the attention of the group of volunteers 'Ho a patriotic song which [he] had just struck off at his press." Consequently, neither Durang nor Warner substantiate the popular version that Ferdinand Durang sang *'The Star-Spangled Banner" for the fast time on September 15, 1814. Nor do they even substantiate the universally accepted theory that the broadside was struck off Edes's press on September 15! Indeed, not even Key-Taney's report: ''Judge Nicholson . . . immediately sent it [the manuscript] to a printer, and directed copies to be struck off in hand-bill form," necessarily implies the conclusion that they were struck off on the morning of September 15. At any rate, the story that Key's poem was taken to a printer, set as a broadside, distributed about town, read, discussed, sung with great gusto, etc., and all this on the morning of September 15, 1814, belongs to the realm of unwholesome fiction! On the evening of September 15 "The Star-Spangled Banner," says Mr. F. S. Key Smith, was "rendered upon the stage of the Holliday Street Theater by an actress." Also Ferdinand Durang is mentioned in this connection by some writers, and others proffer other names. What are the facts ? In the first place, the suspicions of the historians should have been aroused by the observation that the actor- manager. Wood, in his autobiography does not mention any theatrical performances at Baltimore in September, 1814. In the second place, if they had consulted the Baltimore papers of that period, such as the Federal Gazette, Baltimore Patriot, Baltimore American — ^noneof which was published, by the way, by Benjamin EdesI — they would have found no theatrical performances announced in September, 1814, at all, but they would have found a notice in the Federal Gazette, September 20, to the effect that "about 600 Pennsylvania troops arrived yesterday," among them a Lancaster company, apparently the very militia troops to which Ferdinand Durang belonged. Not only this, the historians would further have found from the same source that the theater was not opened untU October IS, 1814- No reference to "The Star-Spangled Banner" appears in the announce- ments of this evening or of the benefit performance on October 14 The Star-Spangled Banner. 17 'Ho aid the fund for the defence of the city/' unless hidden awaj on the benefit program as ''a patriotic epilogue by Mrs. Mason." On this evening Ferdinand Durang did appear — dancing a '* military horn- pipe." With a little patience the historians at last would have found in the announcement of the historical play ''Count Benyowski" for Wednesday evening, October 19, 1814 (in the Baltimore American appears October 15 as a misprint), the following lines, which at last shed the Ught of fact on the whole matter: After the play, Mr. Harding [the Federal Gazette spells the name Hardinge] will sing a much admired New Song, written by a gentleman of Maryland, in commemoration of the gallant Dbfbncs of Fobt M'Hbnbt, called, Thb Stab Spangled Bannbb. . . . The rather immaterial question of whether or not and when and where Ferdinand Durang possibly sang "TheStar-Spangled Banner" for the first time leads up to the much more important question: How came the tune of "To Anacreon in Heaven," and no other, to be wedded to Key's poem? Chief Justice Taney, as anybody can see and as all should have seen before rushing into print with their stories, is absolutely silent on this point. So is Charles Durang. Colonel Warner says: The old air of Anacreon in Heaven Juid been adapted to it by the author, and Mr. Edee was desired so to print it on to the top of the ballad. The most reliable reports, therefore, do not mention Ferdinand Durang at all in this connection. He figures as musical godfather to "The Star-Spangled Banner" in the joumaUstic reports only and under rather suspicious circumstances. However, there exists another and different version. Mjs. Rebecca Uoyd Shippen, of Baltimore, a granddaughter of Judge Joseph Hopper Nicholson and a greatniece of Francis Scott Key, contributed to the Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, 1901-2, volume 25, pages 427-428, an article on "The Original Manuscript of 'The Star-Spangled Banner,' " of which more will have to be said further on. In thii^ article we read: Judge Nicholson wrote a little piece that appears at the heading of the lines, above which he also wrote the name of the tune " Anacreon in Heaven " — a tune which Mrs. Charles Howard, the daughter of Francis Scott Key, told me was a common one at that day — and Judge Nicholson, being a musician among his other accomplishments and something of a poet, no doubt took but a few minutes to see that the lines given him by Francis Scott Key could be sung to that tune, and, in all haste to give the lines as a song to the public, he thus marked it. I possess this rare original manuscript, kept carefully folded by his wife, Rebecca Lloyd Nicholson, and taken from her private papers by myself [Mrs. Shippen] and framed. Judge Nicholson's part in the history of ''The Star-Spangled Ban- ner" was narrated in substantially the same manner in editorial foot- notes to an article on "The Star-Spangled Banner," copied largely from Chief Justice Taney by Mrs. Shippen, for the Pennsylvania 86480-09 2 18 The Star-Spangled Banner. Magazine of History and Biography, 1898-99, volume 22, pages 321-325. It follows that the editor was either inspired by Mrs. Shippen or Mrs. Shippen by the editor. Careful reading of this par- ticular part of the article implies that we have to deal here with a personal opinion, not with contemporary evidence, or even with a family tradition. Waiving aside for the present some doubts as to the accuracy of the story as quoted above, the main contention appears to be that Judge Nicholson suppUed the tune. light is shed on the whole matter if the history of the tune "To Anacreon in Heaven" in England and America is briefly summarized. For a long time the tune of "To Anacreon in Heaven" was attrib- uted, if attributed to any composer at all, to Dr. Samuel Arnold (1740-1802). Of this opinion were J. C. (in Baltimore Clipper, 1841), Nason (1869), Salisbury (1872), and others. The general inability to substantiate this rumor finally led to one of the most grotesquely absurd articles in musical literature, namely that in the American Art Journal, 1896 (v. 68, pp. 194-195), by J. Fairfax McLaughlin, under the title "The Star-Spangled Banner! Who Composed the Music for It. It is American, not English." The Musical Times, of London, 1896 (pp. 516-619), immediately challenged Mr. McLaugh- lin's statements and elaborately buried his patriotic aspirations, though this service could have been rendered him just as neatly by a reference to Mr. WilUam Chappell's article "The Star-Spangled Ban- ner and To Anacreon in Heaven" in Notes and Queries, 1873, fourth series, volume 11, pages 50-51, or to the footnote on page 6 of Mr. Stephen Salisbury's "Essay on The Star-Spangled Banner," 1873, where the contents of a pertinent letter from Mr. William Chappell were made public. In the following pages a combination is attempted of the data, so far as I could verify them in the articles by Chappell and X in the Musical Times with the data in Grove's Dictionary and elsewhere, adding to or deducting from this information the results of a corre- spondence with such esteemed British authors as Mr. Frank Kidson, Mr. William Barclay Squire, and Mr. W. H. Grattan Flood. In his "Musical Memoirs" (1830, Vol. I, pp. 80-84) W. T. Parke entered under the year 1786 these entertaining lines: This season I became an honorary member of the Anati):eontic Society, and at the first meeting played a concerto on the oboe, as did Cramer on the violin. The assemblage of subscribers was as usual very numerous, amongst whom were sev- eral noblemen and gentlemen of the first distinction. Sir Richard Hankey (the banker) was the chairman. This fashionable society consisted of a limited number of members, each of whom had the privilege of introducing a friend, for which he paid in his subscription accordingly. The meetings were held in the great ball-room of the Grown and Anchor Tavern in the Strand, once a fortnight during the season, and the entertainments of the evening consisted of a grand concert, in which all the flower of the musical profession assisted as honorary members. After the concert an elegant supper was served up; and when the The Star-Spangled Banner. 19 cloth was removed, the coDBtitutional song, beginning, * * To Anacreon in Heaven, ' ' was sung by the chairman or his deputy. This was followed by songs in all the varied styles, by theatrical singers and the members, and catches and glees were given by some of the first vocalists in the kingdom. ' The late chairman, Mr. Mulso, possessed a good tenor voice, and sang the song alluded to with great effect . . . This society, to become members of which noblemen and gentlemen would wait a year for a vacancy, was by an act of gallantry brought to a premature dis- solution. The Duchess of Devonshire, the great leader of the Jiaut ton, having heard the Anacreontic highly extolled, expressed a particular wish to some of its members to be permitted to be privately present to hear the concert, Ac, which being made known to the directors, they caused the elevated orchestra occupied by the musicians at balls to be fitted up, with a lattice affixed to the front of it, for the accommodation of her grace and party,. so that they could see, without being seen; but, some of the comic songs, not being exactly calculated for the entertainment of ladies, the singers were restrained; which displeasing many of the members, they resigned one after another; and a general meeting being called, the society was dissolved. Misreading slightly Mr. Parke's reminiscences, C. M. in Grove's Dictionary claimed that Parke wrote of the dissolution of the club in 1786, which he, of course, did not do. Nor would the year 1786 be tenable, since Pohl in his scholarly book on "Mozart and Haydn in London," 1867 (v. 2, p. 107), gleaned from the Gazetteer of Jan- uary 14, 1791, that Haydn was the guest of honor at the society's concert on January 12. . Nor is Mr. Grattan Flood correct if he, in some "Notes on the Origin of 'To Anacreon in Heaven,' " sent me in June, 1908, dates the dissolution of the society 1796. (While fully appreciating the courtesy of Mr. W. H. Grattan Flood in transmitting these notes, I regret the inadvisability of using them, except in con- nection with other sources, because these notes are singularly at variance with the contents of several letters sent me by Mr. Grattan Flood on the same subject, and because these notes contain certain positive statements without reference to source which it would be unmethodical to accept unreservedly.) The "Musical Directory for the Year 1794" in the "List of various musical societies" states dis- tinctly: "The Anacreontic Society which met at* the Crown and Anchor Tavern, in the Strand, the festivities of which were heightened by a very Select Band." Consequently the society no longer existed in 1794. This is not at all contradicted by the entry under Dr. Samuel Arnold "Conductor at Acad[emy of Ancient Music], Ana- [creontic Society]," because the title-page distinctly reads "musical societies of which they [the professors of music] are or have been, members." (To avoid confusion it may be here added that "To Anacreon in Heaven" is not contained in the "Anacreontic Songs for 1, 2, 3, & 4 voices composed and selected by Dr. Arnold and dedi- cated by permission to the Anacreontic Society," London, J. Bland, 1785.) 20 The Star-Spangled Banner. If it is now clear that the Anacreontic Society must have been dis- solved between 1791 and 1794, the year of its foundation is not equally clear, and therefore it is a somewhat open question since when "To Anacreon in Heaven'' can have been simg as the "consti- tutional" song of this society. Mr. Grattan Flood writes in his "Notes" mentioned above: The words and music of "To Anacreon" were published by Longman and Broderip in 177^1780, and were reprinted by Anne Lee of Dublin (?1780) in 1781. Dr. Gummings says that he saw a copy printed by Henry Fought — at least it is made up with single sheet songs printed by Fought — ^but this is scarcely likely, as Fought did not print after 1770, and the song and music were not in existence till 1770-71 ... Mr. William Barclay Squire in a letter dated September 21, 1908, refers to the dates of these two publications, which contain both the words and the music, in the guarded sentence, "Both are about 1780, but it is quite impossible to tell the exact dates." The Longman & Broderip edition is the one the title of which Mr. William Ghappell transcribed for Notes and Queries, 1873: The Anacreontic Song, as sung at the Crown and Anchor Tavern in the Strand, the words by Ralph Tomlinson, Esq. late President of that Society. Printed by Longman and Broderip, No. 26 Cheapside, and No. 13 Heymarket. With reference to Dr. William Cummings's statement that he saw a copy printed by Fought, I have not found any such statement by Doctor Cunmungs in print. Apparently Mr. Grattan Flood reported part of a conversation with the distinguished English scholar, but in reply to a pertinent inquiry Doctor Cummings sent, under date of November 7, 1908, this brief note: I had a copy of Smith's ''To Anacreon " pub.pished] in 1771. I showed it at a public lecture, but cannot now find it. I have two copies of a little later date. The first named was a single sheet song. Doctor Cummings evidently was not willing to commit his memory under the circumstances on the point of imprint, nor does he make it clear whether or po Smith's name appeared on the sheet song as that of the composer. Assuming that Doctor Cummings had every solid reason to date this, the earliest known issue, of "To Anacreon," 1771, it follows that words and music must have been written at the latest in 1771 and at the earliest in the year of foundation of the ''Anacreon- tic Society," which is unfortunately unknown. In 1786, according to Parke, the chairman of the society was Sir Richard Hankey, whose immediate predecessor seems to have been Mr. Mulso. About 1780 Ralph Tomlinson, esq., appears in the Long- man & Broderip edition, as the "late President of the Society," and no other gentleman has yet been foimd to have preceded him in the chair. However, such biographical data are irrelevant for the present purpose, and attention might now profitably be called to "The Vocal The Star^Spangled, Banner. 21 Magazine; or^ British Songster's Miscellany" (London, 1778), in which are published on pages 147-148 as Song 566, without indica- tion of the tune, as is the case with all the songs in the collection, the words of, ANAOBEONTIO SOOIBTT. Written by Ralph TomUiiion, Esq. To Anacieon, in Heav'n, where he sat in full glee, A few Bona of harmony sent a petition, That he their inspirer and patron would be; When this answer aniv'd from the jolly old Grecian — Voice, fiddle, and flute. No longer be mutej I'll lend ye my name, and inspire ye to boot: And, besides, I'U instruct ye, like me, to intwine The myrtle of Venus with bacchus's vine. The news through Olympus immediately flew; When old Tnunder pretended to give himself airs — If these mortals are BuSefd their scheme to pursue, The devil a goddess will stay above stairs. Mark I already they cry. In transports of joy. A fie for PamasBusI to Rowley's we41 fly; And there, mv eood fellows, we'll learn to intwine The m3rrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine. The yellow-hair 'd god, and his nine fusty maids. To the hill of old Lud will incontinent flee, Idalia will boast but of tenantless shades. And the biforked hill a mere desert will be. My thunder, no fear on't. Will soon do its errand. And, dam 'me I I'll swinge the ringleaders, I warrant. I'll trim the young dogs, for thus daring to twine The mjrrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine. ApoUo rose up; and said. Pr'^ee ne'er quarrel. Good king of the gods, with my vot'nes below 1 Your thunder is useless — then, shewing his laurel, Cry'd, Sic evUaJbiUfvXmen^ vou know I Then over eacn head My laurels I'll spread; So my sons from your crackers no mischief shall dread, Whilst snug in their club-room, they jovially twine The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus^ vine. Next Momus got up, with his risible phiz. And swore with Apollo he'd chearfully join — The full tide of harmony still shall be his. But the song^and the catch, and the laugh shall be mine: Then, Jove, be not jealous Of these honest fellows. Cry'd Jove, We relent, since the truth you now tell us; And swear, by Old Styx, that they long shall intwine The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine. Ye sons of Anacreon, then, join hand in hand; Preserve unanimity, friendship, and love. 'Tis your's to support what's so happily phm'd; I ou've the sanction of gods, and the fiat of Jove. While thus we agree, Our toast let it be. May our club flourish happy, united^ and freel And long may the sons oi Anacreon intwine The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine. 22 The Star-Spangled Banner. About two years later, as has been stated above, Longman & Broderip, of London, and Anne Lee, of Dublin, published " To Anacreon in Heaven" as sheet song with music. It further appeared as Song CLXVII on pages 336-337 of "The Vocal Enchantress," London, J. Fielding [1783], and this being the earliest version of Tomlinson's words with their music in the Library of Congress, it is here reproduced in photographic facsimile. (See Appendix, Plate I.) The song received increased publicity as Song IV (p. 4) in "Calliope; or, the Musical Miscellany," London (C. Elliot and T. Kay), 1788, as Song I (pp. 1-4) "Sung by Mr. Bannister at^the Anacreontic Society" in the "Edin- burgh Musical Miscellany," 1792, and as Song LXXXVII in the first volume of Stewart's "Vocal Magazine," Edinburgh, 1797. In 1796 (Qrattan Flood; Mr. Edson prefers ca. 1795) Smollet Holden, of Dublin, made a curious use of the time by including a "Masonic Ode, song and chorus, written by Mr. Coimel, on behalf of the Masonic Orphan School," to the Anacreontic tune in his A Selection of Masonic Songs. A second edition bears the imprint "Dublin, A. L. 6802" (A. D. 1802), and Mr. Elson inserted a photographic facsimile of this Masonic Ode (first words: "To old Hiram, in Heav'n where he sat in full glee") from his copy of the second edition in his book on The National Music of America. The inference to be drawn from the insertion of "To Anacreon in Heaven" in the quoted collections, not to mention many later col- lections, is plain. As those collections were among the most impor- tant and most popular of the time, "To Anacreon in Heaven" must have been familiar to all convivial souls in the British Isles toward 1800. Now it is a fact that with the possible exception of that mys- terious sheet song of 1771, not one of these publications alludes to the composer of the tune. It was not the rule to do so in miscel- laneous collections, yet it is a curious fact that, while contrary to custom, Stewart's Vocal Magazine, 1797, mentions in a separate index the composers of many of the airs, it leaves "To Anacreon in Heaven" without a composer. Possibly the editor doubted the now generally accepted authorship of John Stafford Smith, or he was still unaware of the peculiar form of entry (mentioned by Wm. Chappell as early as 1873!) of "To Anacreon in Heaven" in: The fifth book of canzonets, catches, canons & glees, sprightly and plaintive with a part for the piano-forte subjoined where necessary to melodize the score; dedicated by permission to Viscount Dudley and Ward, by John Stafford Smith, Gent, of His Majesty's Ghapeb Royal, author of the favorite glees. Blest pair of Syrens, Hark the hollow woods, etc. The Anacreontic, and other popular songs. Printed for the author. . . . This collection was published between 1780 and 1790, the exact date being unknown. "To Anacreon in Heaven" appears on page The Star-Spangled Banner. 23 33, as reproduced here in facsimile. (Appendix, Plate II.) The words ''harmonized by the author" may of course mean harmonized by the author of the collection and do not necessarily mean harmonized by the author of the air, but these words, together with the fact that the collection contains none but Smith's own glees, etc., and the wording of the title renders it probable that Smith refers to himself as the composer of the music. But why the words ''Jiarmonized by the author?" If one looks at the song in its garb as a glee, the bass starting out full of confidence, and the other voices continuing the melody and juggling with it, one is almost apt to see in this peculiar cooperation of the high and low male voices a plausible explanation of the notoriously wide range of "The Star-Spangled Banner," if sung by one voice. This explanation is possible only if the form of "To Anacreon in Heaven" in Smith's Fifth Book was the original form. That we do not know, yet the word "harmonized" renders it improbable. Furthermore, if that was the original form of the piece, then some very radical melodic changes must have taken place in the melody shortly afterwards, as a comparison of the two facsimiles will show. Probably Smith composed it, if he really did compose the tune, as a song for one voice, and in "harmonizing" it for several and different voices he felt obliged to wander away from the original. Of course, if the supposed 1771 sheet song was a sheet song for one voice, and if it contained Smith's name as composer, then all doubt as to original form and to the composer vanishes. We would still have a very simple explanation for the extensive range of the tune. Such a wide range was then (and still is, for that mat- ter) considered the sine qua non of effective drinking songs. Two fine examples "Anacreon a poet of excellent skill" and "Ye mortals whom trouble & sorrow attend" may be found in the "Anacreontic Songs" of the very conductor of the Anacreontic Society, namely. Doctor Arnold, and after all, it should not be forgotten that John Stafford Smith could not possibly foresee that his anacreontic master- piece would some day have to be sung by old and yoimg of an entire nation.* a John Stafford Smith was bom 1750 at Gloucester and he died at London September 3, 1836. His principal teacher was Doctor Boyce. He became an '^ able organist, an efficient tenor singer, an excellent composer, and an accomplished antiquary. ' ' From 1773 on he won many prices of the Catch Club for catches, glees, etc., and his five books of glees contain, in the words of Grove, " compositions which place him in the foremost rank of English composers.'' His famous "Musica Antiqua" appeared in 1812, con- taining a selection of music "from the 12th to the beginning of the 18th century,'' for which simple reason it would be futile to look for "To Anacreon in Heaven" in Musica Antiqua. 24 The Star-Spangled Banner. Tracing the American history of the air, or rather the history of its use in America, one runs across these statements in Mr. Salisbury's "Essay on 'The Star-Spangled Banner/" 1873, page 7: I do not discover that it was a favorite when Robert Treat Paine, Jr. used its measure in his spirited song entitled "Adams and Liberty" [1798] p. 9: After sixteen years, in which the tune of the Anacreontic song was seldom heard in this country or in Europe, it was applied to the pathetic verses of Mr. Key. The second of these statements is nonsensical, the first at least improbable, because it is now known that the musical intercourse between England and America was too Uvely in those days to have permitted such a well-known air as "To Anacreon in Heaven," pub- lished in the most popular collections, to have remained barred from our shores. The chances are entirely in favor of the possibility that the song had its votaries here in the seventies, the more so as Parke states Sir Richard Hankey, later on president of the Anacreontic Society, to have served in the British army during our war for inde- pendence. Nor would it be at all reasonable to assume that the "Columbian Anacreontic Society" foimded in imitation of the Lon- don Society in 1795 at New York, the moving spirit of which was for years the great actor-vocalist and bon-vivant John Hodgkinson, should not have helped to spread a familiarity with "To Anacreon in Heaven. " Indeed, at least one performance of it in pubhc is reason- ably certain, namely, when the "Anacreontic Song" was simg by Mr. J. West at a concert at Savannah, Ga., August 19, 1796. However, Mr. Salisbury himself assists in imdermining his theory that "To Anacreon in Heaven" was little known in America before it was appUed to Key's "pathetic verses." On page 5 of his essay he writes of having seen it in his copy of "The Vocal Companion, published in Philadelphia, by Matthew Carey in 1796." It matters little that no copy of such a collection is preserved at the Library of Congress, Bos- ton PubUc, New York Public, Brown University, Philadelphia Library Company, Pennsylvania Historical Society, Princeton Uni- versity, American Antiquarian Society, Worcester; Mr. Salisbury must have seen it in a copy of some collection in his possession. Then he mentions Robert Treat (scil. Thomas) Paine's spirited "Adams and Liberty" ("Ye Sons of Columbia who bravely have fought") written for and stmg to the tune of "To Anacreon in Heaven" at the anfuversary of the Massachusetts Charitable Fire Society in Boston on Ju^e 1, 1798. A photographic facsimile of this famous song is The Star-Spangled Banner. 25 given here as it was published in the very popular ''American Musical Miscellany" of 1798. (Appendix, Plate III.) Mr. Salisbury further mentions Paine.'s song "Spain'' set to the same tune for a Boston fes- tival in honor of the Spanish patriots, January 24, 1809. He also mentions (in footnote, p. 10) a ''patriotic offshot" of the Anacreontic song, "perhaps as good as any other commonly known before 1814" [Q which appeared in The New York Remembrancer, Albany, 1802, with the first line "To the Gods who preside o'er the nation below," attributed by the Boston Daily Advertiser, May 1, 1873, to Jonathan Mitchell Sewall, of Portsmouth, N. H. To these four instances of the use of "To Anacreon in Heaven" may be added these in the following collections: 1797. Columbian Songster, New York, p. 136. Song: Fpr the glorious Four- teenth of July. (" The Genius of France from his star begem 'd throne. ' ') 1799. Columbian Songster, Wrentham, Mass. Song. 32: Union of the gods. 1799. A Collection of Songs selected from the works of Mr. Charles Dibdin, to which are added the newest and most faivorite American Patriotic Songs, Philadelphia, p. 315. Boston Patriotic Song [Adams and Liberty], p. 326. Our Country's efficiency (" Ye sons of Colimibia, determined to keep"). 1800. American Songster, Baltimore: p. 9. "To Columbia, who gladly reclin'd at her ease . . . p. 13. ''Ye Sons of Columbia, unite in the cause." No tunes are indicated for these two, but the metre plainly suggests "To Anacreon in Heav'n." p. 233. To Anacreon in Heav'n. 1802. Vocal companion, Boston. Song XVI. By J. F. Stanfield, Sunderland. (" Not the fictions of Greece, nor the dreams of old Rome.") 1803. The American Republican Harmonist: p. 4. " New Song sung at the celebration of the 4th of July, at Sara- toga and Waterford, N. Y. By WiUiam Foster" (Brave sons of Colimibia, your triumph behold). p. 30. Jefferson and Liberty. ("Ye sons of Columbia, who cherish the prize. " Text merely altered from Adams and Liberty). p. 105. Song [for the fourth of July, 1803] (" In years which are past, when America fought). p. 111. Song. Sung on the 4th of March, at an entertainment given by the American Consul at London. ("Well met, fellow free men I lets cheerfully greet.") p. 126. Song for the anniversary festival of the Tammany Society, May 12, 1803. Written by Brother D. E. 1804. 'Ni^tingale,' selected by Samuel Larkin, Portsmouth. p. 69. Adams and Liberty, p. 188. To Anacreon in Heaven. 26 The Star-Spangled Banner. 1804. Baltimore Musical Miscellany. V. 1, p. 26. Anacreon in Heaven (given in Appendix in facsimile, PI. IV). p. 29. " When Bibo went down to the regions below." p. 121. Sons of Columbia [Adams and Liberty]. V. 2, p. 158. The Social Club. 1811. Musical Repository, Augusta. p. 22. Young Bibo. ("For worms when old Bibo prov'd delicate fun.") p. 140. Adams and Liberty [without indication of the tune]. p. 207. Union of the Gods. ("To Columbia, who gladly clined at her ease.") 1813. James J. Wilson, National Song Book, Trenton. p. 43. " For the Fourth of July" (" Columbians arise! let the cannon resound.*') p. 66. "Embargo and Peace" ("When our sky was illuminated by freedom's bright dawn.") p. 68. "Union and Liberty." ("Harkl The Trumpet of war from the East soimds alarm.") p. 70. " Freedom. " ( " Of the victory won over tyrany *s power. ' ') p. 87. "The Fourth of July." ("O'er the forest crowned hills, the rich vallies and streams.") p. 88. "Jefferson's Election." Sung by the Americans in London, March 4, 1802. "Well met, fellow freemen I Let's cheer- fully greet. ") This is not intended as an exhaustive attempt to trace the tune "To Anacreon in Heaven" in early American song collections, but merely to prove and to corroborate by facts that "the tune was a common one at that day," as Key's own daughter, Mrs. Howard, told Mrs. Shippen. We have some further contemporary evidence in this communica- tion sent by Mr. Charles V. Hagner to the American Historical Record, 1873, volume 2, page 129: At the time it was written by Mr. Key, during the attack on Fort McHenry, Sept., 1814, there was a very popular and fashionable new song in vogue, viz: "To Anacreon in Heaven," every one who could sing seemed to be singing it. The writer of this was at the time, (Sept. 1814) one of some three to four thou- sand men composing the advance Light Brigade, chiefly volunteers from Phila- delphia, under the command of General John Cadwalader, then encamped in the state of Delaware. In the evenings before tattoo, many of the men would assemble in squads and sing this song, hundreds joining in the chorus. Mr. Key must have caught the infection and adapted his words to the same air. Francis Scott Key simply can not have escaped '*To Anacreon in Heaven" ! Indeed so common was the tune that, after Thomas Paine had set the example with his * 'Adams and Liberty,'' the music and the rather involved form and meter of '*To Anacreon in Heaven'* were adopted as standards by poetically inclined patriots. This historical fact applies with all its force to Francis Scott Key. The form and The Star-Spangled Banner. 27 meter of "To Anacreon in Heaven/' "Adams and Liberty," and "The Star-Spangled Banner" are practically the same, as the juxta- position of the first stanza will prove, if such proof be necessary. TO ANACRBON IN HEAVEN. To Anacreon in heaven, where he sat in full glee, A few Bona of Harmony sent a petition, That he their inspirer and patron would be, When this answer arrived from the jolly old Grecian: "Voice, fiddle, and nute, "No longer be mute, "I'll lend ye mv name, and inspire ye to boot: "And besiaes, TU instruct you, like me^ to entwine "The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine." THE STAB SPANGLED BANNEB. say, can you see by the dawn's early light. What so proudly we hailed at the twSient's last gleaming? Whose broad stripes and bright stars through the peruous fight, O'er the ramparts we watched, were so gaUantly streaming I And the rocket's red glare. The bombs bursting in air Crave proof through the night that our flag was still there; say, does mat star spangled banner yet wave O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave? It is absurd to think that any poetically inclined patriot of those days like Key could have on the spur of the moment set himself to writing a poem of such involved meter and peculiar form as his is without using consciously or unconsciously a model. It is equally absurd under the circumstances to believe any story, tradition, or anecdote from whatever source to the effect that others, with, more or less difficulty, supplied a tune which fits the words almost more smoothly than does John Sta£Pord Smith's air the Anacreontic text of Ralph Tomlinson. Internal evidence proves that Francis Scott Key, when his imagination took fire from the bombardment of Fort McHenry, had either the meter and form of the words or words and air of '"To Anacreon in Heaven" or one of its American offshoots in mind as a scaffold. If this be now taken for granted, two possibilities offer themselves : First, Key wrote his inspired lines as a poem with- out anticipating its musical use. When shortly afterwards a desire was felt to sing his poem, the identity of poetic meter and form of both poems necessarily, and, as it were, automatically, suggested to Key himself or any other person of culture the air of "To Anacreon in Heaven." The second possibility is that Key did anticipate the musical possibiUties of his poem and intended it as a song to be sung. In that case the fact, as will be seen, that neither his so-called original manuscript nor the broadside contain any indication of the tune 28 The Star-Spangled Banner. may be explained by afwiiTning that Key, very much like the editor of the American Songster, Baltimore (1800), considered it unneces- sary to mention what was self-evident to him as the author. The first possibility is really more plausible, but at any rate Colonel Warner's statement that "The old air of 'Anacreon in Heaven' had been adapted to it [the poem] by the author'' seems to come nearest the truth, though if a very fine distinction were to be made we should rather say that the poem was adapted by the author to the air, or at least to its poetic mate. One of the popular legends is that Key's poem with its music spread like wildfire beyond Baltimore, and in a short time became a national song. The popular mind seems to consider it a blemish, a reflection on the intrinsic merits of a song (or any other Work of art) if it does not obtain immediate popularity, and writers who cater to the tastes and prejudices of the multitude do not hesitate to amputate the facts accordingly. "The Star-Spangled Banner" rather gains than loses in merit if the silly anecdotes of its wildfire progress are not heeded, and if we adhere to what is still common knowledge among the older generations, namely, that "The Star- Spangled Banner" was not rushed to the front of our national songs until the civil war. Before that time its progress as a national song had been steady, but comparatively slow, as anybody may see who follows its career through the American song collections. This statement in nowise interferes with the fact that Francis Scott Key put it too modestly if he " believed it to have been favorably received by the Baltimore public." It would be quite possible to trace with infinite patience the progress of "The Star-Spangled Banner" through the American song collections, but this report hardly calls for such a laborious imdertaking. However, to illustrate the point raised above, one would find that "The Star-Spangled Banner" appears in such songsters as "The American Songster, New York," n. d.; "New American Songster, Philadelphia, 1817;" "Bird of Birds, New York, 1818;" "The Star-Spangled Banner, Wilmington, 1816;" "The Songster's Magazine, New York, 1820;" "American Naval and Patriotic Songster, Baltimore, 1831;" but not in such as "The Songster's Companion, Brattleborough, Vt., 1815;" "The Songster's Miscellany, Philadelphia, 1817;" "The Songster's Museimi, Hartford, 1826." In other words, twenty years after its conception Key's " Star-Spangled Banner" was not yet so generally accepted as a national song as to necessitate insertion in every songster. Key's poem was accessible to the public as a broadside possibly as early as September 15, 1814. Here must be quoted what Admiral Preble said on page 725 of the second edition of his " History of our Flag:" The Star-Spangled Banner. 29 Tbe Song on this bnMkdside was enclosed in an elliptical border composed of the common type ornament of the day. Around that border, and a little distance from it| on a line of the same are the words, ''Bombardment of Fort McHenry." The letters of these words are wide apart, and each one surrounded by a circle of stars. Below the song and within the ellipsis, are the words "Written by Francis 8. Key, of Georgetown, D. C." This description applies to the ''FacHsimile of broadside as the song first appeared in print/' contained in L. H. Dielman's pamphlet ''The Seventh Star/' published at Baltimore by the board of public works for the Louisiana Purchase Exposition, 1904. However, it may be pointed out by way of correction that merely the initial "F" and not the full name of Francis is printed, that we read M'Henry, not McHenry, that a rather pretty and effective ornamental outer border follows the shape of the broadside, and that the four comers contain additional ornamental designs. What arouses the curiosity of the historian most is that Key's authorship is not withheld, that Admiral Preble does not mention this fact at all, that the title of the poem here is *' The Star-Spangled Banner " and that ru> tune is indicated. If Preble's description tallies with a broadside as facsimiled by Dielman, it absolutely differs from "one of those first printed handbills" which, so Mrs. Shippen stated in her article, first was in possession of her grandfather. Judge Joseph Hopper Nicholson, then of his wife, after that in Mrs. Shippen's possession, and recently was acquired together with a Star-Spangled Banner autograph by Mr. Henry Walters, of Baltimore. The latter courteously granted permission to examine these treasures, and I found that his broadside (about 6} by 5^ inches) is without any ornamental design whatsoever, does not mention Key's name at all, and does not bear any title except " De- fence of Fort M'Henry." This is followed by the same historical note as appeared in the Baltimore American of September 21, 1814, then by the indication "Tune: Anacreon in Heaven," and lastly by practically the same text of the poem as it appears in the Judge Nicholson-Widow Nicholson-Mrs. Shippen-Mr. Walters autograph. The only differences, apart from the differences in interpunctuation, etc., are these: (1) In the first stanza was printed the ''Bombs" instead of the bomb. (2) In the second stanza the misprint ''reflected new shines" instead of "reflected now shines." (3) In the broadside capital letters frequently appear where they are not found in the autograph, f. i. "The Rocket's," "Land of the Free," "Home of the Brave." On the other hand, the autograph has "Country" whereas this broadside has "coimtry." Here then are tvx> broadsides, both of which are claimed to have belonged to that edition set up on the morning of September 15, 80 The Star-Spangled Banner. 1814. We are not permitted to accept Mrs. Shippen's claims for her broadside offhand, since her account is clearly a mixture. of family tradition, personal opinion, and sediment from reading on the subject. The broadsides, to be authentic, must stand the test of analytical criticism, and if one, by this process, is eliminated then all reason- able scepticism will vanish from the other. The three observations called forth by the broadside championed by Preble and Dielman are curious indeed in view of the fact that the Baltimore American, when publishing Key's poem on September 21, 1814, preceded by a brief historical note, did not print the title "The Star-Spangled Banner," but instead "Defence of Fort McHenry," did not mention Key by name at all, but added: "Tune: Anacreon in Heaven." Key's poem — and this is a fact hitherto rarely, if ever, pointed out — made its first appearance in an American songster in the very rare "National Songster, or, a collection of the most admired patriotic songs, on. the brilliant victories achieved by the naval and military-heroes . . . First Hagerstown edition," Hagerstown [Md.], John Oruber and Daniel May, 181 4 on p. 30-31 under the title of '* DEFENCE OF FORT m'HBNBY. Tune: Anacreoxi in Heaven. Wrote by an American Gentleman [I], who was compelled to witness the bom- bardment of Fort M' Henry, onboard of a flag vessel at the mouth of the Patapsco." Evidently the compiler of the National Songster clipped Key's poem from the Baltimore American and did not use a copy of this broadside. If, as Mrs. Shippen insists (Pa. Mag. of Hist., 1901-2, pp. 427-428) her grandfather's broadside was "One of those first printed hand- bills," why was Key's name suppressed in the Baltimore American's account after Judge Nicholson had permitted it to go on the handbill which he himself had ordered at the printing office? One might suspect that in view of the vindicative nature of the British it was deemed safer for Mr. Key to suppress the name of the author of " Their foul footsteps' pollution" in a paper of fairly healthy circulation, but this explanation is not plausible, because the historical note in the Baltimore American could have left no doubt of the offender's identity in the minds of British officers should they have been in a position to catch Key. Possibly Key's modesty would not permit disclosure of his authorship, but what could his modesty avail him, if the broadside with his name had already been favorably received by the public of Baltimore? And not merely this, we have the words of Mrs. Shippen: Judge Nicholson wrote a little piece that appears at the heading of the lines, above which he also wrote the ''name of the tune Anacreon in Heaven.'^ The Star-Spangled Banner. 31 Obviously this action of Judge Nicholson can not apply to the broadside which contains "no little piece" nor indication of the tune, but it does apply to the account in the Baltimore American. Hence it would have been Judge Nicholson himself who withheld Key's name from the newspapers after he had given it to the public in a broadside. Furthermore, the Baltimore American account was bodily reprinted in the National Intelligencer September 27, 1814, under the same title "Defence of Fort M'Henry," and at the bottom of the anonymous poem appears the editorial note: "Whoever is the author of those lines they do equal honor to his principles and his talent T' Consequently, not even the editor of a paper printed at Washington, D. C, prac- tically Key's home, knew of his authorship as late as September 27. Indeed, the anonymous "gentleman" figures in the Baltimore American at least as late as October 19, 1814. There is another suspicious circumstance. It should have aroused surprise ere this that Samuel Sands, the apprentice, set up at a moment's notice such an elaborate ornamental handbill as described by Preble and fac- similed by Dielman. The boy must have had remarkably precocious artistic instincts indeed, and very rapid hands and eyes. But why did he refuse to follow copy; why are there several diflFerences between his broadside and the so-called original manuscript? Thus one becomes convinced that this broadside is not and can not have been a copy of the one struck oflf before the publication in the Baltimore American, but a copy of a broadside published considerably after that date, when Key's authorship was no longer kept a secret, when his poem had changed — at least in print, the earliest manuscript extant has none — its title from "Defence of Fort McHenry" to "The Star- Spangled Banner," and when verbal diflFerences in the text had com- menced to be quite frequent. The Preble-Dielman broadside thus being eliminated, only the Nicholson-Shippen-Walters broadside remains for serious consideration, and as far as I can see, it contains absolutely nothing to arouse our suspicion. In absence of proof to the contrary, it may indeed be called a copy, perhaps a unique copy, of the original broadside edition. We turn our attention to the whereabouts of the original manu- script of Key's poem. Mrs. Shippen writes in the article already quoted: Having heard several times of late that there are in existence several original copies, of the lines written on the night of September 12 [sic I], 1814 ... by Francis Scott Key . . . and as I am the fortimate possessor of the only document that could exist of these lines — the original manuscript — I will explain how it seems possible that there could be more than one . . . [follows a' partly inaccu- rate account based on Taney] ... It is the hack of that old letter, unsigned, that Francis Scott Key (my great-uncle) gave to Judge Joseph Hopper Nicholson 82 The Star-Spangled Banner. (my grand&ther) that I poesefls, together with one of those firtt printed handbills . . . Judge Nicholson [seeing] that the lines given him by Francis Scott Key could be sung to that tune [to Anacreon in Heaven] and in all haste to give the linesiis a song to the public, he thus marked it. I possess this rare original manu- script, kept carefully folded by his wife, Rebecca Lloyd Nicholson and taken from her private papers by myself and framed. . . . This is a clear^ut claim of possession of the original manuscript, and yet Mrs. Shippen herself undermines the claim by closing her interesting article thus : . . . The first piece of paper on which the lines he composed were written on the night of his arrival in Baltimore I have in my possession; the same that Mr. Key himself gave to Judge Nicholson. These statements slightly contradict each other, as a careful read- ing of Chief Justice Taney's account, on which Mrs. Shippen partly bases her claim, will prove. According to Taney, Francis Scott Key told him that — (1) He commenced it [the poem] on the deck of their vessel . . . that he had written some lines or hrief notes that would aid h\m in calling them to mind, upon the back of a letter which he happened to have in his pocket; and for some of the lines, as he proceeded, he was obliged to rely altogether on his memory. (2) He finished it in the boat on his way to the shore. (3) He wrote it out as it now stands , at the hotel, on the night he reached Baltimore and immediately after he arrived. (4) On the next morning he took it to Judge Nicholson. Consequently, a distinction is here made between the autograph sketclh of the poem commenced on the cartel vessel and finished on the back of a letter in the boat before reaching Baltimore, and a written out autograph copy of the sketch. It is the latter which he took to Judge Nicholson for his critical opinion, and, of course, not the sketch on the back of the letter. In the first quotation from her article Mrs. Shippen describes this sketch; in the second quotation, the manuscript as written out after Key's arrival at Baltimore. These two different manuscripts she confuses, not realizing the dis- tinction implied in Chief Justice Taney's narrative. Hence she considered herself Judge Nicholson's heir to the original manuscript of ''The Star-Spangled Banner," whereas she really possessed, and Mr. Henry Walters, of Baltimore, now possesses, not the original manuscript, hU Key's first dean copy of the original manuscript, sketched and finished under such peculiar circumstances. What became of this sketch we do not know. The probabilities are that Key destroyed it after he had neatly written out his poem at the hotel. The Library of Congress is not in a position to inclose here for purpose of comparison and analysis a photographic facsimile of Key's manu- script, as now possessed by Mr. Walters, but fortunately a facsimile The Star-Spangled Banner. 88 may be found in the Century Magazine, 1894, page 362, and in Diel- man's pamphlet ''Maryland, the Seventh Star." Nobody looking at these facsimiles or the original can concede that the latter has the appearance of a filled-in sketch. It is too neatly written for that, the lines are too symmetricaUy spaced and the whole manuscript contains practically only two corrections: In the first stanza Key wrote and then crossed out *' through^' instead of '*hy the dawn's early light," and in the third, " They have vxish'd out'' instead of " Their hlood has wasVd out" The manuscript contains no signature, no title, nor indication of tune. This is mentioned particularly because Mrs. Shippen's article might convey the impression that the manu- script is ''thus marked." The visible effects of folding do not point at all to the "old letter" in Key's pocket, since Mrs. Shippen's manuscript had been "kept carefully folded" by Judge Nicholson's wife. Unquestionably, the manuscript now at the Walters Gallery is the earliest extant of "The Star-Spangled Banner." In after years Key presented signed autograph copies to friends and others, but just how many such copies he made is not known. At any rate, it is not surprising that the existence of several autograph copies led to con- fusion as to the earliest, the incorrectly so-called original, copy. An attempt shall now be made to separate intelligently such copies as have come to my notice principally by way of Admiral Preble's several contradictory contributions to the subject. Charles Durang, in the Historical Magazine, 1864, pages 347-348, claimed that "the original draft, with its interlinations and amend- atory erasures, etc. was purchased by the late Gen. George Keim, of Reading, and I suppose his heirs have it now." Without the slightest hesitation Preble used this statement in his book "Our Flag" (1st ed., 1872, p. 495). In 1874 Preble wrote in his essay "Three Historical Flags" (New Engl. Hist, and Gen. Reg., pp. 39-40), that this particular copy was Presented by Mr. Key in 1842 to Gen. George Keim and is now in poeseasion of his son Henry May Keim, Esq. of Reading, Penn. ... I have a photo- graphic copy of tiie authograph in the pofisession of Mr. Keim. Retracting his former statement about the original draft, with its erasures, in a footnote on the same page, Preble states that his pho- tograph shows it to be " a fair copy, written out by Mr. Key, and I learn from Gen. Keim's son that the autograph was presented to his father by Mr. Key." A facsimile of this was made for the Baltimore Sanitary Fair in 1864, so Mr. Keim informed Admiral Preble January 8, 1874 (see New Engl. Hist, and Gen. Reg., 1877, pp. 29), but, if made, it cer- tainly was not included by Kennedy and Bliss in their "Autograph 86480—09 3 34 The Star-Spangled Banner. Leaves," as the Library of Congress copy of this work proves. Pre- ble gave the text of the Keim copy, though not in facsimile, in his essay, "Three Historic Flags" (1874). In the second edition, of his "History of Our Flag" (1880) he then informed his readers that Gen. George Keim's copy had "since [been] presented to the Penn- sylvania Historical Society by his son." This statement is somewhat puzzling, because the text of the Keim copy quoted by Preble, 1874, the dedication "To Gen. Keim," and the undated signature "F. S. Key" are identical with those of a supposed "Star-Spangled Banner" autograph in possession of Mr. Robert A. Dobbin, of Baltimore, Md. When generously loaning this to the Library of Congress for exhi- bition purposes and granting us the privilege to reproduce it in fac- simile (see Appendix, Plate VII). Mr. Dobbin, imder date of March 24, 1909, wrote: Mr. Key was an intunate friend of Gen. Keim of Pennsylvania. On account of this intimacy and as a mark of the friendship which existed between them, Mr. Key gave this copy, which I have loaned you, to General Keim. You wiU note that Gen. Keim's name b in Mr. Key's handwriting. Mr. Charles W. Keim, a son of General Keim, came into possession of this copy after the death of his &ther, and a few years before his own death presented it to my late wife, who was a granddaughter of Mr. Francis Scott Key. Mr. Dobbin apparently was not aware of the fact that he possessed a photograph, not an original autograph, the photograph even show- ing the marks of thumb tacks. Consequently, not he but the Penn- sylvania Historical Society is in the possession of the Keim copy, which, with its approximate date, 1842, is, of course, as far removed from the original draft with its erasures as is possible. It is here reproduced by permission of the society (see Appendix, Plate V). Benson John Lossing wrote in footnote (p. 956), in his Pictorial Fieldbook of the War of 1812, first edition, 1868: The &c-«imile of the original manuscript of the first stanza of the "Star Spangled Banner/' given on the opposite page, was firat published, by permission of its owner (Mrs. Howard) daughter of the author [Key], in " Autograph Leaves of our Country's Authors/' a volume edited by John P. Kennedy and Alexander Bliss for the Baltimore Sanitary Fair, 1864. Accepting Lossing's statement, Preble in his essay, '' Three Historic Flags," 1874, credited Mrs. Charles Howard, of Baltinoiore, with the possession of this autograph. As the facsimile in the ''Autograph Leaves" shows, it bears the title ''The Star-Spangled Banner" and the signature "F. S. Key," but no dedication and no date. The handwriting has not the fimmess of youth, and it stands to reason that Key wrote this manuscript in late life. Admiral Preble had occasion in his essay, "The Star-Spangled Banner," New England Historical and Genealogical Register, 1877, pages 28-31, to correct Lossing's statement of ownership, since Mrs. Howard wrote him under dateof April 25, 1874: The StaV'-Spangled Banner. 85 I do not think I ever had an autograph of The Star-Spangled Banner. My father [F. S. Key] gave his children from the time they could speak, the habit of committing poetry to memory, and in that way only has the song been preserved to me. Except in one or two words, Mr. Keim's version, as you have it, is the one I have ever remembered. Though, therefore, Mrs. Howard disclaimed ownership of this par- ticular autograph, yet it must have existed and is, to judge by the facsimile, genuine. Another autograph of "The Star-Spangled Banner'' was thus described by Preble in his book, "Our Flag," 1872: A copy of the poem in Key's own handwritings a copy prepared many years after its composition, and evidently in the exact language intended by its author (as it was presented by him to James Mahar, who for thirty years was the gardener of the executive mansion), was a few years since, exhibited in the window of Messrs. Phillip & Solomons, on Pennsylvania avenue, Washington. The identity of the handwriting was certified to by Judge Dunlop, Nicholas Callen, Esq., Peter Force and others, all of whom were intimately acquainted with Mr. Key and perfectly ffttnilJAr with his style of penmanship. In fact his style was so peculiar and uniform, that it would be almost impossible for anyone who had ever noticed it with ordinary care to be mistaken. This report Preble evidently took from a copy of the National Intelligencer, from which he further quoted ''verbatim'' the text of the Mahar autograph which evidently bore the title: ''The Star- Spangled Banner" and the signature "For Mr. Jas. Mahar, of Wash- ington city, Washington, June 7, 1842. From F. S. Key." In his essay, "Three Historic Flags," Preble merely added that the Mahar copy was exhibited at Washington "in 1843, after Mr. Key's death." The present whereabouts of the Mahar copy is unknown to me. Finally, in his essay, "The Star-Spangled Banner," 1877 (already quoted above), Preble remarked of a copy, dated October 21, 1840: It was fiiBt published in &c-6imile in the American Historical and Literary Guri- ositiee (PI. LV) by John Jay Smith [Sec. Ser. N. Y. 1860, pi. 55] who stated the original was in the possession of Louis J. Gist. Preble enlivened his narrative by adding a reduced facsimile of this 1840 copy, and he again used it in the second edition of his "Histoiy of Our Flag," 1880. From there it was reproduced by Miss Mary L. D. Ferris in the New England Magazine, 1890, for her article on "Our national songs " (pp. 483-504) . Another facsimile is in the possession of the American Antiquarian Society, Worcester, as Mr. E. M. Barton, the librarian, informed me. The American Antiquarian Society re- ceived it on October 21, 1876, from Maj. Albert H. Hoyt, then editor of the New England Historical and Genealogical Register. The orig- inal seems to have disappeared until offered for sale as No. 273 in Stan. V. Henkel's catalogue of the Rogers collection of autograph letters, etc., 1895. The added facsimile shows absolute identity in date, 86 The Star-Spangled Banner. signature^ orthography, appearance, and eveiy other detail with the facsimile at Worcester. To sum up, it appears that, not counting the original draft, at least five copies of ''The Star-Spangled Banner" in Francis Scott Key's handwriting exist, or at least existed : (1) The Judge Nicholson-Mra. Shippen-WalteiB copy, 1814. (Waltere.) (2) The Louis J. Cist copy, 1840. (Gist, present whereabouts unknown.) (3) The supposed Howard copy, ca. 1840. (Howard.) (4) The Qen. Eeim-Pennsylvania Historical Soc. copy. (Pa. Hist. Soc.) (5) The Mahar copy, 1842. (Mahar.) There may be other copies, but these five are sufficient for the pur- pose of showing the changes Francis Scott Key himself made in his poem. The different versions would, as often happens in such cases, be used by different compilers. In course of time verbal inaccuracies would creep from one song book into the other. Also the compilers themselves have sometimes felt justified in improving Key's text. The result of all this has been, of course, that gradually Key's text became unsettled. As early as 1872 Preble marked the verbal differ- ences between certain different versions, and since then surely the confusion has not decreased. Hence, very properly, the ciy for an authoritative text has been raised. What should constitute such a text, whether one of Key's own version, or a combination of them, or any later "improved" version, it is not for me to say, though I may be permitted to remark that in my opinion there is no reason for going outside of Key's own intentions. At any rate, I do not consider it my duty to wade through endless song books in order to trace all the verbal inaccuracies and alterations of the text of ''The Star-Spangled Banner."^ The comparison will be extensive enough for all practical purposes if it be limited to Key's own five versions, to the earliest printed versions, and to the one in his collected poems. They will be distinguished from each other, where necessary, by the words written in parenthesis. These printed texts here compared with the earliest manuscript extant are: o In this connection part of the memorandum of Dr. A. R. Spofford, November 19, 1907, is very instructive. He wrote: "A collation of this authentic copy [i. e., the Cist copy], with several widely cir- culated collections of songs, shows numerous variations and omissions: Following is a statement of a few of these, with the number of discrepancies found in each: "Nason (E). A Monc^jam [I] on our National Songs. Albany, 1869. (11 varia- tions from original, and one stanza omitted.) "Higgins (Edwin). The Star-Spangled Banner. Baltimore, 1898. (7 variations.) "Sousa (J. P.). National and Patriotic Airs of All Lands. Philadelphia, 1890. (14 variations, with a fifth stanza added, which was not written by Key.) "Bryant (W. C). Library of Poetry and Song. New York, 1880. (8 variations.) "Dana (C. D.). Household Poetry. New York, 1859. (7 variations.) "Coates (H. T.). Fireside Encyclopoedia of Poetry. Philadelphia, 1879. (0 variations.) The Star-Spangled Banner. 87 (6) The Walters Broadside. (Broadside I.) (7) The Preble-Dielman Broadside. (Broadside II.) (8) Baltimore American, 1814. (Baltimore American.) (9) The " National Songster." (National Songster.) (10) Key's Poems, publ. 1857. (Poems.) The comparison is based on the Walters text, without esthetic com- ment and taking the title of "The Star-Spangled Banner" for granted. The words that differ are italicized. Differences in spelling and interpunctuation are disregarded. • say can you see by the dawn's early li^ht what so proudly we haiPd at the twilight's last gleaming, Whose broad stripes A bright stars through the nerUous fight O'er the ramparts we watch'd, were so ^Jlantiy streaming? And the rocket's red glare, the bomb bursting in air, Gave proof through the night that our flag was still there O say does that star spangled banner yet wave O'er the land of the nee & the home of the brave? On the shore dimly seen through the mists of the deep, Where the foe's haughty host in dread silence reposes, What is that which the breeze, o'er the towering steep, As it fitfully blows, Aai/ conceals, ^/discloses? Now it catches the gleam of the morning's first beam In full glory reflected now shines in the stream 'Tis the star-spansled banner — O long may it wave O'er the land of the free & the home of the brave I And where is that band who so vauntingly swore. That the havoc of war A: the battle's confusion A home & a Country should leave us no more? Their blood has wash'd out their foul footstep's pollution No refuge could save the hireling A slave From the terror of flight or the eloom of the grave, And the star-spangled banner in triumph doth wave O'er the land of the free & the home of the brave. thus be it ever when ^e«7n«n shall stand Between their lov'd hoTne A the war*s desolation! Blest with vict'ry A peace may the heav'n rescued land Praise the power that hath made A preserv'd us a nation I Then conquer we must, when our cause it is just. And this be our motto — "In God is our Trust," And the star-spaz^led banner in triumph shall wave O'er the land of the free A the home oi the brave. "Stedman (E. C). American Anthology. Boston, 1900. (5 variations.) ''While some of these alterations from the author's manuscript may seem unim- portant, others actually change the meaning of the lines, as in the second stanza, where Key wrote — " 'What is that which the breeze, o'er the towering steep "As it fitfully blows, half conceals, half discloses? ' "The second line is perverted into^ " 'As it fitfully blows, now conceals, now discloses?' "In all except three of the reprints before noted this change occuxe. "It is for the worse, for two reasons: "(1) It destroys the fine image of the wind flapping the flag so as to show and con- ceal alternately parts of the stars and stripes; while the substitution makes the breeze sometimes conceal the whole star-spangled banner. "(2) The substitution is bad literary form, since it twice usee the word 'now,' which the author hafl applied twice in the two lines immediately following." 38 The Star-Spangled Banner. DIFFERBNCB8. Te: Cist. Bv: Gist. Bright stars & broad stripes: Gist. clouds of the: Gist; Pa. Hist. Soc.; Howard; Mahar. Bombs: broadside I and II; Baltimore Am.; Poems. From: Broadside II. HuU: Gist; Pa. Hist. Soc.; Howard: Poems; Now-now: Poems. Or^: Gist; Mahar. Are the foes that: Pa. Hist. Soc.; Howard. Are thefoes who: Poems. That Host that: Gist. The foe that- Mahar. Sweepingly: Mahar. This: Mahar. His: Mahar. And: Broadside II. Foejnen: Mahar. Homes: Baltimore Am.; Gist; Pa. Hist. Soc.; Howard; Mahar. War's: Mahar. long may it: Broadside II. Like other patriotic songs, "The Star-Spangled Banner" has had its share of additional stanzas; that is, of verses suggested by the changing times, the changing spirit of the times, and sectional an- tagonism. On the other hand, at least one stanza often came to be omitted. It is the third, undoubtedly expressive of bitter sentiment against the English, as was natural and logical in 1814, but rather unnatural and illogical after we were again the friends of England. This apparent defect of Key's text for a national hymn, which should stand above party feeling and chauvinism, led to the composition of one of the two additional stanzas, which shall here be briefly con- sidered. Its origin was narrated to Preble in 1876 by Benjamin Bush in the following words printed by the Admiral in his essay on "The Star-Spangled Banner" (New Eng. Hist, and Gen. Reg., 1877, p. 31): The circumstances under which these additional stanzas to the Star-Spangled Banner first came to my hand were briefly adverted to in the Preface to my edition of my father's book, entitled "Recollections of the English and French Courts/' published in London in 1871, where I then was. The stanzas were also published; but that need not interfere in the least with your desire to insert them in the second edition of your History of the Flag, wherein I should say they would appropriately come in. The name of the author by whom they were com- posed, was George Spowers, Esq., and this has never been published. I think it eminently due to him now that his name should be given to the public, con- sidering not only the beauty but the admirable sentiments of the stanzas. He had seen in my hands a manuscript copy of the original song, and asked me to lend it to him, which I did. A day or two afterwards he returned it to me with these stanzas. I was quite a boy at the time, at school with my two brothers at Hampstead, near London, while my father was residing in London as minister of the United States. It must have been about the year 1824. The Star-Spangled Banner. 89 Mr. Spowers's well-meant but objectionable stanza, because it, too, drags our national hymn into foreign politics, reads : But huah'd be that strain I Th&jr our Foes are no longer; Lo Britain the right hand of Friendahip extends, And Albion's fair Isle we behold with affection The land of our Fathers — the land of our Friends! Long, long may we flourish^ Columbia and Britain, In amity still may your children be found. And the Star-Spangled Banner and Red Cross togetner Wave free and triumphant the wide world around! The best known of the additional stanzas is the one written by Oliver Wendell Holmes, as he informed Admiral Preble, April 14, 1872, at the request of a lady during our civil war, there being no verse alluding to treasonable attempt against the flag. According to Preble the stanza was first published in the Boston Evening Tran* script. Preble received a corrected and amended autograph of the stanza from Holmes, and this he reproduced in facsimile in the second edition of his famous work (p. 730). It reads: When our land is illumined with liberty's smile, If a foe from within strikes a blow at her glory, DowD, down with the traitor that dares to deme The flag of the stars, and the page of her story! By the millions unchain^ Who their birth-right have gained, We will keep her bright blazon forever unstained; And the star-spangled banner in triumph shall wave, While the lana of the free is the home of the brave. It has been noticed ere this that not only the text of The Star- Spangled Banner but its music is sung and played with noticeable differences. These occur both in the harmonization of the melody and in the melody itself. To trace the discrepancies in the harmoni- zation would hardly be profitable, since the harmonization of any melody will always be to a certain degree a matter of individual taste. Often many ways are possible, several equally good — i. e., equally appropriate — and seldom one the only proper one. The harmonization depends, of course, largely on the bass, and since the harmonization of a national song should be simple and easily grasped by the popular mind, there can not be niuch variance of opinion as to the bass. However, historical considerations will hardly be helpful in this direction. An authoritative harmonization is less a problem of history than of musical grammar, and authoritative it can be only for those who accept the harmonization reconunended by a jury of musicians as the authoritative one for the persons imder their own musical jurisdiction. It is somewhat different with the melody. True, neither an act of Congress nor the recommendation of a board of musicians will stop the process of polishing and modification (either for better or worse) which takes place with all folk, traditional, and patriotic songs. Yet it is obviously imperative for musical and other 40 The StarSpangled Banner. reasons that at least the melody of a national hymn have as much stability and imiformity as can be forced through official channels on the popular mind. The most suitable form of the melody will again be a matter of decision by a jury of musicians, yet it may be interest- ing and instructive to contrast " To Anacreon in Heaven," as used and modified, partly for verbal reasons, about 1800, with the common versions of its oflfshoot "The Star-Spangled Banner" of to-day, which from the beginning must have slightly differed from " To Anacreon in Heaven" by dint of the peculiarities of Key's poem. First, the melody as it appears in the Vocal Enchantress, 1783, the earliest version in the Library of Congress, will be compared bar for bar with ^' Adams and Liberty" in the American Musical Miscellany, 1798 (A. M. M.), and with the version in the Baltimore Musical Miscellany, 1804 (B. M. M.). The facsimile of the "harmonized" version in Smith's "Fifth Book" shows it to be too garbled for purposes of melodic comparison. VOGAIi EKGRANTRBSS, 1788. 2 f^^-^^.-t:x-H^ E £zi-f ^ ^^ ^^ ^ -<= — » 11 ?^^ 12 ^ J j"r.h-.^^r+f-f-^"^%^- J ir CtQ S /^ 16 tr 17 ^r ' c c:/J --£-f4f:r r c> Chorus. ^ 19 ^ 21 er riir r-HL-Lp r- L rr-^ The Star-Spangled Banner. 41 ijij iiUjiii I DiFnncxccB 8 4 II r c ^-i *' i ^ ^ H A* M« n* B* BSa A« JLa IK* H« JL« K* 1S« JL* K* n* 6 ^ f-^. jij J j^ii i i- :jj_j^ j ii ri!ig> i ir' cp B J^ n> A* B* tt* K« [j!V-j, ju^^rnr r J j-j- ^a^ A.* M* n* B* n« akm 12 JL* M* Sft* B* n« Aa i /r'cr Hr r r r r ir e r -* -^ ^^ €/aij-'bv nvf^f A«««tf B««i A* JS* K* ,14,18 B« lft« ML* iL« SK* U* B* K« JK« ^14, 18 18,19 . gitz ^r J ii-iJ iir r f | J in A* M« M« { B. M. M« JL» M. M« JL« n* SK« 17. a B* U* SI« 18, 20 17. 21 ij i r cj-ti/i ir'-^-r i ir r r r i i cJ A« Jt* Jl« Bi It* U« A* H* H* B« U B« M. M* Thus the so-called polishing process had begun within one genera- tion after the ''Sons of Harmony'* had adopted ''To Anacreon in Heaven" as their constitutional song. How is their club melody sung to the words of "The Star-Spangled Banner" by Americans yoxmg and old at the beginning of the twentieth century? For the purpose of comparison I have selected at random 12 recent song books and John Philip Sousa's "National, patriotic, typical airs of all lands" (1890), compiled "by authority" for use in the United States Navy. (Sousa.) If these few differ so widely in single bars, what discrepancies could be revealed if all the song books used in our country were similarly compared! 1. W. H. Aiken, Part Bongs for mixed voices for high schools, 1908. 2. C. A. Boyle. School praise and song, 1903. (B) 3. C. H. Famsworth, Songs for schools, 1906. (F) 4. A. J. Gantvoort. School music reader, 1907 (6) 5. B. Jepeon's New Standard Music Readers, Seventh year, 1904 (J) 6. McLaughlin-Gilchrist, Fifth Music Reader, 1906. (M) 7. Ripley-Tapper, Harmonic Fifth Reader, 1904. (R) 8. E. Smith, Music Course, Book Four, 1908. (Sm) 9. J. B. Shirley, Part songs for girl's voices, 1908 (Sh.) 10. H. O. Siefert, Choice songs, 1902 (Si) 11. C. E. Whiting, The New public school music course. Third reader, 1909 (W) 12. £. J. A. Zeiner, The High school song book, 1908. (Z) 42 The Star-Spangled Banner. 2.10 8.U Anmr *.ia 6,13 ; U J ^ W' f. c ir J 6,14 r' c r I 8,16 9,17 j l r Lr L/ l f DlFFKRINCBS ^ 8,11 1^ i i f i r C 6,13 B; F;J;Si;Sm; 8h;W;Z G; 8h;W. M. Sh; W. F;G;J; M; Bh; Z. Sh;W. 81; W. B; O; J, 8m. B;F;G;J;M; 81; 8m;W;Z. ■•"c /J ii r— tLZJS i 811. 81. F;G;J; M;81; W.Z. 82 *^ B; 8m. F; M; B;81; J; Z. 8lu 8lL BOUBA 1 11 16 19 i f' -J J I I J i. irr^' g ^ -- ^-r' J f g M 26 ^~r~r~T~ii"B 29 81 ^Ff — j^=#^r r r 1 HAIL COLUMBIA.- ''Hail Columbia" was written in 1798 by Joseph Hopkinson (1770-1842), whose prominence as jurist, combined with his author- ship of "Hail Columbia/' has won him a place in biographical encyclopsedias. The poet himself has described the circumstances which led to the composition of his poem in a letter written August 24, 1840, to Rev. Rufus W. Oriswold and printed in The Wyoming Bard, Wilkesbarre, Pa. : "Hail Columbia'* was written in the summer of 1798, when war with France was thought to be inevitable. Congress was then in session in Philadelphia, debating upon that important subject, and acts of hostility had actually taken place. The contest between England and France was raging, and the people of the United States were divided into parties for the one side or the other, some thinking that policy and duty required us to espouse the cause of "republican PVance," as she was called, while others were for connecting ourselves with Eng- land, under the belief that she was the great preservative power of good principles and safe government. The violation of our rights by both belligerents was forcing us from the just and wise policy of President Washington, which was to do equal justice to both but to part with neither, and to preserve an honest and strict neutrality between them. The prospect of a rupture with France was exceed- ingly offensive to the portion of the people who espoused her cause, and the violence of the spirit of party has never risen higher, I think not so high, in our country, as it did at that time upon that question. The theatre was then open in our city. A young man belonging to it, whose talent was high as a singer, was about to take a benefit. I had known him when he was at school. On this ac- quaintance he called on me one Saturday afternoon, his benefit being announced for the following Monday. His prospects were very disheartening; but he said that if he could get a patriotic song adapted to ''the President's March " he did not doubt of a full house; that the poets of the theatrical corps had been trying to accomplish it, but had not succeeded. I told him I would try what I could do for him. He came the next afternoon, and the song, such as it is, was ready for him. The object of the author was to get up an American spirit which should be independent of, and above the interests, passion and policy of both belliger- ents, and look and feel exclusively for our honour and rights. No allusion is made to France or England, or the quarrel between them, or to the question which was most in fault in their treatment of us. Of course the song found favour with both parties, for both were American, at least neither could disown the sentiments and feelings it indicated. Such is the history of this song, which has endured infinitely beyond the expectation of the author, as it is beyond any merit it can boast of except that of being truly and exclusively patriotic in its sentiment and spirit. a Revised and enlarged from my essay ''Critical notes on the origin of 'Hail Colimi- bia,' " in the Sammelbftnde d. I. M. G., 1901, volume 3, p. 139-166. 43 44 Hail Columbia. The young man who was about to take a benefit was Gilbert Fox, to the talents of whom Charles Durang, the historian of the Phila- delphia stage, does not pay a very high tribute. If we believe Durang; it was the misfortime of Fox to have ''created Hail Colum- bia." His friends and admirers became so numerous that his health, and accordingly his career, were ruined by the excessive demands of conviviality. The benefit with which the tragedy of his life began, but which made his name famous ever since, was thus advertised in the Porcu- pine Gazette, April 24, 1798: Mr. Fox's Night. On Wednesday Evening, April 25. By Desire will be pre- sented (for the second time in America) a Play, interspersed with Songs, in three Acts, called The Italian Monk .... after which an entire New Song (written by a Citizen of Philadelphia) to the tune of the ^'President's March " will be sung by Mr. Fox; accompanied by the Full Band and the following Grand Chorus: Firm united let us be Rallying around our Liberty As a band of brothers join'a Peace and Safety we shall find I It was a clever bit of advertising to have inserted the words of the ''grand chorus." Containing no party allusions they aroused the public curiosity as to the tendency of the song, and consequently Mr. Fox reaped a golden harvest. The song met with immediate success. It was redemanded nearly a dozen times on that memorable evening and had to be sxmg by Mr. Fox "for the second time by particular desire" on Friday, the next play night, and again on Satur- day under the name of a ''New Federal Song." On Monday a Mr. Sully begged "leave to acquaint his friends and the public that the 'New Federal Song' to the tune of the President's March" would be given "among the Variety of Entertainments performed at Rickett's Circus this Evening for his Benefit." The newspapers and magazines helped to spread the popularity of the song. It appeared, for instance, in the Porcupine Gazette for Saturday, April 28, as a "song," in the April number of the Philadelphia Magazine as a "patriotic song," and as early as May 7 in the Connecticut Courant as "song." But it seemed at first as if "Hail Columbia," notwithstanding its neutral spirit, would become more a political than a national song, for Cobbett's Porcupine Gazette entered on its behalf into a passion- ate controversy with Bache and Callander's Aurora and General Advertiser. Thus Cobbett violently attacked his political antagonists on Friday, April 27, under the heading "Bache and Callender:" It is not often that I disgust my readers with extracts from the vile paper these fellows print, but that of this morning contains several things that merit to be recorded. Hail Columbia. 45 The Theatre. For some days past, the Anglo-Monarchical party have appeared at the theatre in full triumph — and the President's march and other aristocratic tunes have been loudly vociferated for, and vehemently applauded. On Wednes- day evening the admirers of British tyranny assembled in consequence of the managers having announced in the bills of the day that there would be given a patriotic song to the tune of the President's March, all the British Merchants, British Agents, and many of our Congress tones, attended to do honour to the occasion. When the wished for song came, which contained, amidst the most ridiculous bombast, the vilest adulation to the anglo-monarchical party, and the two Presidents, the extacy of the party knew no bounds, they encored, they shouted, they became Mad as the Priestress of the Delphic Qod, Cobbett adds: This circumstance relative to the theatre, must have given a rude shock to the brain of the few remaining Democrats. It is a lie to say that the song is an eulo- gium on England or on Monarchy. It shall have a place in this Gazette to-morrow and in the meantime, to satisfy my distant readers that the charge of its being in praise of the English is feilse, I need only to observe, that it abounds in Eulogiums on the men, who planned and a£fected the American Revolution I The public took Cobbett's side, and the song gained rapidly in favor. It was sung and whistled on the streets, and soon no public entertainment was considered as satisfactory without it. To quote from McKoy's reminiscences in Poulson's American Daily Adver- tiser for January 13, 1829: ''Such was the popularity of this song that very frequently has Mr. Gillingham, leader of the band, been forced to come to a full stop in the foreign music he had arranged for the evening by the deafening calls for this march, or song to this march." Hardly a week had passed since Mr. Fox's night, when another Thespian introduced the song in New York. But already the rather vague title of ''New Federal Song" had been changed into that of "Hail Columbia." Cobbett writes on Thursday, May 3 : The following is part of an advertisement of the Entertainment for the last Evening at the theatre New York. End of the Play, Mr. Williamson will sing a new Patriotic Song, called '^Hail Columbia: " Death or Liberty. Received in Philadelphia with more reiterated Plaudits than were perhaps ever witnessed in a theatre. When Mr. Williamson again sang "Hail Columbia" "at the End of the Play" on May 18*** * "Death or Liberty" was dropped, and ever since the song has been known as "Hail Columbia." Mr. Williamson seems to have been much in vogue as a singer of patriotic songs. When assisting Mr. Chalmers in his "Readings and Recitations" at Oeller's Room in Philadelphia on Jime 15*** ^, he entertained the audience with "The Boston Patriotic Song: Adams a Advertisement in the New York Gazette May 15. b Advertisement in Porcupine Gazette June 13. 46 Hail Columbia. and Liberty," the "New York Federal Song: Washington and the Constitution/' and again ''Hail Columbia." When engaged for the "Grand Concert" at Ranelagh Garden in New York for July 4*** he sang the same three songs, and, we doubt not, much to the delight of a patriotic audience. Indeed the success of "Hail Columbia" was "inmiediate and emphatic" (Elson). Far beyond the most sanguine expectations of Joseph Hopkinson! Including his song in a letter directed to Geoi^e Washington xmder date of May 9, 1798, he wrote: « As to the song it was a hasty compoeition, and can pretend to very little ex- trinsic merit — yet I believe its public reception has at least equalled any thing of the kind. The theatres here [Phila.] and at New York have resounded with it night after night; and men and boys in the streets sing it as they go. Evidently not much to the delight of some reporter who calls it (in the Centinel of Freedom, Newark, N. J., July 9, 1799) the ''old thread worn song of Hail Columbia." As might be expected, the words of ''Hail Columbia," together with the music of the President's March, were published shortly after the first pubUc performance of the song. In fact only two days had elapsed when Benjamin Carr inserted the following advertisement: ^ On Monday Afternoon wiU be published at Carr's Musical Repository, the very favourite New Federal Song, Written to the tune of the President's March, By J. Hopkinson, Esq. And sung by Mr. Fox, at the New Theatre with great applause, ornamented with a very elegant Portrait of the President [scil. John Adams]. No copy of this original edition of ''Hail Columbia" has come to light. If Carr published it at all with Adams's portrait, he probably, according to his custom, added his imprint. This leads me to now believe, contrary to my remarks on former occasions, that the edition which is in Mr. Louis C. Elson's possession and which he reproduced in facsimile in his books ''The National Music of America" (1900) and "History of American Music" (1904) is not identical with Carr's original edition, but of a trifle later date. Mr. Elson's unique copy shows the American eagle instead of Adams's portrait and it bears no imprint. These differences are, of course, not conclusive, since Carr noiay have been unable to secure a suitable picture, yet this difference, together with the fact that he must have had an edition in the press and that he was not in the habit of suppressing his imprint, compels us to assume Carr's edition and the one in Mr. Elson's possession not to have been identical until the identity is proven. The title of Mr. Elson's copy reads : ''The Favorite New Federal Song [American eagle] Adopted to the Fresidents March. Sung by Mr. Fox- Written by J. Hopkinson Esqr." aComp. William S. Baker's "Washington after the Revolution/' 1898. 5Comp. Porcupine Gazette for Friday 27. Hail Columbia, 47 Filling two unpaged inside pages of a musical sheet; it was arranged in C major ''for the voice, pianoforte, guittar and clarinets and this arrangement was followed, as was customary, by an arrangement (in D major) for the flute or violin. Among *'new music. Just pub- lished" the Federal Gazette, Baltimore, on June 25, 1798, advertised "The President's March," *'Hail Columbia, happy land." This may have been a special Baltimore edition by Joseph Carr, or it may sim- ply have referred to Benjamin Carr's Philadelphia edition, or to the one in Mr.' Elson's possession, or to: The President's March, a new Federal Song. Published by 6. Willig, Marketstreet, No. 185. Phila. A copy of this is contained in a miscellaneous volume of ''Battles and marches" at the Ridgway branch of the Library Company of Philadelphia, and is here reproduced in facsimile by permission. (See Appendix, Plates VII- VIII.) Willig published at the above address, as we know from the city directories, between 1798 and 1803, but the adjective new in the title surely suggests the year 1798. Under the title of ''Hail Columbia" the song was jfirst advertised in August, 1798, among "patriotic and other favorite songs" as ''just published and for sale at Wm. Howe's wholesale and retail warehouse, 320 Pearl street, " New York, but as Howe is merely known as dealer in music, not as a music printer or music publisher, it stands to reason that he merely advertised for sale one or more of the editions so far published. All these early editions contained the words and the miisic. The text without music (8** 6 p.), of which a copy is in New York Public Library, was published at Philadelphia imder the title of-r— Song adapted to the President's march sung at the Theatre by Mr. Fox, at his benefit. Composed by Joseph Hopkinson, Esq. Printed by J. Ormiod, 41, Chestnut street. Thus ''Hail Columbia" rapidly became a national song regardless of its bombastic and prosaic metaphors. Patriotic songs had been written in America showing this prevailing fault of the times to a lesser degree, and better songs followed — among the latter, however, cer- tainly not the ''New Hail Columbia," which begins — Lol I quit my native skies — To arms I my patriot sons arise (see p. 45 of James J. Wilson's National Song Book, Trenton, 1813), but none, except Key's "Star- Spangled Banner" and Reverend Smith's "America" were destined to rival the popularity of "Hail Columbia" for almost a century. But as "America" was written to the tune of "God Save the King" and the "Star-Spangled Banner" to the drinking song " To Anacreon in Heaven," at least " Hail Colum- bia" may claim the distinction in the history of our early national songs of being in poetry and music a product of our soil. 48 Hail Columbia. W. T. R. Saffell in his book ''Hail Columbia, the Flag, and Yankee Doodle Dandy/' Baltimore, 1864, when describing the allegorical- political musical entertainment of The Temple of Minerva, which was performed at Philadelphia in 1781, points out the two lines: ''Hail Columbia's godlike son" and "Fill the golden trump of fame." He adds: "Do not 'Hail Columbia,' the 'trump of fame,' and the measure of the chorus, appear to carry Fayles back from 1789 to 1781, for his music, and Hopkinson from 1798 to the same scene and the same year for his words? Who can say but our immortal 'Hail Coliimbia' had its real origin in 'The Temple of Minerva,' or in the surrender of Com- wallis, when 'Magog among the nations' arose from his lair at York- town and shook, in the fury of his power, the insurgent world beneath him ? May not Fayles have touched a key in the ' Temple of Minerva ' in 1781, and revived the sound in 17891 May not the eye of Hopkin- son in 1798 have fallen upon the 'Columbian Pamassiad' of 1787, when the 'Temple of Minerva' fibrst entered the great highway of history? But none the less glory for Mr. Hopkinson." The eye of Joseph Hopkinson might indeed have fallen upon the Colimibian Pamassiad in the Columbian Magazine (Philadelphia) for April, 1787, where the "Temple of Minerva" was printed, but "Fayles" certainly did not "touch a key" in this Uttle play. And this for the very simple reason that the "Oratorio" (sic) "was composed and set to Music by a gentleman" who signed himself H. With a little critical thought Mr. Saffell might have suspected Francis Hopkinson to have been the author and composer of "The Temple of Minerva," and so he was indeed, as my monograph on ' ' Francis Hopkinson and James Lyon" (1905) has established beyond doubt. Consequently Mr. Saf- fell's effort to trace the "President's March" back to 1781, by way of "The Temple of l^iinerva," if I understand his florid fantasies at all, is demolished by plain historical facts. It is different with his sug- gestion that the author of "Hail Columbia" may have been influenced by "The Temple of Minerva." Joseph Hopkinson of course knew the poetry of his father and probably shared the admiration of many contemporaries for it. Hence it was quite natural for him to remem- ber the two lines quoted above and to unconsciously borrow from them for his own poem. This process was quite probable in his own peculiar case, yet we should bo careful not to apply too zealously com- parative philological text-criticism to the patriotic songs of those days in order to trace the influence exercised by one poet upon the other. Such apostrophes as "Hail Columbia" were frequently used by the poet-politicians and indeed their patriotic effusions have many stock phrases in common. Similar sentiments were then continually expressed in similar methaphors just as they are to-day. Here, for instance, is the first stanza of a poem which Joseph Hopkinson might Hail Columbia. 49 also have read in his youth and parts of which might have lingered in his memory. It was printed in the Federal Gazette, June 23, 1789, and reads : A FEDERAL SONG For the Anniversary of American Independence To the tune of " Rule Britannia " Ye Friends to this auspicious day I Gome join the federal, festive band And all Columbia — ^homage pay To him who freed tny happy land. Hail Columbia! Columbia! Oeniua hail! Freedom ever shall prevail. National songs are meant to be sung. The best and most heart- stirring patriotic poems will soon be forgotten if not supported by a melody which catches the public ear. It might be said that Hopkin- son's ''Hail Cioliunbia'' would have conquered the nation wiih any of the popular times of the time, but the fact remains that its immediate and lasting success was actually obtained with the aid of the ''Pres- ident's March." Not all the honor, therefore, is due to Joseph Hop- kinson. We musicians are entitled to claim some of the laurels for the composer of the tune which, no matter how Uttle its musical value may be, has become immortal together with the words of ''Hail Columbia." Until recently the musical origin of "Hail Columbia" was as obscure as its literary history was clear. Not that the composer had been treated unkindly by the historians. They tried to lift the veil which covered his name, but their accounts were so contradictory that one claim stood in the way of the other. A methodical analysis of the contradictory accoimts left the problem open, and it became probable that merely an accidental find would enable us to solve it. The reader will have noticed that Hopkinson mentions the "Presi- dent's March" in his letter without any allusion to its composer. The same applies to Durang in his "History of the Philadelphia Stage" (1864-65) to Dunlap's "History of the American Theatre" (1823), to Wilson's "National Song Book" (1813), to McCarty's "Songs, Odes and other Poems on National Subjects" (1842), and to A. G. Emerick's "Songs for the People" (1848). The critical investigations began 1859, with an anonymous article in Dawson's "Historical Magazine" (Vol. Ill, p. 23): The Preeident's March was composed by a Professor Pfyle, and was played at Trentonbridge when Washington passed over on his way to New York to his inauguration. This information I obtained from one of the performers, confirmed afterwards by a son of said Pfyle. The song ''Hail Columbia'' was written to the music during the elder Adam's administration, by Judge Hopkinson, and 85480-09 4 50 Hail Columbia. was fizBt sung by Mr. Fox, a popular siiiger of the day. I well remember being present at the first introduction of it at the Holiday street theatre, amid the clap- ping of hands and hissings of the antagonistic parties. Black cockades were worn in those days. I have also reason to believe that the "Washington March" generally known by that title — I mean the one in key of G major, was composed by die Hon. fS!ancis Hopkinson, senior, having seen it in a manuscript book of his, in his own handwriting among others of his known compositions. J. 0. The above was published in the ''Baltimore Clipper" in 1841, by a person who well understood the subject. Evidently this person was J. C, whose account was simply reprinted from the Baltimore Clipper. A somewhat different version appears on page 368 of the ''Recol- lections and Private Memoirs of Washington/' by his adopted son George Washington Parke Custis, edited by Benson J. Lossrng in 1860. In New York the play bill was headed ''By particular Desire" when it was announced that the president would attend. On those nights the house would be crowded from top to bottom, as many to see the hero as the play. Upon the president's entering the stage box with his feunily, the orchestra would strike up ''The President's March" (now Hail Columbia) composed by a German named Feyles, in '89, in contradistinction, to the march of the Revolution, called ''Wash- ington's March " . The audience applauded on the entrance of the president, but the pit and gal- lery were so truly despotic in the early days of the republic, that bo soon as " Hail Columbia" had ceased, "Washington's March" was called for by the deafening din of a hundred voices at once, and upon its being played, three hearty cheers would rock the building to its base. In the following year, 1861, the ''Historical Magazine/' which took a vivid interest in the history of our national songs, brought out an article totally contradicting the two already quoted. The article — ^in Volume V, 280, page 281 — is headed ''Origin of Hail Columbia" and reads: In 1829, William Mc Koy of Philadelphia, under the signature ''Lang Sjme", published in Poulson's Daily Advertiser an account of the origin of the song "Hail Columbia", which was set to the music of "The President's March '* , , , Mr. Mc Key's reminiscences have not, we believe, been reprinted since they were originally published. The article is as follows: The seat of the Federal Government of the thirteen United States being removed to Philadelphia, and in honour of the new president, Washington, then residing at No. 190 High street, the march, ever since known as "the President's March", was composed by a German teacher of music, in this city, named Roth, or Roat, designated familiarly by those who knew him as "Old Roat". He taught those of his pupils who preferred the flute, to give to that instrument the additional sound of a drone, while playing in imitation of a bagpipe. His residence was at one time in that row of houses standing back from Fifth, above Race street, at the time known as "The Fourteen Chimneys", some of which are stUl visible in the rear ground, north eastward of Mayer's Hail Columbia. 51 church. In his penon he was of the middle size and height. His foce was truly Gennan in expression, dark grey eyes, and bushy eyebrows, round, i>ointed nose, prominent lips, and parted chin. He took snufif immoderately, having his vest and ruffles usually well sprinkled with grains of rappee. He was con- sidered as excentric, and a kind of droll. He was well known traditionally, at the Samson and Lion, in Crown street, where it seems his company, in the olden time, was always a welcome to the pewter-pint customers, gathered there at their pipes and beer, while listening to his facetious tales and anecdotes, without number, of high-life about town, and of the players — Nick Hammond, Miss Tuke, Hodgkinson, Mrs. Pownall, and Jack Martin, of the old theatre in South wark. This said ''President's March'' by Roat, the popular songs of Markoe, the "city poet," in particular the one called ''The Tailor Done over" and the beautiful air of "Dans Votre Lit" which had been rendered popular by its being exquisitely sung at the time, by Wools, of the Old American Com- pany, were sung and whistled by every one who felt freedom (of mind) to whistle and to sing . . . Public opinion having . . . released itself suddenly from a passion for French Revolutionary music and song, experienced a vacuimx in that parti- cular, which was immediately supplied by the new national American song of "Hail Columbia happy Land" written in '98 by Joseph Hopkinson, Esq. of this city, and the measure adapted by him, very judiciously, to the almost foigotten " President's March". Ever since 1798, the song of "Hail Columbia" by Joseph Hopkinson, and the "President's March" by Johannes Roat, being indiscriminately called for, have become, in a manner, s3monymous to the public ear and understanding when they are actually and totally distinct in their origin, as above mentioned. Following the clue given in this reprint^ I found the original article in Poulson's American Daily Advertiser for Tuesday, January 13, 1829, under the heading '' President's March." Though this article ap- pears anonymous, there can be no doubt of Mr. McKoy having been the author, for we know from ''Watson's Annals of Philadelphia" that it was he who wrote the series of articles on olden times in Philadelphia, published in said paper during the years 1828 and 1829 and mostly signed "Auld Lang Syne." In the same year that this gentleman's account was reprinted in the Historical Maga2dn6, Richard Grant White's ''National Hymns, How They Are Written and How They Are Not Written," left the press. What this author has to say on the origin of the "President's March" is contained in a footnote on page 22: . . . The air to which Hopkinson wrote ''Hail Columbia" was a march written by a German band master on occasion of a visit of Washington, when President, to the old John Street Theatre in New York. A similar view as to the musical origin of the song is held by W. T. R. Saffell in his book "Hail Columbia, the Flag, and Yankee Doodle Dandy, Baltimore, 1864." He says, on page 53: A piece of music set for the harpsichord, entitled the "President's March" was composed in 1789, by a German named Fayles, on the occadon of Washington's first visit to a theatre in New York. fCUHN LOEB MUSIC LIBRARY HARVABiD UNIVERSITY " 62 Hail Columbia. Rev. Elias Nason, on page 33 of his monograph, '^A Monogramm on Our National Song . . . 1869/' is equally meager, equally omniscient, and equally opposed to giving authorities when he writes : ... on Washington's first attendance at the theatre in New York, 1789, a Gennan by the name of Fyles composed a tune to take place of "Washington's March/' christening it with the name of "President's March." Some years later, in 1872, Benson J. Lossing reprinted in Volume I (pp. 650-554) of his "American Historical Record" a paper on ''The Star-Spangled Banner and National Airs," which the Hon. Stephan Salisbury had read before the American Antiquarian Society, October 21, 1872. In regard to ''Hail Colimibia" this author says: Poulson's Advertiser of 1829 mentions that this song was set to the music of "the Flresident's March" by Johannes Roth, a German music teacher in that city. And the Historical Magazine, vol. 3, page 23, quotes from the Baltimore Clipper of 1841 that the "President's March" was composed by Professor Phyla of Philadelphia, and was played at Trenton in 1789, when Washington passed over to New York to be inaugurated, as it was stated by a son of Professor Phyla, who was one of the performers. Rear-Admiral Qeorge Henry Preble, in his ** History of the Flag of the United States; Boston, 1880,'' wrote: The ''President's March" was a popular air, and the adaptation easy. It was composed in honour of President Washington, then residing at No. 190 High Street Philadelphia, by a teacher of music, named Roth, » or Roat, familiarly known as ''Old Roat." He was considered as an excentric, and kind of a droll, and took snuff immoderately. Philip Roth, teacher of music, described as Uving at 26 Grown Street, whose name appears in all the Philadelphia directories from 1791 to 1799, inclusive, was probably the author of the march. According to his son, who asserted he was one of the performers, the march was composed by Professor Phyla, of Philadelphia, and was played at Trenton, in 1789, when Washington passed over to New York to be inaugurated. b a Poulson's Advertiser 1829. b Historical Magazine, Volume 111, 23. Baltimore Clipper, 1841. American Historical Record Volume 1, 53. Hon. S. Salisbury's paper before the American Antiquarian Society 1872. John Bach McMaster, the celebrated author of '*A History of the People of the United States; New York," has something to say on the subject in Volume I, on pages 564-565: At the John street theatre in New York, ' ' in a box adorned with fitting emblems, the President was to be seen much oftener than many of the citizens approved. On such occasions the 'President's March' was always played. It had been composed by Phyles, the leader of the few violins and drums that passed for the orchestra, and played for the first time on Trenton Bridge as Washington rode over on his way to be inaugurated. The air had a martial ring that caught the ear of the multitude, soon became popular as Washington's March, and when Adams was President, in a moment of great party excitement Judge Hopkinson wrote and adapted to it the famous lines beginning 'Hail Columbia.' " Hail Columbia. 58 Mary L. D. Ferris, in a clever but superficial causerie on "Ouy National Songs" in the New England Magazine, new series, July, 1890 (pp. 483-504), expresses her opinion briefly, thus: The miiBic of Hail Columbia was composed in 1789, one hundred years ago, by Professor Phylo of Philadelphia, and played at Trenton, when Washington was en route to New York to be inaugurated. The tune was originally called the President's March. In the same year (1890) appeared John Philip Sousa's semiofficial work,' 'National, Patriotic, and Typical Airs of All Lands with Copious Notes, compiled by order and for use of the Nayy Department/' Of the ''President's March" Sousa remarks: On the occasion of Gen. Washington's attendance at the John St. Theatre in New York, in 1789, a German named Fyles, who was leader of the orchestra, composed a piece in compliment of him and called it the "President's March," which soon became a popular fatvorite. In the first of a series of articles on our national songs, published 1897, April 29, in the Independent, E. Irenaeus Stevenson maintains that "Hail Columbia" is rather a "personal'' than a national song, haying been, as he imagines, written in honor of George Washington, But this is not his only blunder, for he not even knew that the "Wash- ington's March" and the "President's March" were two entirely different pieces. * The very air to the words confirms one in wishing that " Hail Columbia " would remain solely an artless souvenir belonging to Washington. For the tune was not written to Judge Hopkinson's words. It was a little instrumental march, called "Washington's March," of vast vogue circa 1797, a march composed in honour of the first President by a Grerman musician named Fhazles, Fhylz, Phyla, or Pfalz, of New York. Phazles looked after musical matters in the old theatre on John Street; and apparently he really wrote, not imported, the tune. Judge Hopkinson fitted to it the address to Washington, in 1798. When George Washington, on Sunday, May 27, 1798, acknowledged the receipt of "Hail Ciolumbia" sent to him by Joseph Hopkinson on May 9, he " offered an absence for more than eight days from home as an apology for . . . not giving ... an earlier acknowledg- ment." The polite note has been reprinted by William S. Baker in his work already quoted. Baker adds the following editorial foot- note: The song referred to in the above quoted letter was the national air, " Hail €k>lumbia,'' the words of which were written by Joseph Hopkinson and adapted to the music of the ** Ftesident's March " composed in 1789 by a German named Feyles, who at the time was the leader of the orchestra at the John Street Theatre in New York. A similar yersion appears in S. J. Adair FitzQerald's Stories of Famous Songs. London, 1897, on page 100: The music was taken from a piece, called ''The Ftesident's March," which had seen the light ten yeaxB previously. It was composed by a German named Fyles on some special visit of Washington's to the John Street Theatre, New York. 54 Hail Columbia. Col. Nicholas Smith in his ''Stories of Great National Songs," 3lilwaiikeey 1899, becomes involuntarily humorous, when saying (on p. 41): The "President's March" was composed in 1789 by a German picfesBor in Philadelphia, named Phylo, alias Feyles, alias Thyla, alias Phyla, alias Roth, and was first played at Trenton when Washington was on his way to New York to be inaugurated president. The few lines which Howard Futhey Brinton says to the subject in his "Patriotic Songs of the American People/' New Haven, 1900, may also find a place here: Of the then current tunes none caught the popular fancy mate than the " Presi- dent's March,'* which had been composed in 1789 by a German named Feylee, in honour of General Washington. Louis C. Elson is the last writer whom I have to quote. In his widespread work ''The National Music of America and its Sources, Boston, 1900," we read (on pp. 157-169) a very much more elaborate account than the last ones mentioned: ... it is definitely known that the composition was written in 1789, and that it was called "The President's March." Regarding' its first performance and its composer there is some doubt. William Mc. Eoy in "Poulson's Advertiser" for 1829 states that the march was composed by a German musician in Phila- delphia, named Johannes Roth. He is also called "Roat" and "Old Roat" in some accounts. That there was a Philip Roth living in Philadelphia at about this time may be easily proved, for his name is found in the city directories from 1791 to 1799.a He appears as "Roth, Philip, teacher of music, 25 Crown St." Washington at this time was a fellow citizen of this musician for he lived at 190 High Street, Philadelphia. But there is another claimant to the work. There was also in Philadelphia at this time a German musician, whose name is spelled in many different ways by the commentators. He is caUed "Phyla", "PhUo", "Pthylo" and "Pfyles" by various authors. None of these seems like a German name, but it is possible that the actual name may have been Pfeil.6 This gentleman of doubtful cog- nomen claims the authorship of the march in question, or rather his son has claimed it for him. The march is also claimed by this son to have been first played on Trenton Bridge as Washington rode over, on his way to the New York inauguration. Richard Grant White, however, states, on what authority we know not, that the work was first played on the occasion of a visit of Washington to the old John Street Theatre in New York. It is evident that all these different accounts are based directly or indirectly upon the three contradictory versions of William McKoy in Poulson's Advertiser, 1829, of J. C. in the Baltimore Clipper, 1841, and of George Washington Parke Custis, 1860. Later accoimts con- o History of the Flag of the United States, by Rear Admiral Geo. Henry Preble, p. 719. b Through the courtesy of John W. Jordan, Esq., librarian of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, we learn that the first Philadelphia '' City Directory " was published in 1785, the second in 1791. In neither of these does the name of any musician bear- ing any reesemblance to the ones given above appear. Hail Columbia. 55 tain nothing substantially new except when confusing the problem by incorrect and uncritical quotations from unmentioned sources, as in the case of Rev. Elias Nason who inaccurately copied R. Grant White's superficial footnote. If our problem can be solved, it will be possible only by criticaUy investigating pro et contra the data given in the reports of 1829, 1841, and 1860. These data are: 1. The march ever since known as the ''President's March" was composed by a German teacher of music in Philadelphia, named Johannes Roat or Roth, ' ' the seat of the Federal Government of the thirteen United States being removed to Philadelphia and in honour of the new President Washington, then residing at No. 190 High street" (Mc. Eoy). 2) The President's March was composed by Professor Pfyle and was played at Trentonbridge when Washington passed over on his way to New York to his inauguration. (Information obtained by J. C. from ''one of the performers" confirmed afterwards by a son of said Pfyle.) 3) The President's March was composed by a German, named Feyles in 1789 and was played upon President George Washington's entrance into the stage box with his family. (Recollections by George Washington Parke Chistis.) To begin with the first version: Who was this German teacher of music, by the name of Roth? Even the most careful research in the old newspapers, magazines, directories, and in books relating to the early theatrical and musical life of the United States will add but very little to the following few items: I find Roth first mentioned in the year 1771. On December 5 a concert advertised in the Pennsylvania Gazette for November 28, by "Mr. John M'Lean (Instructor of the German Flute)" in Phila- delphia, was to "conclude with an overture j composed (for the occar sion) by Philip Roih, master of the band belonging to his Majesty's Royal Regiment of British Fusiliers." Not until 1785 have I again found his name mentioned. But in this year we read his name in the first City Directory of Philadelphia, published by White. He appears there as ^^ Roots, Philip, music maker. Sixth between Arch and Race streets." We next read his name in an advertisement in the Pennsylvania Journal (Phila.) for September 10, 1788. ''Mr. Roth, Music Master in Pennington AUey, running from Race to Vine Streets, between Foiu-th and Fifth Streets, teacher aU kinds of Instrumental Music in the shortest manner, viz. Harpsichord or Piano Forte, Guitar, Flute, Hautboy, Clarinet, Bassoon, French Horn, Harp and Thorough Bbbb, which is the Ground of Music.*' 56 Hail Columbia. The third item which I was able to trace shows Both again as a composer. The "Columbian Magazine" (Phila.) brought out in the April number of 1790 **A Hunting Song. Set to Music by Mr. Roth, of Philadelphia.'' It is written in E flat major and in the intentionally simple style of the German Volkslieder of that period, to the words: "Ye sluggards who murder your lifetime in bed, etc." Needless to say that the song is of little musical value. The first directory for Philadelphia had been published in 1785. The second was issued in 1791, the third in 1793; after that the directory was issued annually. In all these, till 1805, we run across the ''musician" or ''teacher of music" or "music master" Philip Roth, his name being spelled from 1803-1805 "Rothe." He lived from 1791 to 1794 in 25 Crownst; from 1799-1803 in 33 Crownst, whereas for the years 1795-1798 his residence is given without a house number as in "Crownst." We find in the directory for 1806 "Rote, widow of Philip, music master, 94 N. Seventh." This would suggest 1805 as date of his death, but Mr. Drummond of the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania informed me that the city records show Roth to have died in 1804. That Philip Roth, besides teaching " all kinds of instrumental music in the shortest manner," played in the concert and opera orchestras of Philadelphia is highly probable, but he never appears as a soloist or as a composer in the many concerts given there till 1800, the programmes of which I have copied as far as I was able to trace them in the newspapers. Of course, the last remark interferes in no way with the possibil- ity of his having composed the "President's March." Mr. McKoy's claims must be considered as not contrary to chronology and cir- ciunstances in regard to Roth's person, and his misspelling the name and calling him Johannes instead of Philip matters very little. But otherwise his claims are suspicious, though he seems to have known Roth well. The reader will have noticed that McKoy does not mention the year in which the "President's March" was composed. This is of importance, as his narrative excludes the years 1774-1788, dtiring which we had fifteen presidents of the Continental Congress, and also the year 1789, when George Washington became President of the United States. The seat of government was not removed to Philadelphia until the fall of 1790. It had been, from 1789 to the date of removal, in New York and not in Philadelphia. If, therefore, McKoy's statement is correct the march was composed in 1790. In this case however the remark "in honour of the new President" loses its sense. Hail Columbia. 57 But the lines might represent an excusable slip of memory, and the march might have been written by Roth and played in honor of the President when passing through Philadelphia on his way to New York in 1789. Washington left Mount Vernon on the 16th of April; reached Philadelphia on the 20th and continued his voyage the foUowing day.* The Pennsylvania Journal (W., April 22), the Pennsyl- vania Mercury (T., April 21), the Independent Gazetteer (T., April 21), the Pennsylvania Packet (T., April 21), the Freeman's Journal (W., April 22), and the Pennsylvania Gazette (W., April 22) all give an account of the President's reception at Philadelphia, but none of these papers, except the Pennsylvania Gazette, refer to any music having been played at the entertainment and this paper only in a vague way: ''PhUadelphia, April 22. Monday laJst His Excellency Geoige WaBhiBgton, Esq., the President Elect of the United States, arrived in this city, about one o'clock, accompanied by the President of the State . . . troops . . . and a numerous concoune of citizens on horseback and foot. His Excellency rode in front of the procession, on hcHseback . . . The bells were rung thro' the day and night, and a feu de joy was fired as he moved down Market and Second Street to the City Tavern ... At three o'clock His Excel- lency sat down to an elegant Entertainment of 260 covers at the City Tavern, prepared for him by the citizens of Philadelphia. A band of music played during the entertainment and a discharge of artillery took place at every toast among which was, the State of Viiginia." This meager notice and the silence of the other papers in regard to music are significant. Had the band played a march composed in honor of the illustrious guest, the papers would have mentioned the fact, as it was their habit of doing on similar occasions. This state- ment can be proved over and over and will be supported by all who have had occasion to study our early newspapers and their habits. For the same reasons, Mr. McKoy's claims, even if taken literally, which would imply that the President's March was written in 1790 when the seat of government was actually removed to Philadelphia, contain no evidential strength. During the President's short stay in Philadelphia : ... an elegant F6te Ghampdtre was given to this illustrous i>enonage, his amiable consort and family . . . [Sept. 4.] on the banks of the Schuylkill, in the highly improved grounds of the messis. Gray, by a number of respectable citizens. . . A band of music played during the repast, and at the close of the repast several excellent songs were sung, and toasts were given. Neither this account which appeared in the Pennsylvania Packet for Wednesday, September 8, 1790, nor any other, mentions a piece ^Gomp. McMaster, I, 538 or Baker. 58 Hail Columbia. of music composed "for the occasion." It would have been quite contrary to the practice of our early newspapers to have omitted reference to a piece written and played in honor of the new president. Consequently McEoy's version, in spite of the fact that he was a contemporary and fellow-citizen of Philip Roth, becomes very doubtful. Had he attributed the "President's March" to this musician without going into details, his case would have been much stronger. We then might have admitted the probability that he knew the history of the march either from Roth himself or from others conversant with the matter. In its actual form, however, McKoy's statement not only contains a contradictio in adjecto, but it is contradicted moreover by two of his contemporaries, one of whom claimed to have been among the original performers of the march and the other to have been a son of the composer. If the claims made for Roth had been known to either of these two gentlemen, they emphatically would have denied their correctness, and at least a short reference to this protest would have slipped into J. C.'s account. Evidently Philip Roth was not generaUy considered outside of Philadelphia as author of the march, nay, not even in Philadelphia itself, for we shall see that "Professor Pfyle," too, resided for years in Philadelphia. Certainly his son would have heard of Roth's claims if such were made, and he would not have failed, in his conversation with J. C, to prove the fallacy of claims which unjustly robbed his father of the glory of having written the air to one of our national songs. On what groimds Mr. McEoy attributes the piece to Roth we have no way of ascertaining. We have to content ourselves with the fact that chronology and circumstances command weight against his theory. Unless an early copy of the President's March is discovered, printed or in manuscript, bearing Roth's name as author, it would be uncritical to accept his authorship as a historical fact. But who was "Professor Pfyle," alias Fayles, alias Feyles, alias Fyles, alias Pfalz, alias Pfazles, alias Pfeil, alias Pfyles, alias Philo, alias Phyla, alias Phyles, alias Phylo, alias Phylz, alias Thyla? J. C.'s spelling seems to corroborate Elson's idea that the actual name was the German "Pfeil," anglicized later on into Ffyle. But the numerous instances in which the name of tins "gentleman of doubtful cognomen" appears in newspaper advertisements, etc., leave no doubt that in America he spelled his name Phile. Only once is the name given with a different spelling. This name of Phile was not so uncommon after all in America, as I find five different " Phile's " in the two first Philadelphia city directories. On Saturday, March 6, 1784, a concert was advertised at Philadel- phia, in the Pennsylvania Packet, "For the Benefit of Mr. Phile," in which he and a Mx. Brown "for that night only" were to play "A Hail Columbia. 59 Double Concerto for the Violin and Flute." This concert was post- poned from March 18 to the following Tuesday, March 23. Preyious to 1784 I have not found Phile mentioned. He must have been an able violinist, for when the Old American Company of Comedians returned in 1785 to the Continent from the West Indies, where they had sought refuge in the fall of 1774, he was made leader of the orchestra. To quote Charles Durang, who in his rare and interesting ''Histoiy of the Philadelphia Stage" (Ch. IX) throws '^ professional side lights" on the different performers in 1785: The orchestza was composed of the foUowing musiciaiiB; Mr. Fhilo, leader; Mr. Bentley, haipeichord; Mr. Woolf, principal clarionet; Trimner, Hecker, and son, violoncello, violins etc. Some six or seven other names, now not remem- bered, constituted the musical force. The latter were all Germans. On July 18, 1786, was to be performed in New York,« under the direction of Mr. Reinagle, the ''vocal parts by Miss Maria Storer," "A Grand Concert of Vocal and Instrumental Music." The first part of the concert was to consist "chiefly of Handel's Sacred Music, as performed in Westminster Abbey. The Second Part miscellane- ous!" Phile was engaged as soloist Lib^fiiBt part, his name appear, ing thus in the program: '^Concerto Violin . . . Mr. Phile," and Mr. Beinagle and Mr. Phile were to play a "Duett for Violin and Violoncello" in the second part. We next find him at Philadelphia in 1787 ^ and again in connection with a concert. It was the one for Monday, January 15, at the Southwark Theater. The concert was interspersed with '^ Lectures Moral and Entertaining," and concluded with the ''Grand Panto- mimical Finale. In two Acts called Robinson Crusoe." We read in the "First Act": " Rondeau— Mr. Phile." He can not have remained very long in Philadelphia, because we find him a month after his concert engagement in Philadelphia at New York and offering his services as music teacher. The adver- tisement reads : "" Music. Philip Fhile, most respectfully offeiB his service to Lovera of Instru- mental Musick, in Teaching the Violin and German Flute methodically. Attend- ance will be given at his Lodgings No. 82 Chatham Bow, near Vande Waters. He will also wait on such Gentlemen, as would wish to take Lessons, at their own Houses. N. B. Musick copied at the above mentioned place. Feb. 20. Not quite two months after this advertisement was inserted Phile reappeared in public in Philadelphia, and it seems as if he was ex- pressly called from New York. The '^ Syllabus" of the magnificent ''First Uranian Concert/' which was performed at the German aN. Y. Packet 1786, July 13. bPa. Packet, Jan. 13, 1787. 6N. Y. Daily Advertiser, Feb. 21, 1787. 60 Hail Columbia. Reformed Church on April 12, 1787; under the direction of the ambi- tious Andrew Adgate,^ contains his name among the ''Authors" in the following manner: "IV . . . Concerto Violino By Mr. Phile of New York." In the following year ' ' Mr. Rehine's Concert of Vocal and Instru- mental Music," which was to have taken place on November 26 at the City Tavern in Philadelphia, was ' ' postponed on account of the bad- ness of the weather Hill Friday Evening the 29th.'" In this concert the restless Mr. Phile was to play '' Solo Violino" in the first act. ^ An entire ''Amateurs Concert" was given "For the Benefit of Philip Phile" on January 29, 1789, "at the house of Henry Epple in Racestreet." The orchestral numbers were three "Grand Over- tures" by Vanhall, Haydn, and Martini. As soloists we notice Reinagle with a pianoforte sonata. Wolf with a "Concerto Clarinetto," and Phile. The latter played in the first act a "Concerto Violino" and in the second a "Solo Violino." It really seems as if Phile was the fashionable violin virtuoso of the day, constanly "on the road" between New York and Philadelphia, for again a "Violin Concerto by Phile" was to be performed at "A Concert of Sacred Music" which the recently founded "Musical Society of New York" gave on Thursday, Jime 18, 1789, at the Lutheran Church in order to cover the expenses resulting hx)m the purchase of an organ by the Society.^ It may be that during all these years Phile remained the leader of the orchestra of the Old American Company, but it is by no means certain, as the fact is nowhere mentioned. We only know (from Durang) that he held this position about 1785. If some of the writers whom I have quoted claim that he was the leader of the orchestra in the John Street Theater at New York in 1789, they forgot to refer to their source of information, and therefore can not be con- sidered as historically trustworthy. Phile became tired of his erratic life and he decided to "continue his residence " in Philadelphia. Of this decision he gave public notice in the Pennsylvania Packet for December 16, 1789: Mr. Phile moet reepectfuUy informs the citizexiB of Philadelphia, particularly thoee (Gentlemen he had the honour to instruct formerly, that the unavoidable necessity which occasioned his abscence has now ceased, and that he is determined to continue his residence in this city. He hopes from the many proofs he has afforded of his abilities as a Teacher of dif- ferent Instruments of Music, to meet with the Patronage of a generous Public. He proposes to instruct Gentlemen on the Violin, Flute, Clarinet and Bassoon. Mr. Phile is willing to render every satisfaction; this, with a particular attention to those Gen- tlemen who may please to encoonge him, wiU, he trusts, establish the Reputation he is desirous to merit. a Pa. Packet, April 0. h Federal Gazette, Nov. 28, 1788. « N. Y. Daily Adv. and N. Y. DaUy Gaa. for June 12, 1789. Hail Columbia. 61 Dixectiona to Mr. Fhile, living in Race street between Front and Second street, will be punctually attended to. N. B. Music copied. Philadelphia, Dec. 14. Undoubtedly Phile resided at Philadelphia during the year 1790, as on March 18, 1790, " AConcert of Vocal and InstrumentaJ Music for the Benefit of Mr. Phile " was to be giYen,<* and as half a year later, on Saturday, October 16, he performed a ''Flute Concert" at Messrs. Gray's Gardens, the entertainment concluding with ''Harmony Music by Mr. Phile."* These concerts at Gray's fashionable gardens were held regularly during the sunmier months and were by no means of the ' ' roof garden " order. The best performers of Philadelphia were engaged for the instrumental and vocal solos, and music only of composers then con- sidered as the best was played. The concert mentioned, for instance, comprised grand overtures by Haydn, Schmitt, Martini, and sym- phonies by Stamitz and Abel. For the years 1791 and 1792 I have not been able to trace Phile's name, but I find him as "Phile Philip, music master, 207 Sassafrasst" in the Philadelphia directory for 1793. Then he disappears, and it is veiy likely that he died a victim of the yellow fever epidemic raging so terribly at Philadelphia during 1793, for we notice a ''Phile, Susanna, widow. Washer, 86 No. Fourth st." in the directory for 1794. This is a curriculum vit» of Philip Phile, as far as I could glean it from newspapers and other sources. Not once is he mentioned as author of the "President's March." However, as he evidently was a composer besides being a violin virtuoso, so far neither chronology nor circumstances seriously weaken J. C.'s or Custis's claims in favor of Phile. George Washington Parke Custis claimed that the march was composed by a German named Fyles in 1789, in contradistinction to [Francis Hopkinson'sf] Washington's March, and that it was struck up when the President entered the stage box with his family. He does not state when the march was first played, far less does he claim that the march was composed for the occasion of Washington's first visit to the John Street Theater in New York. We have to examine his account as it stands and are not justified in embellishing it, as Saffell, Nason, and others have done. I feel inclined to trust Custis' s version neither as a solid basis for air castles, nor as a reflex of direct and authentic information bearing upon the subject, nor as a supplementary evidence in favor of J. C.'s Phile tradition. It might be objected that Custis, having become a member of Washington's family a few months after his birth, ought to be con- sidered a reliable witness and out of reach of historical skepticism. Certainly, if it were evident that he visited the theater with the president on May 11, Jime 5, November 24 and 30, 1789, the only a Pa. Packet, T. March 16, 1790. b Federal Gazette, Fr. Oct. 15, 1790. 62 Hail Columbia. four timeS; according to Baker's '' Washington after the Revolution/' and Paul Leicester Ford's charming book, ''Washington and the theater/''* that the president attended theatrical performances in New York. This, however, is not the case, and we have no means of ascertaining whether or not Custis himself heard the President's March played on these occasions. In the second place, are the rec- ollections of a boy of 8 years reliable? Certainly not; but this argu- ment applies to Custis, who was bom in 1781, on the 30th of April.^ Furthermore, the "Recollections" were written dming a period of thirty years, and their preface is dated by the author ''Arlington House Near Alexandria, Va. 1856." Is it not most Ukely that Custis, when "recollecting" the events of the year 1789, was forced to supplement his or his family's reminiscences with information gained from other sources, in particular from tradition and the study of books t When a boy of 8 years George Washington Parke Custis probably was not very much interested in the name of the composer of a march. Even if he was, such early recollections can not be considered a safe basis for critical history. If he learned the name later on, especially after twenty or thirty years had elapsed, then his accoimt has merely the strength of hearsay. Neither the diary which Washington kept in 1789, nor the old newspapers, nor other contemporary sources mention a performance of the President's March at the New York theater in 1789, nor have such lovers of historical minutiae discovered any ref- erence to that effect. Possibly the "President's March" was played in 1789 on one or several occasions when George Washington visited the theater, but we are not obhged nor even justified in admitting it, and with the admission of this possibility as a fact we would still be very distant from positive proof of the authenticity of Custis's state- ment that the "President's March" was composed hy PhUe in 1789. "The President's March," said J. C, "was composed by a Professor Pfyle, and was played at Trenton bridge when Washington passed over on his way to New York to his inauguration." It seems not to have entered the mind of any of the historians quoted, except William S. Baker, to search for the contemporary accotmts of this occasion. The research would not have caused them very much trouble, as quite a number of newspapers printed reports of the "respectful ceremonies" at Trenton, among them the Pennsylvania Mercury for Saturday, May 2, 1789; the Pennsylvania Packet for M., April 27, and the New York Journal for April 30. By neglecting the newspapers the writers missed a most important clue, as will readily be seen from the report printed in the Pennsylvania Packet: a Published in 1899 as No. 8 of the New Series of the Dunlap Society Publications. ^Gomp. Appleton or the *' Memoir of George Washington Parke Custis" prefixed by his daughter to the * ' Recollections. ' ' Hail Columbia. 68 A Sonata Sung by a Number of young Girls, dressed in white and decked with Wreaths and Ghaplets of Flowers, holding Baskets of Flowers in their Hands, as General Washington passed under the triumphal Arch, raised on the Bridge at Trenton, April 21, 1789. Welcome, mifl^ty chief I once more, Welcome to this grateful shore Now no mercenary foe Aims again the fatal blow Aims at thee the fatal blow. Virgins fair and Matrons grave Those thy conquering arms did save — Build for thee triumj^ial bowers t Strew, ye fair, his way with flowers — Strew your Hero's way with flowers. As they sung these lines they strewed the Flowers before the General, who halted until the Sonata was finished. The General being presented with a Copy of the Sonata, was pleased to address the following Card to the Ladies. To the Ladies of Trenton . . . General Washington cannot leave this Place without expressing his Acknowl- edgments to the Matrons and Young Ladies who received him in so novel and graceful a Manner at the Triumphal Arch in Trenton, for the exquisite Sensations he experienced in that affecting moment. The astonishing Contrast between his former and actual Situation at the same spot, the elegant Taste with which it was adorned for the present occasion — and the innocent Appearance of the White Robed Choir who met him with the gratu- latory Song— have made such an impression on his Remembrance, as, he assures them, will never be effaced. Trenton, April 21, 1789. The other papers referred to brought similar reports, all printing sonata instead of cantata, with this important addition, however: ''Sonata, composed ^ and set to music for the occasion." Of other music performed at Trenton bridge on this day, and especially of music composed for the occasion, not a syllable in any of the reports. One is almost led to suppose that this ''Sonata" was the piece alluded to by J. C. and attributed by one of the performers, and later by Phile's son, to Philip Phile as the "President's March." At last the problem appears to approach solution. J. C.'s state- ment seems to be corroborated to the degree of circumstantial evi- dence by this account, and Philip Phile, indeed, seems to have been, beyond reasonable doubt, the author of the much-disputed march. Our joy is premature. New Music. Just published (Price 3 S. 9) and to be Sold by Rice & Co. Book- sellers; South side Market near Second Street. A chorus, sung before Greneral Washington, as he passed under the triumphal Aich raised on the Bridge at Trenton, April 2l6t. 1789; composed and dedicated by permission, to Mrs. Washington By A. Reinagle. This advertisement was published in the Pennsylvania Packet, Tuesday, December 29, 1789. Therewith we have a third and for- midable claimant in the person t)f one of the foremost musicians in the a Mr. Baker attributes the words to Maj. Richard Howell, later on governor of New Jersey. 64 Hail Columbia. country; the composer of numerous operas, sonatas, songs, marches, in particular of the ''Federal March," written for and performed at Philadelphia on July 4, 1788, in the grand procession in honor of the Constitution, the only known copy of which is now in the Library of Congress. If the music of the chorus sung on the bridge at Trenton was identical with that of the President's March, then, of course, Alexander Reinagle's music was wedded to ''Hail Columbia," and not Philip Phile's. Fortunately a copy of the "Chorus'' is still extant to throw light on the puzzling situation. In their pamphlet on "Washington's reception by the ladies of Trenton," the Society of Iconophiles published in 1903 a reduced facsimile in copper photo- gravure of the piece as once in possession of Maj. Richard Howelli supposed author of the poem in question. The extremely rare piece bears this title: GhoniB Bung before Gen. Waahington as he passed under the Triumphal arch raised on the bridge at Trenton, April 21st, 1789. Set to music and dedicated by permission to Mrs. Washington by A. Reinagle. Price } dollar. Philadelphia. Printed for the author, and sold by H. Rice, Market Street. The instrumental introduction and the first bars of the chorus may follow here to prove conclusively that Reinagle's chorus and the Presi- dent's March are not identical. Vivace* 1^^ rs-rL*^ i ^ n=^ m p /2d Voicb. 321 zz: ^ Welcome IBT VOICB. Welcome / 8D VOICB. t Wel-come Wel-come / Welcome, Welcome f Welcome.Welcome, ■^^ feiS t Wel-come, Welcome Wei -come , Welcome Hail Columbia, 65 Here, then, is a puzzling situation. Phile's son claimed that a march known as the President's March and composed by his father was played on the bridge at Trenton, and that he was one of the per- formers. On the other hand, there exists a composition by Reinagle, the title of which would seem to leave no doubt that it was played and sung on the same occasion to the words "Welcome, mighty chief I once more." If we were permitted to assume that hoth compositions figured on the programme of the festivities at Trenton, that would clear the situation somewhat, but no contemporary accoimt mentions any music but the so-called "Sonata.'' Had the "President's March" been composed for the occasion the fact surely would have been men- tioned in the newspapers. Even if "The President's March" was already so popular as to be played as a matter of course in the presence of the President, the probabilities are that the march would have been reported by name or at least that the contemporary reports would have aUuded to the performance of other music besides the "Sonata." Such, however, is not the case, and the issue can not be avoided. Either Reinagle's chorus was sung or "The President's March" had been fitted to Major Howell's words. Under the cir- cumstances it is fortunate that the rendition of Reinagle's chorus on the bridge at Trenton, all appearances to the contrary notwithstand- ing, is very doubtful for the foUowing reasons: (1) The printed title allows to read a distinction between chorus sung, which would then mean "words simg" and set to music. (2) They must have been sung before Washington on April 21, whereas Reinagle's composition was advertised in the Pennsylvania Packet, Philadelphia, December 29, 1789, as just published. An unusual interval between performance and pubUcation. (3) Reinagle's piece is engraved for "2 voice. 1 voice. 3 voice" with pianoforte accompaniment apparently reduced from orchestral score. The 3. voice stands in the bass clef, and the whole is com- posed for either a mixed chorus or a 3-part male chorus. But the Sonata was simg "by a number of yoimg girls," and of a band or orchestra assisting on the occasion and accompanying the singers no mention is made. Any of these three observations alone might carry little weight. Together they do, and combined with a fourth they appear to bear out the doubt that Reinagle's chorus was not composed for April 21, 1789. The "Plan" (programme) of the "New York Subscription Concert" for Tuesday, September 16, 1789, as it appears in the Daily Advertiser for the same day, reads: After the first act, wiU be performed a choruB, to the words that were sung, as Gen. Washington passed the Bridge at Trenton — ^The Music now composed by Mr. Reinagle. 86480—09 5 66 Hail Columbia. This implies that Reinagle's setting, published in December, was not the one simg when General Washington passed the bridge. Con- sequently Reinagle no longer interferes with the Phile tradition. The claim put forth for Phile's authorship of the President's March is by no means yet proved, but it remains imshaken. It would be decidedly strengthened if it could be shown that the ''Music of the Sonata" actually sung on April 21, 1789, and of the ''President's March" were identical. As Reinagle did not compose the music for the occasion, and as Phile is the only other musician mentioned in connection with said occasion, appearances seem to be in his favor until counterbal- anced by the observation that the claim for Phile is based upon the reminiscences of one of the original performers confirmed later by Phile's son. The term performer without the addition vocal generally applies to a performer on some instrument. To have been a performer on said occasion would infer that the "Sonata" was sung with instru- mental accompaniment. To repeat it, nothing goes to show that such was the case. But in order not to push arguments too far, the possi- bility may be admitted either that the performer W€U3 a vocal performer, scilicet, one of the "young girk," or that the "Sonata" was really sung with instrumental accompaniment though not so described in any of the reports. We might even allow the combination of both possibilities for the simplification of matters. In that case the words of the "Sonata" were either fitted to the already popular "President's March," or this march was composed for the occasion and subse- quently became popular under the name of " The President's March." However, all this seems to be impossible, for a very simple reason. In my opinion the words of the '^Sonata^' can not have been sung to any of the versions of " The Presidents MarchP Every attempt to fit the words of the "Sonata'^ to this march fails, even after the boldest surgical operations. Consequently, unless others succeed with such attempts, the conclusion is inevitable that the "Sonata'' sung on (he bridge ai Trenton and the "President's March" were not identical. It follows that J. C.'s statement of 1841, Uke McKoy's of 1829, contains a serious flaw. Therefore we are not justified in accepting it as authentic. To prove the point just raised, some of the earliest versions of the "President's March" are here submitted either in facsimile or in transcript. At the same time these musical quotations will show the musical genesis and partial transformation of "Hail Columbia" about the year 1800. (1) The arrangement for two flutes, on page 3, of the first number of R. Shaw's and B. Carr's "Gentleman's Amusement," Philadel- phia, Carr, April, 1794. See facsimile of the copy at the Library of Congress (Appendix, PI. IX). (This "Gentleman's Amusement" is Hail Columbia. 67 identical with the one advertised in the New York Daily Advertiser, May 8, 1794, sa "Philadelphia printed for Shaw & Co.") (2) "President's March." Philadelphia, G. Willig, Mark[et] street 185, and therefore published between 1798 and 1803. See facsimile of the copy at the Library of Congress in Appendix, Plate X. (3) The Preildent't liMeh m In BhAw'e Flute Preceptor. Philadelphia, 1802. i JS^JLT—L ^^ r r r L\t:=^^^ ij.'Trrr r jjL-Ur r if r f#=pt ij.''rrrrr nr Ljr cj'ir cjr r ir'"£J^ ^ XJ-IL_U ^ r * ir £^ r M f ^ rrrj r J g girrrfr j ^m (4) The President*! liareh m In the " Oompleet Tutor for the Fife," PhlledelphlA, O. Wllllg, M. 1006b \f tr-^^^iUj-^ I j.' " L^* r ^ lUJ Trnni^^^'^^ ^irrrf^^^^ ^^^^ fefTc:^t71 68 Hail Columbia. Now, it is a singular fact that, to my knowledge, "The President's March" is nowhere mentioned in contemporary sources before the year 1794. That it was popular about 1794 is clear, as it otherwise would hardly have been printed in Shaw and Carr's '* Gentleman's Amusement." Some months later the Old American Company, then playing at the Cedar Street Theatre in Philadelphia, advertised in the American Daily Advertiser, September 22, for the same evening that — . . . previous to the tragedy [the Grecian Daughter] the band will play'a new Federal Overture, in which are introduced several popular airs; Marseilles hymn, Qa ira, O dear what can the matter be, Rose Tree, Carmagnole, "FresidentB' March," Yankee Doodle, etc. Composed by Mr. Carr. This "Federal Overture," by Benjamin Carr, was published 1795 in an arrangement for two flutes in the fifth number of Shaw and Carr's "Gentleman's Amusement/' Had the march been well known as "The President's March" in 1789 and later, why should A. Rei- nagle's much less popular "Federal March" and Sicard's "New Con- stitutional March and Federal Minuet" (both 1788) and other patri- otic pieces have been published and not "The President's March?" And if published, advertisements to that effect would have appeared before 1794 in the newspapers, as was the case with all early American musical publications, either sacred or secular. We must not forget that the demand for patriotic music was very eager in those days, and a march in honor of President Washington would have sold well. Furthermore, had the air been really popular during the years inmie- diately following 1789, at least one of the innumerable political and patriotic songs which were to be simg to popular melodies (and the words with tune indication of most of these songs were printed in the newspapers or magazines) would show the indication: "Tune — President's March." Such is not the case, but it seems to be a fact that all songs, which, like "Hail Columbia," were fitted to this tune, appeared in print after 1794. Therefore, while the analysis of traditions, reports, and contem- porary evidence so far submitted permits us to concentrate our atten- tion upon Phile more than on Roth as the possible author of the "President's March," it does not yet permit us, if at all interested in sound history, to attribute the "President's March" with something like certainty to Philip Phile, and most decidedly not to date the origin of the march 1789. Here, then, the matter rested when recently the hoped-for accident helped to clear the situation still further. At the Governor Penny- packer sale the Library of Congress acquired a lot of miscellaneous early American musical publications. Among the fragments appears an imnumbered page, evidently torn from an engraved music collec- tion for the pianoforte, bearing two marches, one, Hail Columbia. 69 THE PRESIDENTS MABCH, BY PHEIL, the other, fortunately, ''March, by MoUer." Fortunately, because the reference to the name of John Christopher Moller proves that the page can not have been printed before his arrival in America in 1790, and that it most probably forms part of one of the publications issued by Moller and Henri Capron at Philadelphia in 1793. The importance of this page therefore lies in the fact that "The President's March'' was attributed to Pheil and not to Roth as early as about 1793. Consequently this probably earliest edition of the march (see Appen- dix, PI. XI), though it does not assist us in dating and locating the origin of "The President's March," removes all reasonable doubt from the tradition that the music of "Hail Colmnbia" was composed by Philip Phile. A comparison of the "Hail Columbia" texts, as they appear in song books, is imnecessary, because practically no verbal differences have crept into Joseph Hopkinson's poem. It may be noticed, however, that the autograph which was formerly in possession of Mr. C. D. Hil- debrand, of Philadelphia, and which Admiral Preble reproduced in facsimile in the second edition of his book on our flag,^ has in the first stanza "war was done'* instead of "war was gone.'* The latter ver- sion not only is the one now customary, but it appears in the two earliest printed versions of "Hail Columbia," described above. For this reason the Hlldebrand autograph probably is not the earliest or even an early autograph copy. Two other copies in Joseph Hopkin- son's hand are mentioned by Preble in this manner: " During the centennial year an autograph copy of ' Hail Columbia ' was displayed in the museum at Independence Hall, Philadelphia. This copy was written from memory Feb. 22, 1828, and presented to George M. Keim, esq., of Reading, in compliance with a request made by him. It has marginal notes, one of which informs us that the passage 'Behold the Chief refers to John Adams, then President of the United States. Mr. Hopkinson also presented General Washing- ton with a copy of his poem, and received from him a complimentary letter of thanks, which is now in the possession of his descendants." An autograph copy signed and dated "Philadelphia, March 24, 1838" (4®, 3 p.) was offered for sale in Henkels's "Catalogue of Auto- graph Letters," 1895. The added facsimile showed that this 1838 copy has the marginal note about. John Adams and done instead of gone in the first stanza, thereby corroborating the claim that the Hildebrand copy is of a comparatively late date. To whom this 1838 copy was sold, I do not know. Until recently the Pennsylvania Historical Society possessed two autograph copies of " Hail Columbia," a From there &u»iiniled by Mary L. D. Ferris for her article on "Our National Songs" in the New England Magazine, 1890, pp. 483--504. 70 Hail Columbia. one of them coming from the Hopkinson family papers, but the society has since disposed of one of the two. The other is here repro- duced in facsimile by permission of the society. (See Appendix as Plates Vlllar-VIIIb.) If a text comparison of ''Hail Columbia" is unnecessary, not so a comparison of the musical settings, or rather arrangements. First, in order to show the difference between the old and the new way of singing the "President's March" to the words of "Hail Columbia," the edition which Willig printed between 1798 and 1803 will be com- pared .with the probably simultaneous edition of a copy which has been reproduced in facsimile by Mr. Elson in his books, as mentioned before. From these early editions I turn immediately to current song books, selecting for the purpose the same as was done for "The Star- Spangled Banner" chapter (see p. 41). Also the same principle and method of comparison will be adopted with this difference, that the text is added, since it is sometimes placed differently under the notes. "The President's March. A new Federal song," Philadelphia, G. Willig, between 1798 and 1803. ^^ t 5: ¥ m •J -an, Hail I Co - lum • bla, hap - py landt Hail! ye he -roesJieaT^n-bombandl 6 _ _ 6 7 r r/ E r— i^ ^ ^-^-f- p |i * Who foaght and bled in free dom's [ cause, Who fought and bled In 1^^ ^m t free-dom*8 cause, And when the stonn of war was gone. En - joy'd the peace your 14 f 12 T : 3 ^ ^ 13 ' :p: X £^ 15 + ^Ri^ c T' n yal - or won; Let In • de-pen-dence be our boast, Ey - ermind-ful what It cost, Ey - er grateful for the prize. Let its al- tar reach the skies Firm, u - nit - ed, let us be, . . Ral-lylng round our Lib - er - ty, 27 ^^ -i^-^'g=^^ ^ rc^^^-i^s^ As a band of brothers Join'd, Peace and safe-ty we shall find. Hail Columbia. 71 9 Instead of atta breve : B. rjl'X DfF=^='i^ ^m 4. J: fi; F ; 6 ; J ; M ; B ; BI ; W. (Hall Colombia is not In ▲.; 8h.; Sm.; Z.) E O; J. P; W. Who G; J. Who M; B. Who 81. Who 6 7 _ 8 fought and bled In Free-dom*seau8e,Wbofoaghtandbled In Freedom's eause»And F; O; J;M; B; 81; W. F;M;B;S1;W. F; Q; J; M;B;8i; W. F;M;B;8I;W. The grmee note g U diseuded In modem editions. 9 ^ 12 14 rri rr ^ And when the storm of Tal - or won; Let J 6; J. F;0; J:M;B;81;W.O; J. M SI what It cost F; M; B; W. J 19 ^ g^i^^ T~c rr£rt M; 81. B; 81. F;M;B let Its al - tar W 22 •^F;B;81;W G; J. B; F; G; J;M; B; 81; W. F; G; J; B. W. M g^ =c r iir- s^^£-r us r. r Bal - ly - ing round our Bal - lying round our Bal - ly - Ing round our B F; J;M; B;8i; W. G r iiQ* O" f 26 1 — r £ F; Q; J; B; W. M 81 B;81 {±U^- H G; J •^ B;F;M;B:B1;W G; J F; W G;J;B1. M; 72 Hail Columbia. SOUSA. .2 [f^J r' g l i r ^ who \^ r r ^ l i b '-■ I r llr r r ^ fcjc: wbo II I II I 11 27 m I I I III I I II For eight song books, selected at random, to thus differ in the majority of bars of a national song of 28 bars, is a deplorable state of affairs. It means that if 8 children, each familiar with one of these song books, were to sing ''Hail Columbia" together, not one would sing the melody exactly like any of the other 7 children. One is ashamed as an American to think of the result, if not 8, but 80 current song books were similarly examined! The discrepancies betwecQ current versions of ''The Star-Spangled Banner" are regrettable enough, but those between current versions of "Hail Columbia" evidently are still worse.' on v, He stuck a feather in nis hat, And caUed him Macaroni. As I heard it repeated, the second line was. Riding on a pony^ or. Upon a Utile pony . . . In the English opera written about the middle of the eighteenth century, by Dr. Ame, is the comic song of ''Little Dickey, " who resents the arrogance and attempted tyranny of some older boy. The last stanza runs thus : Did little Dickey ever trick ye? No, I*m always civil, etc. The air of the song is what we call "Yankee Doodle, " but it is not so called in the opera Innumerable have been the verses that have been adapted to it [Yankee Doodle], but it is believed the following were those best known and oftenest repeated by our fathers during the war of 1776, and they are said to have been sung at the battle of Bunker's Hill in 1775. Words additional or similar were repeated to me by my father fifty years ago, as those familiar to him when a boy, during the revolutionary times. Perhaps their order of following is not correct. Then follow 17 stanzas of " Yankee Doodle, or Father's return from Camp/' in the main identical with the stanzas given in Farmer & Moore's Collections, but clearly accumulated from different versions. The last few quotations illustrate that by 1880 the matter of ''Yankee Doodle" had fallen entirely into the hands of compilers, whose sole object it seems to have been, and still seems to be, to accept more or less credulously the numerous conflicting statements and to weave them indiscriminately into a smooth, entertaining tissue of facts and fancy. The first to really analyze this ragout was Mr. William Barclay Squire, and he contributed to the first edition of Grove's Dictionary of Music (1879-1889) an article on "Yankee Doodle," which at that time was by far the best, and is still valu- able. Mr. Louis C. Elson, in his useful book on the " National Music of America," 1900, added in the main merely information received from Mr. Albert Matthews, of Boston. . Nor does the amoimt of his original critical research rise above what may be expected from a book plainly designed and written in a style to satisfy the popular Ya nkee Doodle. 105 demand for more or less verified facts on our national songs. This applies even more strongly to Mr. Kobb6's chatty '' Famous Ameri- can Songs," 1906, who also caught a glimpse of Mr. Matthews's un- published mine of data. From the same source come the following excerpts from Dr. George H. Moore's ^aper ''Notes on the origin and history of Yankee Doodle," read before the New York Histor- ical Society on December 1, 1886, and before the New England His- torical and Genealogical Society on December 7, 1887. As was stated in the introduction to my report on ''Yankee Doodle," Mr. Moore's paper was never printed, though it was mentioned in the Magazine of American History for January, 1886, in the Boston Post of December 8, 1887, and in the New England Historical and Genealogical Register for January, 1888. Mr. Albert Matthews, as he informed me under date of January 3, 1909, rediscovered the manuscript and copied long extracts. "Moore," says Mr. Matthews, "picked to pieces various theories about 'Yankee,' but accepted without criticism the Farmer & Moore version." Clearly Mr. Moore's unpublished paper can not have influenced subsequent writers very much, but it is essential that so much of it be printed here as was available through the courtesy of Mr. Albert Matthews: Dr. Shuckbuigh unquestionably played an important part in the proceedings which resulted in making Yankee Doodle a national tune. He took the initia- tif e step. He maziied to verse, (not immortal, for not a line of it can be proved to exist to-day) but to a song sufficiently popular to be remembered for many years, the old fashioned jig which had charmed his childhood and lingered in his memory to become the (vehicle) inspiration of his comic muse in later years . . . Dr. Shuckbuigh undoubtedly scored (achieved) a success in his Yankee Doodle Song, hitting off the men and events of the time, in a style which readily admitted additions and alterations to fit occasions. That song was a satire more or less clever of the New Englander and his ways — ^written originally from the point of view of an Englishman long domesticated in New York, and reflecting the prejudices of the British tory and the Albany Dutchman — ^the intellectual apparatus of that extraordinary mythical creature, the genuine Knickerbocker. What that first Yankee Doodle Song was is mainly left to con- jecture . . . The only verses I have met with, which carry any appearance of having been a part of the original are the following: There is a man in our town, I pitv his condition. He sold his oxen and nis sheep. To buy him a commission — ' When his commission he had got, He proved a nation coward He durst not go to Cape Breton For fear he*d be devoured. Another verse has less authority: Yankee Doodle came to town Put on his strip 'd trowse's And vow'd he could n't see the town (place) There vhu so many houses. 106 Yankee Doodle. So far the literature on the origin of ''Yankee Doodle" moved in a few distinct channels, but in 1905 two theories were added that have very little in common with those previously advanced, com- bined, embellished. In the German magazine '' Hessenland " (vol. 19, 1905, pp. 20-23), Mr. Johann Lewalter published an article imder the title: "Der 'Yankee Doodle' ein Schwalmer Tanz?" In other words, the author endeavored to prove the probability of a Hessian origin, but his knowledge of the Uterature is very slight and he did not exercise discrimination in the use of his sources, so that most of his article is not worthy of consideration. As to his hypothetical question, it is sufficient to abstract from the article the following: In Langenacheidt's "Land und Leute in Amerika'' it \b said that probably the air of the folksong ''Yankee Doodle " has its origin in a military march played by the Hessian soldiers in the War for Independence. The same origin is hinted at in the eighth volume (1880) of Spamer's "Illus- triertes Konversationslexikon". Mr. Lewalter then calls attention to the ftict that the principal recruiting station in 1776 was Ziegenhain in the Schwalm, the fertile province of Hesse, to the further fact that "Yankee Doodle" in form, musical spirit and rhythm bears a peculiar resemblance to the genuine dances and folksongs of the Schwalm region. Therefore, he concludes, it may be claimed that this song, played by the Hessian troops as a march, was imported by them to America in those days. Finally, the fact should be noted that during a country fair in the Schwalm in the fall of 1904 "Yankee Doodle " was played as a Schwalm dance, and men and women danced to it as they would to one of their own traditional airs without discovery of the substitution. It wiQ be seen later on how suddenly his Hessian theory collapses, if the historical test is applied. Much more compUcated but much more fruitful in its application is a theory advanced by Mr. William H. Grattan Flood in the "Dolphin" (Philadelphia, 1905, vol. 8, pp. 187-193) under the title "The Irish origin of the tune of Yankee Doodle.^^ In this interesting article Mr. Grattan Flood, an enthusi- astic student and champion of Irish music, first sets out to undermine principally the English origin. Then, in the footsteps of the eminent English folk-song collector, Mr. Frank Kidson, he refers to the "Earliest printed version" of "Yankee Doodle" in the first volimie of James Aird's "Selection of Scotch, EngUsh, Irish, and Foreign Airs," printed at Glasgow in 1782. Without further preliminaries Mr. Grattan Flood then proceeds: The very structure of this tune is seen to be decidedly Irish and apart from any other argument intrinsic evidence should point to its Irish origin. . . . The above printed version by Aird in 1782, antedates the ''Two to One '' (1784) version by two years, and is much nearer the Irish original ['All the way to Galway'], with the strongly marked G natural (the so called "flat seventh'') so charac- teristic of seventeenth century tunes in D major. However, the oldest form of the time is also given here as it appears in a MS dated 1750, the authenticity of which is beyond question. The manuscript was written at different times between the years 1749 and 1750, and the owner's name is given, dated Decem- ber 1, 1750. Yankee Doodle. 107 By way of illiutraiing the changes which a tune undergoes in seventy or eighty years, I think it is well to give the version as noted by Dr. Petrie in 1840, but, as will be seen, the changes are unimportant. Thus ''Yankee Doodle " can rightfully be churned as a product of Ireland. . . . OBITIOAL ANALYSIS OF THE THEORIES ON THE ORIGIN OF "YANKEE n The chronological enmneration of the theories on the origm of ''Yankee Doodle" will have disclosed their genealogy and concatena- tion sufficiently to now warrant neglect of such dates, references, and inferences that are mere variations and aberrations from the original source. The examination of this amazing labyrinth of conjectures wiU be based entirely on such analytical data only as possess some real substance. The other data will be treated as not existing. Much of the analytical evidence has become quite familiar to his- torians, but much will have the flavor of novelty. However, no distinction will here be made between old and new data, except when necessary. To sum up, since 1775, when the origin of "Yankee Doodle" began to arouse interest, it has been claimed that— 1. The song of "Yankee Doodle" was composed by a British officer of the Revolution. 2. The air had its origin in a military march "Schw&lmer Tanz," introduced into this coimtry by the Hessians during the war for Independence. 3. The first part of the time is identical with the Dama Esparta and the tune had its origin in the Pyrenees. 4. The air is of Hungarian origin. 5. The time was introduced by German harvest laborers into Holland. 6. The air was composed by the fife-major of the Grenadier Guards about 1750 as a march. 7a. The time was founded on an English time common among the peasantry of England previous to the time of Charles I. 7h. It was set during the time of Cromwell to various ditties in ridicule of the protector. One of these began with the words "The Houndheads and the Cavaliers ;" another Nankee Doodle came to town Upon a Eentiflh pony [or Upon a little pony] He stuck a feather in his hat And csJled him Macaroni. were known as early as Cromwell's time, and indeed applied to him. 108 Ya nkee Doodle. 8. In the reign of Charles II the time was sung to the words, per- petuated as a nursery rhyme: Lucy Locket lost her pocket Kitty Fisher found it. Nothine in it, nothing in it But the binding round it. [or, Not a bit of money in it Only binding round it] 9. The air is the same as of the New England jig ''Lydia Fisher/' which was a favorite in New England long before the American Revolution. 10. The earliest printed version of the air "Yankee Doodle" appears in 6/8 time in "Walsh's collections of dances for the year 1750" under the title of "Fisher's Jig." 11. The air is identical with "Batty Fisher's Jig" as printed in one of Thomson's country dance books in triple time. 12. "Yankee Doodle" is identical with an ^' Air from Ulysses/' opera by J. C. Smith. 13. The air "Did little Dickey ever trick ye" in an opera by Ame, composed about 1750, is the same as "Yankee Doodle." 14. Doctor Shackburg, wit and surgeon in the British army encamped in 1755 near Albany, composed a tune and recommended it to the provincial officers as one of the most celebrated airs of martial music and that this joke on the motley assemblage of provincials took immediately. 15. Doctor Shuckburgh wrote the Yankee Doodle verses to an old- fashioned jig. 16. The air is of Irish origin and is identical with "All the way to Galway." These 16 theories have here been grouped not chronologically but amicably to a process of eUmination. The majority of these theories, on close inspection, relate rather to the early use of than to the origin of the song. It will therefore facilitate the process of elimination if some consequential data on the use of the air in America imtil the time of our war for independence are here brought together. In the New York Journal, October 13, 1768, we read in the "Jour- nal of Transactions in Boston, Sept. 28, 1768:" Sept. i9. The Fleet was brought to Anchor near Castle William, that Evening there was throwing of Sky Rockets, and those passing in Boats observed great Rejoicings and that the Yankey Doodle Song was the Capital Piece in their Band of Music." Writing of the events at Boston in 1769, the late Mr. Fiske in his work on the ''American Revolution" (vol. 1, p. 65) says: On Sundays the soldiers would race horses on the Common, or play Yankee Doodle just outside the church-doois during the services. Ya nkee Doodle. 100 Unfortunately Mr. Fiske did not refer to his authority for this almost incredible bit of information; nor did Mr. Elson, when he wrote in his book on our national music (p. 145) : A little later [than 1769], ivhen the campe were in the town of Boston, the British custom was to drum culprits out of camp to the tone of ''Yankee Doodle," a decidedly jovial CcnUio in aciiu. The next reference carries us to the commencement of hostilities. When the news of the affair at Lexington (Apr. 19, 1776) reached Lord Percy in Boston, says the Reverend Gordon in his History in a letter dated " Roxbury, April 26, 1776," he ordered out a reenlorce- ment to support his troops. The brigade marched out playing, by way of contempt, Yankee Doodle . . . James Thacher has almost literally the same in his Military Journal under date of April 21, 1775. A further contemporary reference is found in the '' Travels (1st ed., vol. 2, p. 60) of Thomas Anburey, the British officer, who, under date of ''Cambridge, in New England, Nov. 27, 1777," wrote as follows: . . . the name [of Yankee] has been more prevalent aince the commencement of hofltilities. The soldiera at Boston used it as a term of reproach, but after the afEair at Bunker's HiU, the Americans gloried in it. Yankee Doodle is now their paean, a favorite of faivorites, played in their army, esteemed as warlike as the Grenadier's March — ^it is the lover's spell, the nurse's lullaby. After our rapid successes, we held the Yankees in great contempt, but it was not a little mor^ tifying to hear them play this tune, when their anny marched down to our surrender. Anburey, of course, alludes to General Burgoyne's surrender at Saratoga, October 17, 1777. Again the military bands of the Conti- nental army are said to have used ''Yankee Doodle" as their jniean at the climax of the war when Lord Comwallis surrendered at York- town, October 19, 1781, but Robin, £nox, Thacher, Anburey, Chas- tellux, Gordon, and Johnston do not confirm this popular legend. I distinctly recall having seen it told by a French memoir writer of the time, but unfortunately am unable to retrace my source. On that occasion the British army marched out to the tune of ' 'The World turned upside down." So it was in more than one respect. Clearly, before and during the first stages of the war, "Yankee Doodle" was considered a capital piece by the British soldiers to ridi- cule the New Englanders, but the latter blunted the point of the joke, and indeed used it in rebuttal by appropriating the tune with all its associations for their patriotic field music. This curious process found an echo in one of our very first by-products of the war. John Trumbull's ''M'Fingal" was first published at Philadelphia in 1775. 110 Yankee Doodle. In the first, original edition the first carUo ''The Town Meeting'* begins: When YankieB ekiird in martial rule, First put the British troope to school; Instructed them in warlike trade, And new maneuvres of parade, The true war dance of Yankv-reels, And val'zous exercise of heeb. and later on the lines occur: Did not our trooiM show much discerning, And skill vour various arts in learning? Outwent tney not each native Noodle By far in playing Yanky-doodle; Which, as 'twas your New-England time 'Twas marvellous they took so soon? A New England tune or not, ''Yankee Doodle" was common prop- erty in New England before the war for independence. Not alone this, it is easily proven that the tune was well known south of New England, too, at least nine years before the war. In my writings I have had repeated occasion to point to Andrew Barton's comic opera *'The Disappointment, or The force of credulity," New York, 1767, in this connection. This, the first American opera libretto, unmis- takably belongs to the class of ballad operas, that is, operas in which the airs were sung not to new music but to popular ballad times. Now, as Sabin, without attracting proper attention at the time, dis- covered as early as 1868, there appears in the 1767 edition, though not in the 1796 edition, of this coarse, yet witty, libretto, written in Phil- adelphia, but printed in New York: AIR IV, YANKBB DOODLB. 01 how joyful shall I be, When I get the money, I will brin^ it all to dee, 01 my diddling honey. (Exit, singing the chorus, yankee doodle, etc.) It foUows conclusively that the air of '' Yankee Doodle" was suffi- ciently popular in America in 1767, or more correctly, in Philadel- phia, to be used in a ballad opera. It further follows from the above that the words of the chorus refrain were so well known in 1767 that it was sufficient to print: '' Yankee doodle, etc." The fact that the air of ''Yankee Doodle" was popular in America in 1767 renders it impossible for a ''British officer of the Revolution" to have "composed" the song. If at all true, this tradition can only mean that he either added some verses to a current text or wrote an entirely new set of verses. The second theory on the list collapses for the same reason. The Hessian military can not have introduced the tune to our country as it was popular in America long before their arrival here. On the Yankee Doodle. Ill contraiy, it becomes probable that the Hessian bands exported the air from America. However, not chronology alone, but logic forbade the acceptance of the Hessian origin, since according to Mr. Lewalter's own accomit '^ Yankee Doodle" was merely grafted on the Schwalm peasants by way of experiment. They danced readily enough to the tune, but Mr. Lewalter's story clearly shows that they did not con- sider it one of their traditional dance tunes. This plain observation should discourage further efforts in this direction, which would pre- sumably be based on the fact that the British military service included Hessians long before 1775, indeed before 1767. Similar objections must be raised against the theories of the Biscay and Hungarian origin. They were advanced ahnost one hundred years after ''Yankee Doodle" had become popular in America, time enough for any tune to find its way into any country and to be so assimilated that its foreign origin is entirely forgotten. That Hun- garians danced to it fifty years ago proves absolutely nothing except that '^ Yankee Doodle" with its rhythmic accents appealed to them. Kossuth and his friends, experts in revolutions but not in musical history, recognized in ''Yankee Doodle" one of the old national airs of Hungary; this also proves nothing except that they knew the air.^ It is the same with the Biscay origin advanced by Mr. Buckingham Smith in 1858. Had he contented himself with recording the use of the tune in Biscay, one may be puzzled by the coincidence that two Turanian nations were willing to naturalize "Yankee Doodle." But Mr. Smith goes further, and he claims that "the first strains are identically those of the heroic Dama Esparta [ I] as it was played to me of brave old Biscay." Are they ? I quote without comment the first bars of this ^^Ezpaia Dantza^' (sword-dance), as published by Charles Bordes in "Archives de la Tradition Basque," under title of "Dix danses . . . du Pays Basque Espagnol," 1908: 4-Jj J ^ ^F^^-^^J^r^^+j^ :ete. As a fifth theory we have that promulgated by Duyckinck's Cyclo- paedia in 1855: It is not impossible . . . that Yankee Doodle may be from Holland. A song in use among the laborers, who in time of harvest migrate from Germany to the Low Countries . . . has this burden — Yanker did el, doodel down Didel, dudel lanter, Yanke viver, voover vown, Botermilk and Tanther. The Duyckincks received their information from a person who in turn relied on the memory of a Dutchman who '^had listened to it at harvest time in his youth." This circuitous route may explain why 112 Yankee Doodle. the chorus refrain, as quoted above, belongs to no known language. In itself the fact that the words are neither German, Dutch, or Eng- lish proves nothing and should not have been advanced so hastily by Lossing, Elson, and others, since such nonsense rhymes are conmion to all people. Here are a few examples taken at random from books in the English language. O'Keefe has this nonsense in one of his librettos : Ditherum, doodle adgety Nagity, tragedy rum, Goofltnenim foocDe nidgety Nidgety, nagety mum. In the libretto to the ''Castle of Andalusia" occurs this: A master I have, and I am his man, Galloping dreary dun And he wiu get married, as fant as he can With my ludly, gaily, gambraily, Oiffiling, nigffling, galoping, Galloway, araggletail, dreary dun. Finally, in the American songster ''The Blackbird," New York, 1820, I noticed the refrain on page 39: With my titol teedle turn Likewise fol lol f eedle fum Not forgetting diderum hi. And also teedle tweedle dum. Sense there is not in these samples of nonsense rhymes, yet who would deny that they are based on the English language? Conse- quently, the "Yanker didel, doodel" lines with the one word Boter- milk (buttermilk) as an anchor of sense may either have been intended as a Dutch nonsense rhyme, or they are the unintelligible Dutch corruption of a Low German (Plattdeutsch) chorus refrain, or they are merely the result of travel of the original English "Yan- kee Doodle" refrain corrupted more and more, as it passed from America into the German lowlands, thence to Holland, and from there back to America. I am inclined to think that this is the most plausible explanation, rather than to simply discredit, as has been done, the narrative in Duyckinck's Encyclopaedia, and to accuse the editors of having invented the silly lines out of the whole cloth. After all, the substance of their statement is merely that during the first half of the nineteenth century harvest laborers from the German lowlands are known to have sung the air of ''Yankee Doodle" in Holland. This implies early use, not origin, and even if it implied the latter, not the Dutch but the ''Plattdeutsche" would be responsible for the melody. We turn to Mr. Elson's book on the National Music of America and there find these interesting lines: Just as this volume is going to press [1900] the author is enabled, through the kindness of M. Jules Koopman, traveling in Holland, to trace this theory of Yankee Doodle. 113 Dutch origin more definitely. The fini period of the melody is quite familiar to Dutch musicianfl, and has been used in Holland from time immemorial as a children* 8 song; the second period is not known in Holland. Again, this implies at the best merely early use and by no means a Dutch origin. If ''Yankee Doodle'' were a traditional Dutch air, it certainly would not have escaped the scrutinizing eye of the best authorities on Dutch folk songs, such as Van Duyse and D. F. Scheurleer. The story of a Dutch origin may be dropped, since Mr. D. F. Scheurleer, in a letter to me under date of October 7, 1908, remarks: Was die Melodie betrifft, muss ich gestehen in den Niederlanden hein Proto- type zu kennen. Dieses war auch der Fall bei von mir befragten Sachverstfin- digen. Das von Dmen citierte quan hoUflndische Emte-Lied ist mir v611ig neu und ich wQsste daran keinen Sinn su geben . . . Ich habe beim Yankee doodle flfters gedacht an hier im 18ten Jahrhundert s^hr bekannte Savoyarden-Lieder, gesungen von Savoyarden-Knaben, die mit Drehleier und Meerechweinchen herumzogen. Diese Leierkastenlieder waren sehr geeignet um von Matrosen und Emigranten welter befOrdert zu werden . . . To avoid aU possible confusion^ it may be added that the air of the Dutch song ^'Pauwel Jonas" (Paul Jones) is not identical with "Yankee Doodle." Somewhat more perplexing than the theory of Dutch origin is the one attributing "Yankee Doodle" to the fife-major of the Grenadier Guards about 1750, who is said to have composed the melody as a march for drum and fife. This statement rests on the authority of Mr. T. Moncrieff, but unfortunately no clue to his source is given. It is significant, however, that according to this theory words became associated with the air long after it had become familiar to the ears of the people in towns where British regiments were stationed. The weak point of this theory is its vagueness. The strong point that the air is attributed without circumlocution to a tangible author. "Yan- kee Doodle" must have had an origin. If we should be forced to admit that all other theories are inherently weak, then the fife-major of the Grenadier Guards would loom up as a very formidable candi- date for the authorship of "Yankee Doodle." Not, of course, of a march by this title, but of a quick march, with some other or with- out title, which found its way shortly after 1750 to America, there became popular, was wedded to words dealing with the New Eng- land Yankees, and permanently retained the name of "Yankee Doodle." That the air was imported by the Grenadier Guards themselves is impossible, because Sir F. W. Hamilton's "History of the First or Grenadier Guards" proves that a detachment of the regiment, including seven drummers and two fifers, was not sent to 86480-09 8 114 Yankee Doodle. America until 1776. The whole fife-major theory, however, is con- siderably weakened by reference to these words in a letter written on December 22, 1908, to the Librarian of Congress by Major Mont- gomerie of the Grenadier. Guards: . . . We cannot discover that the office of Fife-Major ever existed in this Regi- ment. We have had Drum-Majors since 1672, but their names we do not know. The air of ''Yankee Doodle" seems to have been founded, said our anonymous in the Musical Reporter, Boston, 1841, on an air some- what similar which was common among the peasantry of England previous to the time of Charles I, 1600 (1625)-1649. On page 97 of this report the air in question is copied and it requires a very unmusical ear to detect beyond the rhythm and general character any telling similarity. Consequently, said air may have been common among the English peasantry of those days, but this fact would shed no light whatever on the origin of ''Yankee Doodle," as the two airs are not related. Furthermore, if this air cited by our anonymous is the one that was set during Cromwell's time to varioiis ditties, such as "The Roundheads and the Cavaliers," or "Nankee Doodle," then all pro- tracted and painstaking controversy on this subject was unnecessary, since "Yankee Doodle" is not concerned. Indeed, the controversy could easily have been avoided ere this had the commentators found their way to a copy of the rather scarce Musical Reporter. The air there quoted and reprinted on page 97 of this report is but a version of "Nancy Dawson," and as such an eminent authority on folk songs as Mr. Frank Ejdson expressed himself (Dec. 22, 1908), he "should very much be surprised to have proof of its existence before 1760 or thereabouts." As to the ditties beginning "The Roundheads and the Cavaliers'*" and "Nankee Doodle came to town," Rev. T. Woodfall Ebsworth, the eminent authority on English ballads, is quoted in the first edition of "Grove's Dictionary of Music" to this effect: I believe that I have seen and weighed, more or less every such ballad still remaining in print, and most of those in M.S. that search has detected: and I can declare unhesitatingly that I never came across any indication of such an anti- Gromwellian original as the apocrjrphal ''Nankee Doodle came to town." I believe that none such is extant or ever appeared. . . There is no contemporary (i. e. 1640-1660 or, say 1648-1699) ballad specially entitled "The Roundheads and the Cavaliers." The ante-Cromwellian origin of "Yankee Doodle " and its anti-Crom- wellian use with all the embellishments that imaginative minds have added during the last seventy years may definitely be laid to rest. However, since the (slightly varying) lines — rNankee] Yankee Doodle came to town Upon a Kentish pony. He stuck a feather in his hat And called him Macaroni Yankee Doodle. 115 have actually been sung in America for generations to the tune of "Yankee Doodle/' it will become necessary later on to approximately fix the date of these lines, and that is, to anticipate the third or even fourth quarter of the eighteenth centiiry. Thus, Cromwell and "Yankee Doodle" are separated by at least a century. Theories eighth to eleventh all have this in common, that they take as starting point the rhyme: Lucy Locket lost her pocket Kitty Fisher found it Not a bit of monev in it [or. Nothing in it, notnin^ in it] Only binding round it. For ''Lucy Locket" Lydia Locket is sometimes substituted; for "Kitty Fisher," Lydia Fisher, and other slight verbal differences occur in the numerous citations of these lines. With the exception of the theory of ante-Cromwellian origin, they have been chiefly responsible for the mass of confusion surrounding ** Yankee Doodle," particularly after Doctor Rimbault threw the weight of his authority into the controversy. From the perusal of the literature on the subject as gathered for this report, it appears conclusively that the lines were used as a nursery rhyme during the first half of the nineteenth century both in England and America, and were then always sung to the same air as ''Yankee Doodle." Indeed, "two female relations" informed one G. A. G., for Notes and Queries, 1865 (vol. 8, p. 155), that the lines were "current some fifty years ago in the girls' schools" of the Isle of Wight and of Hampshire — ^that is, about 1810. For the use of the lines during the eighteenth century we have, to my knowledge, the contemporary statement only of an aged and re- spectable lady bom in New England, who remembered having heard the rhyme sung to the same tune long before the Revolution as a favor- ite jig, called "Lydia Fisher." (See on p. 98, Watson's accoimt, 1844.) On the other hand, the anonymous author in the Musical Reporter, Boston 1841, gives F fr*- c p r. I r^ g ft r. ^ that is, "Nancy Dawson" as the air to which the song "Lydia Locket or Lucy Locket has been sung . . . from time immemorial." If we turn to page 98 and attempt to sing the rhyme to this melody, we find that this is easily done, even in the fourth bar, if the two words "found it" each get two of the four notes. Except for this fourth bar the traditional "Yankee Doodle" is not sung more read- ily. Here then would seem to be a conflict between the state- ment of an old lady relying on her memory and actual quotation of 116 Yankee Doodle. a melody by an equally aaonymous writer who may have had an equally good memory. This difference of opinion is not vital^ since often in folk music the same words are grafted on different melodies until the fittest survives. At any rate, we have no reason to doubt the possibility that ''Lucy Locket" was sung also to the air of ''Yankee Doodle" in New England previous to the American revolu- tion. For further data we must rely on internal evidence. "Lucy Locket," of course, points to "Lucy Lockit," one of the main charac- ters in the famous "Beggar's Opera," first performed in 1728 and popular during the entire century. Possibly, ' 'Lucy Locket ' ' f oimd her way into the rhyme only for reasons of sound. Howeverj 1730 would appear to be about the earliest possible date for the rhyme unless Gay adopted "Lucy Locket" as an effective stage name from the popular rhyme. The presence of a Kitty Fisher in the rhyme would forbid this conjecture if we recognize in her with Rimbault the famous lady of easy virtue called "Ejtty Fischer." What Rimbault wrote about her in the Historical Magazine (1858) is mostly nonsense, as he him- self tacitly admitted by printing a totally different reference to this lady in the Leisure Hour (1876) : Kitty Fisher, as everybody knows, was a celebrated character in the middle of the last century. She was painted by Sir Joshua Reynolds more than once, and ultimately married Squire Norris of Bemmendon [rede Benenden] in Kent. This agrees with what one finds about her in ''Notes and Queries" and Stephen's Dictionary of National Biography. The registers of Benenden give the date of her burial as March 23, 1767. It is not recorded when Catherine Marie Fischer, probably of German origin, was bom, nor are such biographical details of much accoimt for our argument. It stands to reason that Kicty Fischer was not made the heroine of such verses before she had become a really public character. Since she appears to have reached the height of her reputation as pro- fessional beauty about 1759, shortly before she became the second and exemplary wife of Mr. Norris, it would seem safe to conjecture that the *'Lucy Locket" and "Kitty Fisher" rhyme did not originate many years before 1759. Therefore, the attempt to trace this rhyme, which only gradually can have become a rmr«erj/-rhyme, by way of this Kitty Fischer to the times of Charles II, 1630 (1660)-1685, was conspicuously absurd. On the other hand, nothing would prevent us from assuming that the rhyme, with whatever melody, may have found its way to America before our war for independence, that is, before 1775. In our coimtry Kitty Fisher appears to have become Lydia Fisher. This modification may have been due to the natural desire to avoid the harsh verbal sound of ''pocket — ^Kitty", and since our people probably took no special interest in the famous Kitty Yankee Doodle. 117 Fischer's affairs, they substituted Lydia perhaps for some further local reason. But, i^r all, is it necessary to recognize in the Kitty Fisher of the rhyme the famous Kitty Fischer or any other particular Kitty Fisher t The name surely neither was nor is so uncommon as to compel this association. Indeed Mr. Matthews , following the same line of argument, has found two ladies of this name, contemporary with the beautiful courtesan. The one is ' ' an eminently respectable young lady who is mentioned several times in letters written in 1743-1747 by Lieut. Colonel Charles Russell, of the British Army," the other a ' 'Miss Eatty Fisher, a very young lady at boarding school at Leicester mentioned in the Oxford Magazine, April, 1771." It is entirely possible that ' 'Kitty Fisher ' ' was incorporated in the rhyme without the slightest intention of personal allusion, just because the name "Kitty Fisher" was conmion and popular, and because it sounds rather well in the rhyme and fits the tune. Should this have been the case, then the alwence of real evidence to the effect that the lines were known long before 1800 would fortify the impression that they originated about 1800, and this again would explain nicely why they were sung to (the then already very popular) time of ''Yankee Doodle." The "Lucy Locket" rhyme was clearly intended for singing, and it is the rule with such folk songs that the melody preceded the text. In other words, the earlier the rhyme is dated the older becomes the melody of "Yankee Doodle," unless the rhyme was sung originally to another tune, which was exchanged later on for the rhythmically similar and catchier "Yankee Doodle." Naturally the idea suggested itself to trace this tune in written or printed form as far back as possible. Here, again. Doctor Rimbault became responsible for much of the confusion surrounding our air. In the Historical Magazine (1858, vol. 2, p. 214), we read that Rimbault found the earliest copy of the tune in "Walsh's collection of dances for the year 1750 where it is printed in 6/8 time, and called FisJier's Jig/* but in his article in Leisure Hour, 1876, Rimbault turns his back on his previous discoveries and says: The probability is that the tune is not much older than the time of its intro- duction into America. We know that it was popular in England at that time, having been printed in one of Thompson's country dance books as Kitty Fisher's Jig. A few lines below Doctor Rimbault gives "a copy of Thompson's version of the tune which is written in triple time. It was after- wards altered to common time, as now known.'' The contradictions between these statements are so flagrant that suspicions of Doctor Rimbault's methods not only, but of his veracity, are aroused. It is a disagreeable duty to attack a well-known and defunct scholar, yet Doctor Rimbault stands convicted by his own 118 Yankee Doodle. testimony. It may be after all that he saw our tune aamewheref but first he discovered a "Fisher's jig" in 6 — ^8 time in Walsh, and then, forgetting all about this discovery, he finds it printed in triple time as "Eatty Fisher's Jig" in Thompson. Only if both statements are true, does Rimbault stand acquitted. Now, Mr. William Barclay Squire in the first edition of Grove's Dictionary, has already cast suspicions on Rimbault's statement of 1858 by the remark that **no copy of 'Fisher's Jig' has turned up," and he was repeatedly supported in this statement by Mr. Frank Kidson. To make absolutely sure whether or no these two eminent authori- ties on English folk song had found in the meanwhile evidence to support Rimbault, carefully prepared letters of inquiry were addressed to them which they had the kindness to answer as follows: Mr. Squire, August 5, 1908: We have [at the Britiah Mufieum] a small collection of Country Dances pub- lished by Walsh in 1750, but no ''Yankee Doodle'' is in this. Mr. Kidson, August 12, 1908: Dr. Rimbault's statements have never been proved. I have seen two copies of Walsh's Dances for 1750 and have seen those for 1742, 1745, 1748, 1765, and in fact have MS. copies of them all in full. I have many (very many) 18th century dance collections and four or five Caledonian Country Dances (Walsh) but nothing Uke Yankee Doodle in any of them. Kitty Fisher's Jig is also non est. and previously Mr. Kidson had informed Mr. Albert Matthews that he had also examined Thompson's Dances from 1751 and 1765 in vain. Finally, Mr. Squire, September 21, 1908: "Kitty Fisher's Jig" has never turned up ... he [Mr, Kidson] and I have both looked thro' endless dance books in vain. Equally void of substance appears to be the claim presented by one J. C. in the Baltimore Clipper, 1841, that an ^' Air from Ulysses,** which he found "about the year 1797" in a book of instructions "for the bassoon" was the identical air now called Yankee Doodle, with the exception of a few notes." A careful reader of these quotations from J. C.'s narrative (see p. 102) can not fail to notice that the air evidently was not really identical^ that the author is contributing data to the controversy from memory after a lapse of forty years, that he did not have the book of instruc- tions before him when he wrote his article. No methodically trained historian would accept such circimistantial evidence without serious scruples. A curious circimistance about J. C.'s statement is that he begins with a quotation from Burgh's Anecdotes, which has nothing to do with ** Yankee Doodle," but merely acquaints the reader with the fact that John Christian Smith [recte John Christopher Smith, 1712-1795] composed an opera ''Ulysses." Why this quotation? Apparently because J. C. desired to trace the composer of an Air from Yankee Doodle. 119 Ulysses f whom he had either forgotten or who was not mentioned in his book of instructions. He remembered the word Ulysses in con- nection with a tmie ahnost identical with "Yankee Doodle/' and with the help of Burgh's Anecdotes he conjectured a bridge between the word Ulysses and the opeTA I7Zy««e« by John Christopher Smith, which was performed at Lincoln's Inn Fields in 1733. It would seem an easy matter to verify J. C's conjecture by a reference to Smith's score, but unfortimately no copy of his opera has ever been discovered, nor is it certam that the music was ever published. However, if a tune like Yankee Doodle was in Smith's opera '^Ulysses," then this jiglike tune, must of necessity fit words in the libretto of this mythological opera. Though such a combination appeared to be very improbable, Mr. William Barclay Squire of the British Museum was approached in the matter, and he wrote me imder date of September 21, 1908: Sam^ Humphreys' Ul3raBe8 (libretto) is here, but contaiuB nothing to which one can imagine Y. D. to have been sung. Here are some spedmena: Balmy Slumbers, soft Repose, Gently cull my lovely Fair; Send your solace to her Woes, Ease her of said Despair, etc. etc. Or. Now I die with |oy. to be Chaste, and dutiful to thee; And reeipn my youthful Bloom, All untamted to the Tomb, etc. etc. Not only this, Mr. Squire stated that he knows of no such book of instructions for the bassoon as alluded to by J. C. Like so many other theories of the origin of ''Yankee Doodle" the conjecture of a connection between the tune and John Christopher Smith's opera *' Ulysses" may safely be dropped. Ere this a flaw in the J. C. statement had been suspected, and Mr. William H. Grattan Flood in his article quoted on page 1 06, suggested that the error of asserting an air from Ulysses as the source of the tune might have arisen from a confusion of the designation Ulysses with a song of that name in Dibdin's Musical Tour, 1788, the full title of which is ' 'The Return of Ulysses to Ithaca." As the analysis of J. C's state- ments leaves it open to doubt from where the ''Yankee Doodle" melody in his book of instructions for the bassoon was taken, Mr. Grattan Flood's suggestion is as acceptable as any. The song in ques- tion accompanies "Letter LXXXIV " in Dibdin's Musical Tour, and is preceded on page 341 by this bit of explanatory monologue: ''Why/' said the Poet, "you may remember Mr. O'Shoknesy, the other night, &ivoured us with the whole tiege of Troy to an Irish tune— for my part, I felt my consequence as a poet a little touched at it — and so, not to be outdone, I have brought Ulysses back to Ithaca safely through all his perils, to the tune of— Yankee Doodle, . . ." 120 Ya nkee Doodle. Omitting the prelude and postlude and the accompaniment^ the first of Dibdin's eight burlesque stanzas reads: ^ ^i» =S=£ I sing U- lys - sea and those chiefs who oat of near a mil - lion So ^ £=h£==£: :p= g^ ^^ lack - 1 - ly this ba - con say'd be - fore the walls of n Ion. ^ s JL.J J J ^ ^^ ^ Tan - kee doo - die, doo - die doo, black ne • gro he get fnm • bo and /3\ i N h i^l^ ^^^ I # it. g when you come to oar town we'll mikke yon drink with bnm - bo. A factlmlle of the whole song appears in the Appendix as PI. z1t-zt. The burlesque song, by the way, was first used by Dibdin in this form for his puppet play ''Reasonable Animals," 1780. The statement in Admiral Preble's ''History of the Flag," that the melody of "Yankee Doodle" occurs in an opera composed by Thomas Augustine Ame about 1750 to the words "Did little Dickey ever trick ye/' was long ago discredited by Mr. William Barclay Squire in Grove's Dictionary. Mr. Squire called attention to the appearance of the air under its own title in the comic opera "Two to One," of which the libretto was written by George Colman the younger, the music selected, arranged, and composed by Dr. Samuel Arnold and the score published by Harrison & Co. in 1784. The song in question was sung by Mr. Edwin in the character of Dickey Ditto. Plate XVI shows the first stanza with the melody in facsimile. At the time Mr. Squire held that this probably was the earliest appearance of Yankee Doodle in print, but Mr. Prank Kidson in his fine collection of "Old English Country Dances," 1890, pointed to an earlier version to be found in the first volume of James Aird's "A Selection of Scotch, English, Irish, and Foreign Airs," Glasgow. Since Mr. Eddson could not find ' ' any air in it, which gives a later date than 1775 or 1776," he fixed (on p. 13) the date of publication at about that period, but the late Mr. Glen in his scholarly "Early Scottish Melodies" fixed the date of Aird's first volume as 1782, and Mr. Eidson, in a letter to me (Aug. 12, 1908), accepted this date as "all right." Aird's "Yankee Doodle" is reproduced in facsimile on Plate XVII of the appendix. No earlier appearance in print than this of 1782 has been discovered, and the fact that the same volume contains at least one negro jig and several "Virginian airs" would seem to prove a direct Yankee Doodle. 121 American influence, probably called forth by the war. Presumably "Yankee Doodle" came to Aird's notice by way of America. If, then, the ascertained earliest appearances in print of Yankee Doodle in Europe have been traced to (1) James Aird's Selection . . . ,first volume, Glasgow, 1782; (2) Samuel Arnold's Opera "Two to One," London, 1874 ; (3) Charles Dibdin's "Musical Tour," Sheffield, 1788, the question suggests itself, When and where was the tune first printed in America? In his yaluable "Songs and Ballads of the American Revolution," 1855, Mr. Moore published a ballad of the title "The Recess." This satire, he says, first appeared at London written by "a true friend of the TSJng and the Colonies." "It was reproduced in America, in 1779, on a music sheet adapted to the tune of YanJcee Doodle,'* Mr. Moore does not mention publisher or place of publication of this music sheet, nor does he point to any library in which it may be found. He may be correct in his statement. In that case I failed to locate the piece when compiling material for my "Bibliography of Early Secular American Music." Until actual proof of the piece's existence is given me, I prefer to suspect that "The Recess" was printed without music as a broadside, perhaps with the indication "To the tune of Yankee Doodle." The first stanza as given by Mr. Moore reads: And now our Senators are gone To take their leave of London To mourn how little they have done How much they have left undone I Of secular music very little was published in America before 1790, and according to my bibliography "Yankee Doodle" did not appear in print in America until Benjamin Carr's "Federal Overture," a medley of patriotic songs, including "Yankee Doddle," and composed in 1794, was published "adapted for the pianoforte" by B. Carr, New York, in January, 1796. No copy of this appears to be extant, only a "medley duetto adapted for two German flutes" in the fifth number of Shaw and Carr's "Oentleman's amusement." Unfortunately the copy of the Library of Congress, the only one that has come to my notice lacks the very pages where one could expect to find "Yankee Doodle* in the form given it by B. Carr. Nor have I as yet found a copy of John Henry Schmidt's "Sonata for beginners," 1796, in which our air was "turned into a fashionable rondo," nor a copy of " YavJcee Doodle, an original American air, arranged with variations for the pianoforte," as printed by J. Carr, Baltimore, in 1796. Presumably in June, 1798, "Yankee Doodle" was "Published by G. Willig, Market street No. 185, Philadelphia," together with "The President's March. A new Federal Song." ("Hail Columbia." For facsimile of both, see Pis. IX and X in Appendix.) A copy of this extremely 122 Ya nkee Doodle. rare piece is preserved in a miscellaneous volume of ''Marches and Battles" at the Ridgway branch of the Library Company of Phila- delphia. The melody y sung to the words ' 'Columbians all the present hour/' has this form: ^^=t ^r i r^r^ I r. c t ^ Is fi-r Mr ^ i ^j^g^ i-f C |C c-^ ^ HJ.tJj-j JLJLJ!/ J I ; j^ ^ ^^- J^jH-^ r I J r ^ C If- p This version was composed or rather arranged by James Hewitt, since he advertised, probably between 1800 and 1802, the *^New Yankee Doodle^' beginning "Columbians all the present hour as Brothers should unite us," as "composed and published at his Musical Repository No. 59, Maidenlane, New York." A copy of this song is preserved at Harvard University. Some years later, Gottlieb Graup- ner, one of Boston's most important musicians, "printed and sold" at his "Musical Academy No. 6, Franklin Street, Franklin Place," "General Washington's March" together with "Yankee Doodle" in a simple arrangement for the pianoforte. Mr. Elson's "History of American Music" contains a facsimile, and from this the following veision of the melody is quoted: rjrTTrfrri'rrr i rrrnr Hirrrnfrr I . j rrnirhLii^ ^m /9% "^ i ^J ' ^j i r r " Different again is an earlier form of the tune in the "Compleat tutor for the fife," Philadelphia, George Willig [1805]. On page 28 of this curiously American reprint of a rare English publication, we find among the interpolations "Yankee Doodle:" rirrrr^ T 'I I f ^^^=F'-g?^^^lj:TT-ai Yankee Doodle. 123 Another early form appears on page 8 of Raynor Taylor's "Martial music of Camp Dupont," Philadelphia, G. E. Blake [ca. 1818]: r irrrT i f frTT r rrf i r r i ^ i cjr i JJJJ i .r5 Alexander Wheelock Thayer^ the Beethoven biographer, commu- nicated to the first edition of Grove ' ' the following version as it was sung sixty years since, and as it has been handed down by tradition in his family from Revolutionaiy times:" ij l r r r r ir r r r 1^ J -^ ^ir r M l Chosus, fisF&Anr. ^m : J J I J f Y t I J. / J J I ; ^ Yan - kee doo - die, keep It np. Tan - kee doo - die dan - dy, \ § r z ^ J I ■* r *■' ^ N r ^ r ir^ ^ Mind the ma - slo and fhe itep, and with the giria be han - dy. These early versions of the melody will be sufficient to demonstrate that ''Yankee Doodle/' whatever its original form might have been, passed through many hands before it became fixed in the popular mind in its present form. The semiofficial form now used in the United States is contained in John Philipp Sousa's ''National Patri- otic and Typical Airs of all Lands/' Philadelphia, 1890: ^j^^-J4(v^i ^ ^ If r r Mr -^i ift ft c B \§ " ' I I r ' " ^r r \f J J I J'.^J'J' JIJ ^ f. J' l Jft c cir r I I This process of elimination and substitution of notes, and even bars is characteristic of many folk songs, and the "Folk" unconsciously adopts the same attitude of mind as does a composer who polishes and changes his melodic ideas until he feels satisfied with the result. But this process also explains, how imperfect rendition and local usage 124 Yankee Doodle. can produce such abortive and almost incredible versions as the one in James Hulbert's "Variety of Marches'' (1803, p. 8) and in his '* Complete Filers' Museum" (Greenfield, Mass. [18-], p. 12): i frr-fi f ji | ' r r r '^' -^ ^ j i r-c r or the one in Alvan Robinson's ''Massachusetts CoUection of Martial Musick" (2d. ed., Exeter, 1820, p. 58): r-jfi'^r -^' i cjT H ^- ^ ' I .' ^-^ I H ""'IlI I U rcr i dTr i uTJ ii' |. 'ifj TJ 'irr cri^ ^ j i r ci In addition to these early versions in print a few in manuscript are extant. For instance, the facsimile on Plate XVIII shows the form of *'Yankey doodle" as it appears in ''Whittier Perkins' Book 1790" of ''A Collection of Dancing Tunes, Marches, & Song Tunes" now in possession of Mrs. Austin Holden, Boston, Mass. This is an exceedingly interesting collection of more than one himdred times, and its importance is increased by the fact that it was written by a person with a very neat hand not only, but a musical hand. Parts of a Boston newspaper of 1788 have been used for the inside of the leather binding, but this, of course, though original, may have been added any time after 1788. The earliest possible date of compila- tion is 1778, since in that year Francis Hopkinson wrote his ''Battle of the Kegs," which figures in the collection. It furthermore looks as if the collection was complete before Whittier Perkins claimed it as his property in 1790. We are perfectly safe in dating this version of "Yankee Doodle" as it appears on the first page of the unpaged collection as "about 1790:" rrfrf r H Ya nkee Doodle. 125 Taitksb DooDi«a This last yersion is probably a few years earlier. It appears written in a collection of psakn and popular tunes attached to an incomplete copy of Thomas Walter's "Groimds and rules of musick/' Boston, edition of 1760, as preserved under niunber of '^G. 38. 23" at the Boston Public Library. As a matter of fact, the manuscript music forms two collections in two different hands. The psalm times are paged 26-46 in continuation of the engraved psalm tunes, and on page 42 we read '^Wm. Cummingham, Esqr. 1765." These psalm tunes are followed by seventeen pages of such popular airs as ''The Hero," "Lovely Nancy," "A trip to Halifax," ''God save the King," "Prince Eugene's March," "Bellisle March," "Wild Irishman," "British Grenadiers," and "Yankee Doodle." The presence of so many marches and of a "Hessian Minuet" permits us to conjecture that the collection was written after 1766, either during the war or immediately after. It is therefore perhaps not unsafe to date this version of "Yankee Doodle" as "about 1780." It will be observed and the fact is noted here without an attempt to solve the puzzle, how strikingly these two early American manuscript versions differ from the early printed versions and how much more similarity exists between them and the printed New England versions of 1803 and 1820. Indeed the assumption is not aJt aU far fetched that Yankee Doodle in its modem form is a composite tune, formed out of ai least two different tunes of different age. Finally a version may here be recorded which Mr. Frank Kidson foimd in a manuscript book in his possession, the first date in which is 1790 and the last 1792: ij.'ivj^ i rrrr i rf fr"'^''''!^ r'^ "Yankee Doodle" has gradually become a national march, a national air. That its text is now more or less obsolete, is so evident as not to require proof. The only words current are with slight variations: Yankee Boodle came to town Riding on a ponv, Stuck a leather in nia hat And called it Blacaroni. 126 Yankee Doodle. These or similar words Admiral Preble, 1816-1885 in his childhood heard repeatedly (see p. 104) from his father, Capt. Enoch Preble, 1763-1842. As far as I can see, this is the only evidence we have that the words were known in America as early as about 1820. They may have originated much earlier. How much earlier, depends on the circumstancial evidence offered by the words ''Yankee Doodle" and "Macaroni." The combination of ''Yankee" and "Doodle" was, so Andrew Barton's "The Disappointment" proves, fairly cur- rent in 1767, at least in Philadelphia. Since no earlier reference to a time " Yankee Doodle" has come to light, and since it is entirely possible that the tune under this title had rushed into popularity in the very year of publication of "The Disappointment," no earlier date for the use of the words "Yankee Doodle" would be safe than "at least as early as 1767." After that, the use of these two words in combination became, as we know, fairly frequent, at any rate in America, Doodle retaining its old meaning and "Yankee" becoming preferably a nickname for New Englanders. In England the combi- nation "Yankee Doodle" probably was not used until about or after 1770. As Mr. William Barclay Squire informed me, the British Miiseum [G. 310. (163)] preserves a single-sheet song, called "Yankee Doodle, or, the Negroes Farewell to America. The words and music by T. L." The sheet bears the initials C. & S., i. e., Charles and Samuel Thompson, who published music at London from 1764 to 1776 or 1778. (The music bears no relation to our "Yankee Doodle" tune. This is mentioned here because somebody in the ecstasy of discovery may claim that T. L. wrote and composed our "Yankee Doodle.") The publishers may have printed this sheet song as early as 1764 or as late as 1778. Consequently, it does not help us positively to trace the earliest known use of the words "Yankee Doodle" in England. Attention had been drawn to this song in Notes and Queries as early as 1852, and by Doctor Rimbault in Notes and Queries December 1, 1860, and in the Historical Magazine, 1861, where he stated that the British Museum gave the song the conjectural date of 1775. Rim- bault added the titles of two other "Yankee Doodle" songs printed in England and preserved at the British Museum, which are of inter- est in this connection: (1 ) D'Estaing eclipsed, or Yankee Doodle's defeat. By T. Poynton. (2) "Yankee Doodle, or (as now christened by the saints of New England), the Lexington March." Rimbault further stated that Poynton's song has its own melody, whereas the second song has the familiar "Yankee Doodle" music, a statement since verified by Mr. William Barclay Squire, Mr. Matthews, and others. Of the text of this particular "Yankee Doodle" song more will be said later on. Here it is sufficient to remark that Mr» Yankee Doodle. 127 Albert Matthews discovered a copy of it in possession of Mr. John Ritchie, jr., of Boston. It bears the imprint of Thomas Skillem, London, and he is known, according to Mr. Frank Kidson's ''British Music Publishers," to have printed music under his own name at 17 St. Martin's lane between 1777-78 and 1799. Therefore, this partic- ular publication by Skillem can not have contributed to the circula- tion of the words ''Yankee Doodle" in England before 1777. With reference to "D'Estaing eclips^, or Yankee Doodle's defeat," this quotation from the Grentleman's Magazine, 1783, by Peterafidd in the Magazine of American History (1877, Vol. I, p. 452), will be of service: Your readers and the public must remember an object of compassion who used to sing ballads, about the streets and went by the vulgar appellation of Yankee Doodle, alluding to a song he sang about London, at the Commencement of the American War; his real name was Thomas Foynton. Apparently he was identical with the author and composer of ''D'Estaing eclipsed." In that case, he most probably sang his own "Yankee Doodle" words and tune about the streets and not our "Yankee Doodle." However, since D'Estaing was "eclipsed" in 1778 and 1779, T. Poynton can not have contributed to the circula- tion of the words "Yankee Doodle" in England until after 1778. These data render it very improbable that lines containing the two words "Yankee Doodle" in this combination can have originated in England before 1764. This allows the widest possible margin (the beginning of C. and S. Thompson's activity as music publishers), whereas the probabilities are that the two words were not current in England until considerably after 1770. Turning to the word "Macaroni" in our doggerel quatrain — Yankee Doodle came to town Ridinc[ on a ppnv Stuck a feather in nis hat And called it Macaroni, it may have been used as mere nonsense, the fun consisting in the in itself burlesque association of "feather in his hat" and "Macaroni" without any hidden meaning. In this case the word "Macaroni" would afford no tangible clue for tracing the earliest possible date of the verses. It is different if the prevailing and almost obviously correct impression be accepted that we have here an allusion to the London Macaronis imitated by a New England doodle with the aspi- rations of a dandy and a fop. According to Doctor Murray's Oxford English Dictionary the word "Macaroni" as applied to a certain kind of burlesque poetry, dates back to 1638 and flourished between 1727 and 1741. In the sense of fop, dandy, it was the exquisite of a class which arose in England about 1760 and consisted of young men who had traveled and affected the taste and fashions prevalent in continental society. Again, ac- cording to Doctor Murray, this use seems to be from the name of the 128 Ya nkee Doodle. ''Macaroni Club/' a designation probably adopted to indicate the preferences of the members for foreign cookery^ macaroni still being at that time little eaten, though the dish was known in England as early as Ben Jonson's time (1599). Horace Walpole, on February 6, 1764, speaks of 'Hhe Macaroni Club, which is composed of all the traveled young men, who wear long curls and spying glasses." A few months later, on May 27, 1764, he writes: ''Lady Falkener's daughter is to be married to a yoimg rich Mr. Crewe, a Macarone, and of our Loo." Mr. Henry B. Wheatley in "London Past and Present" (1891, Vol. H, p. 453) states that the Macaroni Club was "instituted in 1764." As Mr. Wheatley does not allude to any authority for this definite date, I agree with Mr. Matthews that he ought rather to have stated ' ' about 1764." Moreover, Mr. Matthews unearthed an important accoimt of the origin of the word as applied to fops under the title ' 'Macaroni explained" in the Scots Magazine for November, 1772: Macaroni is, in the Italian language, a word made use of to express a compound dish made of vermicelli and other pastes . . . This dish was far from being universally known in this country till the commencement of the last peace: when, like many other foreign famous, it was imported by our connoscenti in eating, as an improvement to the subscription-table at Almack's. In time, the subscribers to those dinners became to be distinguished by the title of Macaroni; and as the meeting was composed of the younger and gayer part of our nobility and gentry, who, at the same time that they gave in to the luxuries of eating, went equally into the extravagances of dress, the word Macaroni changed its meaning to that of a person who exceeded the ordinary bounds of fashion, and is now justly used as a term of reproach to all ranks of people, indifferently, who iaU into this absurdity. The "last peace" was the Peace of Paris, 1763. This together with the fact that the statement was made less than a decade from that peace and that nobody has succeeded in unearthing a reference to "Macaroni" in the sense of fop earlier than 1764, leads to a very simple conclusion: If in our "Yankee Doodle" lines the word "Macaroni" is used in the sense of fop, then the lines almost with certainty had their origin after 1764- It is further significant that the Macaronis, who affected immense knots of artificial hair, ludi- crously small cock-hats [!], enormous walking sticks with long tassels and jackets, waistcoats and breeches of very close cut (see Wright's Caricature History of the Georges, London [1868], p. 259), reached the height of their reign as arbiters of advanced fashion from about 1770 to 1775. All this direct and circumstantial evidence on the words "Yankee Doodle" and "Macaroni" leads to the conclusion that our doggerel quatrain did not originate until about or after 1764. Furthermore, it undermines the possibility that the verses were not written in America and since no reference is made in English sources to these lines until far into the nineteenth century, it may be taken for granted that indeed the lines originated in America. The question would still remain open, by whom were they written? By a city- bred Colonial, who merely desired to ridicule the rustic New Eng- Yankee Doodle. 129 landers, or by a Tory or by a Britisher! Had two or three verses, unmistakably belonging together, been preserved instead of one, the question would probably have been easy to answer. The stanza — Yankee Doodle came to town Riding on a pony, etc. never appears with companion stanzas, and yet it is safe to say that such existed. Unless an authentic contemporary copy of the whole ''poem" turns up, we, at this late date, can do no more than call attention to some verses which have survived, and which may have belonged to the original string of stanzas, or at least may have been inspired by them. Such verses are the following: 1. From Watson's "Annals of Philadelphia,'' 1844, contained also in his letter of February, 1832 : Yankee Doodle came to town For to buy a firelock: We wiU tar and feather him And so we will John Hancock. 2. Samuel Breck in his "Recollections" (1877, p. 132), writing about 1830 and speaking of John Hancock, said: . . . Thia subject brings to my mind four verses to the tune of ''Yankee Doodle" olten sung by the British officers during the Revolution: Madam Hancock dreamt a dream j She dreamt she wanted something; She dreamt she wanted a Yankee Kmg, To crown him with a pumpkin. 3. George H. Moore's manuscript on "Yankee Doodle" pre- viously mentioned contains this stanza recorded by an ''old gentle- man who recalled [it] about 1830 as one of a ditty common in his own school days:'' Yankee Doodle came to town Put on his stripM trowse's And vow'd he could n't see the place (town) There vhu so many houses. This last verse, just as the " Macaroni ' ' verse, deals humorously with the personal appearance of Yankee Doodle, and while slightly satirical, might have been written not only by a Britisher, but by any American, Tory or Rebel, who desired to poke some fun at the New England coimtry bumpkins. It is different with the first and second verse just quoted. They obviously can have been penned only by a Tory or a Britisher, and the question merely is what date of origin their contents suggest, though they do not seem to have appeared in print until far into the nineteenth century. A brief reference to the biog- raphy of so well known a historical figure as John Hancock will answer the question without much further comment: Bom in 1737 at Quincy, Mass., John Hancock became one of the most active ''Sons of Liberty" (after 1765), a representative of the Massachusetts Legislature, 1766-1772, and he was a member of the Committee to demand of the royal governor the removal of the British troops from Boston, 1770. The efforts of the governor to secure his and Samuel Adams's person, led to the Battle of Lexington April 18 85480-09 9 130 Yankee Doodle. and 19, 1775 uid cauBed Gen. Gage to exclude both from tlie general pardon granted the rebels. Chosen President of the Provincial Congress in October, 1774, he became a delegate to the Continental Congress, 1775-1780, and its President froni May, 1775, to October, 1777. He married Dorothy Quincy at Fairfield, Conn., August 28, 1775. The "Madam Hancock" verse, therefore — so it may be argued — was not written before August 28, 1775, but a "Madam Hancock" may have been introduced for reasons of satire into this verse by its author without the slightest knowledge whether or not John Hancock was married. Nor do the words "Yankee King" necessarily point to the year 1775, when Hancock became President of the Continental Congress, because it appears from "A New Song" in the Boston Oazette of March 26, 1770 (to which Mr. Matthews called my atten- tion) that the sobriquet "K — g H — k" was applied to him as early as 1770. However, "Madam Hancock" and "Yankee King" taken together would seem to lend force to the conjecture that this particular verse originated after August 28, 1775, rather than before. No such circiunstantial evidence attaches to the "tar and feather" verse, except that from 1768 on the patriots delighted in inflicting this pas- time on the Tories, and that John Hancock certainly was despised by Tory and Britisher alike after 1770 more than before. The three verses beginning "Yankee Doodle came to town," it may safely be assumed, belong to the same breed of verses, though they and others may not have been written by one author or on the same occasion. The "Madam Hancock" verse surely had a source not very distant from that of the others, and as far as the date of origin of all four verses is concerned, everything seems to point to a date later than 1770. For practical purposes, indeed, these verses may be said to have been written probably about 1775. On page 105 of this report George H. Moore's impublished opinion of Doctor Shuckburgh's share in the fortimes of "Yankee Doodle" was quoted in part. He there mentions as* "The only verses I have met with which carry any appearance of having been a part of the original." There is a man in our town I pity his condition. He sold his oxen ana his sheep To buy him a commifision — When his own commission he had got, He proved a nation coward He durst not go to Cape Breton For fear he^a be devoured. Moore does not say that he got these verses from an "old gentle- man " remembering them like the " Strip'd trowse's " verse about 1830, nor does he state who this old gentleman was, nor would a disclosure of identity help us much. Any attempt to date these two verses must take its cue from the allusion to Cape Breton : the author of the verses. Yankee Doodle. 131 de&rly belonging together, referred either to the capture of Cape Breton on June 17, 1745, by the Americans, or by General Amherst on July 26, 1768 (Louisbourg). Here the matter would have to rest, but for the "Yankee Doodle" song published by Thomas Skillem, of London, between 1777 and 1799, and preserved at the British Museum. As stated on page 177, Mr. Matthews discovered another copy at Boston in possession of Mr. Ritchie, jr., who allowed the Library of Congress to secure a facsinule. (See Appendix, PL XX.) The title and text read : TANKKE doodle; or, (as now christened by the Saints of New England) THB LEXINGTON XABOH. N. B. The Words to be Sung throu' the Noee, dE in the West Country drawl TAX, TO THE TUNE OF DOODLE, DOODLE, DO. Here you may see the happy CongresB All now is done with such a bonrgrace. No English wight can surely grumble, Or crv, our treaty-makers fumble. Doodle, dooale, do., etc. The ''Caricature History" also contains ''The Motion" (p. 128) among verses clearly relating to the Duke of Argyle and to the year 1741, this one: Who de dat de box to sit on? 'Tis John, the hero of North Briton, Who, out of place, does place-men spit on, Doodle, etc. We are carried far into the seventeenth century by Edw. Ravens- croft's comedy after the Italian manner "Scaramouch a philosopher, Harlequin a School-boy," 1677. In the fifth act, first scene Harlequin sings "ridiculously" "Tricola, tracola" mixed with "Doodle-doodle- doo," and "Toodle-doodle-doo." In "the Witch of Edmonston" by William Rowley, Thomas Dek- ker, John Ford, etc., 1658, Act IV, scene 1, occurs this interesting passage: Enter Anne Batcliff mad. Rate, Oh my Ribs are made of a pa3nied Hose, and they break. There's a Lancashire hornpipe in my throat: hark how it tickles it, with Doodle, Doodle, Doodle, Doodle. And finally in Middleton's & Rowley's "The Spanish Gipsy," 1653 (acted 1623 or 1624), Sancho sings a line with Doodle-doo. What do these references prove? First, that a chorus refrain with *' Doodle-doodle, do " existed as early as the middle of the seventeenth century. In America the word "Yankee" was grafted on to this not later than 1767 (Barton's Disappointment), and the form of "Yankee Doodle do" was used as late as 1787 or 1790 (Tyler's Contrast). If the internal and other evidence submitted led to the conclusion that the "Father and I" text originated 1775 or 1776, then the conjecture is fairly safe that the refrain "Yankee Doodle keep it up" is of the same date. This conclusion in turn would lead to the other that in Barton's ' ' Disappointment " the older refrain ' ' Yankee Doodle-doodle do" was used. But the references would appear to establish a very much more important point, namely, the existence of a tune called "Doodle, doodle, do" certainly as early as 1762 and probably as early as the seventeenth century. Indeed, we are almost compelled to assume that this tune was known as a Lancashire hornpipe as early Ya nkee Doodle. 146 as 1668. Since the texts mentioned lend themselves more or less smoothly to our '^Yankee Doodle" melody^ the latter may he sus- pected to be identical with the ''Doodle, doo'' tune, but it would not necessarily follow that words were sung to it except as chorus refrain. In 1772 Stevens' ''Doodle Doo" was to be sung to the tune of "Ev'ry where fine ladies flirting/' I have not yet traced a song with these first words, but it will be noticed that they lend themselves smoothly to the "Yankee Doodle" melody. This suggests the query: Were these perhaps the original words that went with the melody or were they grafted on the melody later, or do they, after all, represent a dif- ferent melody? I am not in a position to give any answer to these questions which might solve the problem of "Yankee Doodle" in a manner heretofore hardly suspected. However, the existence of a "Doodle, doo" air before 1760 and possibly identical with the "Yankee Doodle" air has become so probable that this probabiUty obliges the historian to move with caution and skepticism when examining the theories of the origin of "Yankee Doodle" not yet analyzed, namely, the Doctor Shuckburgh theory in Farmer and Moore's Collections, 1824, and the "All the way to Galway " theory of Mr. Orattan Flood, 1906.« a This book was in proof sheets when at last Mr. Frank Kidson, having at first almost denied the existence of such a time, was able to send the author the following under date of Leeds, May 11, 1909: [" Doodle Doo. No. 175, p. 88, Wright's 200 Choice Country Dances, vol. 2d, ca. 1750.] J -'^ I j JJ J In explanation Mr. Kidson, to whom again thanks are due for his professional courtesy, writes: ^' I have great pleasure in sending you the Doodle Doo which you will see prac- tically fits the words given in G. A. Steven's ''Songs Comic and Satyrical," Oxford, 1772, p. 134, song 72. I have copied the tune from a country dance book without title, but which I know for a certainty to be the second volume of Wright's 200 Country Dances, a later edition issued by John Johnson of Cheapside about 1750. ParticulaxB are given in my British Music Publishers. . . Dan Wright first iEBued his two volumes, and then Johnson continued with his 3, 4, 6, & 6th, reprinting the 1st and 2d from his old plates with new plates substituted for certain cases. The 86480-09 ^10 146 Yankee Doodle. The latter does not call for a lengthy discussion, as the supposedly Irish origin of "Yankee Doodle" (see p. 106) is based simply on two assertions: First; that its structure is "decidedly Irish;" second, that it is identical with the Irish tune of "All the way to Oalway" as it appears in a manuscript dated 1750, the authority of which Mr. Orattan Flood says to be beyond question. Since the structure of the melody has been claimed with equal enthusiasm as decidedly Hessian, Hungarian, Scotch, English, etc. — indeed, in his letter quoted above,. Mr. D. F. Scheurleer called my attention to the similarity of "Yankee Doodle" with the times of the itinerant Savoyards — ^]^lr. Grattan Flood's manifestly sincere assertion can not be accepted without veiy careful proof as "intrinsic evidence." Mr. Grattan Flood's other assertion is somewhat strengthened by facts nqt mentioned in his interesting article. It appears from Saigent's "History of an expedition against Fort Du Quesne in 1755" (Philadelphia, 1855) that when Braddock's ill-fated campaign was being prepared drafts were made in Ireland "from the second battalion of the Royals, at Gal way," besides from other Irish regiments. Furthermore, the "Orders for Foreign Service," quoted in Ejiox's "Historical Journal of the Campaignes in North America for the years 1757, 1758, 1759 and 1760," leave no doubt that Major-General Kennedy's regiment stationed at Galway, the Fifty-fifth Regiment stationed at Galway and two other Irish regi- ments, the First or Royal Regiment of Foot and the Seventeenth Regiment of Foot, received marching orders in February. In this connection it is also noteworthy that in 1758 the Fifty-fifth Regiment participated in General Abercrombie's unlucky Lake expedition (Ticonderoga!), the First and the Seventeenth regiments in General Amherst's siege of Louisburgh, whereas Kennedy's Forty-third Regi- ment all through 1758 was condemned to idleness in Nova Scotia. However these facts may fit into the historical argument, it is known that of the 8,000 regulars voted by Parliament in 1757 for reenforce- old plates have the moons and half moons (as in the Dancing master), but the new plates have them not. Do(xf2tf Doo is from a new plate issued about 1750 . . . I have some startling theories about Yankee Doodle name and tune, and one is that the first part is older than the 2d part. . . " It is clear that our Yankee Doodle and this Doodle Doo are not identical or even similar and that the several Yankee Doodle texts can not have been sung to this Doodle Doo. It is equally clear that the Doodle Doo texts quoted on p. 143 fit oiur Yankee Doodle well, but this Doodle Doo very poorly, if at all. Here, then, is a new puzzle and a new obstacle in the path that seemed to lead easily out of the whole Yankee Doodle labyrinth. Personally, I still adhere to the belief that there must have been kinship between Yankee Doodle and Doodle Doo, and I am keenly interested in Mr. Kidson's startling theories in the desperate hope that he at last may be able to give a satisfactory solution of the Yankee Doodle puzzle. Ya nkee Doodle, 147 ments, fully one-half were Irish. If then ^'Yankee Doodle'' is of Irish origin and identical with ''All the way to Oalway/' it is clear how this influx of Irish soldiers may have helped to spread the air in America, even had it not been known previously to the Irish then settled in America. But, has Mr. Orattan Flood succeeded in proving the identity, without which his theory of the Irish origin, of course, collapses? On pages 123-125 of this report some of the early printed and manuscript versions of ''Yankee Doodle" are quoted, and here are two versions of "AH the way to Oalway" as given by Mr. Grattan Flood in his article: ALii THB Way to Oalway Ma. 1750 All ths Wat to Galwat PSTBia 184 ^ "rr7j'-pH-i^ To these may be added for more comprehensive comparison a manuscript version (ca. 1820) in possession of Mr. Frank Kidson: ^ffrJTT -^-hJ^-^-h-^^-t^^bto^ ^ ^Ti^lj- J -U-jU-JLfjj '-=m i^ ti^j and the version in Capt. Francis O'Neill's "Dance Music of Ireland" (Chicago, 1907, p. 172): >j,jjjjjji-L^-Jrrr:i^T^jj m 148 Ya nkee Doodle. If Mr. Grattan Flood says that the C natural in the first half of ''All the way to Galway/' the so-called flat seventh, is luimistakably Irish, then the first half of ''Yankee Doodle" is just as immistakably not Irish. Though the eye may detect a similarity between the two first parts, to the musical ear they sound fundamentally tmlike. Only the first, third, and fifth bars of the eight in the 1750 version of "All the way to Galway" coiQd possibly be pressed into service for Mr. Grattan Flood's theory, which he bases, it should be kept in mind, on a comparison between Aird's "Yankee Doodle" of 1782 and a 1750 manuscript version of "All the way to Galway." This com- parison becomes still more futile if the two second halves be con- trasted. Only one bar, the last, is identical, and that bar, I trust, may be f oimd in a million compositions. How weak the whole theory is appears convincingly if we figuratively try to cover one time with the other and apply the numerical test of identity:- "All the way to Galway" has 57 notes, "Yankee Doodle" 52. OrUy 18 notes are identical! It is easily seen how Mr. Grattan Flood came to embrace the Irish theory. There is an obvious wholesale similarity in melodic structure, if considerations of key be discarded, between the secong halves of the earliest "All the way to Galway" and some of the "Yankee Doodle" versions — ^for instance, those of Willig (p. 122) and Sousa (p. 123). Approximate similarity, not approximate identityl This similarity in melodic patterns belongs to the chapter on " Thematic coincidences and common property ' ' in the history of music. It is a fascinating but wholly unreliable and dangerous chapter. In the case of "Yankee Doodle" the wholesale similarity, as it was called above, may be admitted, but the moment deductions of identity are to be drawn from this similarity we are perfectly justified in claiming an equal share of similarity between "Yankee Doodle" and the Scotch air "Will ye go to Sheriff muir " as given, for instance, in Hogg's "Jacob- ite Relics" (1819, V. I, p. 149): ^ S« c g c^ E p- g r jl'^V/g r/s r.-:-0 ^^^^^m ^^rr^^ J II Yankee Doodle. 149 or, as in Gow's Third Repositoiy (oa. 1806) : rt^c-^ tr ■f^ i^^mr^f^'^^^ This version I owe to the courtesy of Mr. Frank Kidson, as also the much more important information that the ''Sheriff Muir" air appears in Oswald's ''Caledonian Pocket Companion" (Book 6, circa 1750-1760). Without this discovery it would merely be possible to state that the text of the air appears in Semple's "Poems and Songs of Robert Tannahill" (1876), among the "Unedited and unpublished pieces" (p. 354) of the poet (1774-1810), as doubtful, and that Hogg says "The air has long been popular." With Mr. Kidson's find, we would be able to offset the Irish claim for "All the Way to Galway" by a Scotch claim for " Will ye go to Sheriff Muir," since the proximity of the dates of first known appearance of both tunes would forbid to derive for the sake of argument "Will ye go to Sheriff Muir" and thus again incidentally "Yankee Doodle" from "All the Way to Galway." Should it be insisted that the Irish tune dates " from about the first quarter of the 18th century," as Mr. Grattan Flood suspects under date of July 23, 1908, equal emphasis might be laid on the probability that Oswald did not print a new tune, but a popular, that is, a fairly old one, and that there might be some connection between it and the battle of Sheriffmuir, 1715. The probabilities are that neither "All the Way to Galway" nor "Will ye go Sheriffmuir" contributed anything to "Yankee Doodle." On the other hand, if mere similarity is to decide the origin of " Yankee Doodle," and if the latter's hypothetical prototype, the tune "Doodle, doodle, doo" (or perhaps "Everywhere fine ladies flirting") should be found to antedate "All the Way to Galway," what would prevent the argument that "All the Way to Galway" borrowed its better half from " Yankee Doodle " instead of vice versa? However, not to let my personal opinion enter too much into this report, it should be noted that Mr. Grattan Flood's theory is by no means accepted by other eminent authorities. For instance, Mr. Frank Kidson wrote me under date of August 12, 1908, this sweeping statement: ' 'All the Way to Galway' ' is not really like Yankee Doodle, and cannot be proved to be earlier in date even if it was like it. 150 Ya nkee Doodle. And Captaiji Francis O'Neill under date of July 14, 1908, wrote : I agree with you in noting the diasimilarity of the first parts of the times under consideration, the style and composition of first part of Yankee Doodle is more modem. I must admit, no Irish tune, March or Air that I can remember, unmis- takably resembles the first part of Yankee Doodle and I have an excellent memory in such matters. The substance of the rather novelistic account (see pp. 96-97) which under the title of ''Origin of Yankee Doodle'' appeared in Farmer and Moore's Collections; 1824, is, to recapitulate, this: In 1755 Doctor Shackburg[!], a physician attached to the staff of (General Abercrombie's army, encamped a little south of Albany, N. Y., on the ground "now" belonging to John I. Van Rensselaer, esq., "to please brother JonaOian composed a tune" and wiQi much gravity recommended it to (he officers as one of the nu)st celebrated airs of martial music. The provincial troops, whose march, accoutre- ments, arrangement, the narrator with great glee compares to that of Sir John Falstaff 's ragged regiment, took the bait, and in a few days nothing was heard in the provincial camp but the air of Yankee Doodle. By utilizing the data printed in the ''Historical Magazine," in O'Callaghan's New York Colonial Documents, in the "Collections of the New York Historical Society," in the old British Army lists, and combining them with the information contained in transcripts for the Library of Congress from the "Sir William Johnson Manuscripts of Letters, and passages relating to Dr. Richard Shuckburgh, 1745-1773," his life may be traced with sufficient clearness for the present purpose. It is a curious coincidence that two Richard Shuckburghs appear about this time in the British army lists, but the Richard Shuckburgh whose commission in the army dates from March 18, 1755, who in December of the same year became a lieutenant in the First Regi- ment of Foot Guards, and in 1768 a captain, can not possibly be connected with "Yankee Doodle" in preference to the Dr. Richard Shuckburgh for the simple reason that this regiment, since 1815 commonly known as the Grenadier Guards, did not come to America before 1776. Dr. Richard Shuckburgh, on the other hand, was prospecting with a Captain Borrow as early as 1 735 on the Delaware, and he held a commission as surgeon in the "Four Independent Companies of Foot at New York" since June 25, 1737. About 1748 Doctor Shuckburgh began to take a lively interest in the Indians, and as early as 1751 he speaks of his ambition to become secretaiy of Indian affairs under Sir William Johnson, with whom he was on terms of friendship. When this position became vacant through the death of Captain Wraxall in July, 1759, Sir William immediately appointed Dr. Shuckburgh to this office for which he appears to have Yankee Doodle. 151 been eminently qualified, having in the words of Sir William John- son, March 24, 1760, ''recorded all my proceedings with the several nations of Indians since the opening of the last campaign/' 1759. Unfortunately Sir William delayed the report of his action and reconmiendation to the board of trade. Consequently, when his letter finally reached London, a Mr. Marsh, in 1761, had already been selected as Wraxall's successor. If it was bad enough for Shuck- burgh to be "elbowed out" of a position, as he put it, it was more unfortunate that the rules forbade him to hold two offices. In the firm expectation that his secretaryship would become permanent, he had in 1761 resigned his commission as surgeon in the Independent Companies, and of course now found himself without any position. His disappointment at these developments gives the keynote to his correspondence of the next few years, though on January 10, 1763, he is able to send Sir William the good news: 1 have compleated my Purchase with the Suigeon of the 17th Regt. and received my Commiflsion from the General the 29th ult. These facts explain why Shuckburgh suddenly disappears from the British army lists (carefully extracted for me by Mr. Lydenburg of the N. Y. Public Library), and just as suddenly reappears in 1764 as surgeon of the Seventeenth Kegiment of Foot, stationed since 1758 in America. The most miserable year of his life Shuckburgh spent in 1765 at the military post of Detroit, separated for a full year from his family and for six months shut off from all communication. When he returned to New York at the end of 1765, the military service had lost its attraction for him, and he probably did not view the death of Mr. Marsh in the same year with much regret, since now the secretaryship of Indian affairs was again within reach. Sir William Johnson lost no time in repeating his former recommenda- tion, but not until 1767 did Shuckburgh receive the place. This appointment explains why not Dr. Richard Shuckburgh, but a Thomas White, appears as surgeon in the 17th regiment from May 9, 1768, on. Shuckburgh was not to enjoy his new office for many years. On December 26, 1772, Sir William Johnson wrote of him to the Earl of Dartmouth as "aged and of late very infirm," and on August 26, 1773, the New York Gazetter printed this obituary notice: Died, at Schenectady, last Monday, Dr. Richard Shuckbuigh, a gentleman of very genteel family, and of infinite jest and humour. Sir William Johnson was greatly shocked by this news, and from Johnson Hall, September 30, 1773, wrote to Mrs. Shuckburgh to assure her of his concern at her loss and of his great friendship for her husband. That he should, in the same letter, have called her 152 Yankee Doodle. attention to the fact that her husband had borrowed $100 from him shortly before his death was at least not tactful, and the fact is mentioned here merely to show that Shuckbrn^gh, though qtdte a property holder in the colony, was frequently in financial trouble. However, he had at least the satisfaction of seeing his daughter well married to a British officer. The obituary notice mentions Shuckburgh's ''infinite jest and humour." His correspondence with Sir William Johnson would not permit this inference. It is of a serious turn and mainly expressive of his disappointment at not having received the secretaryship of Indian affairs. Yet one or two letters contain a few humorous remarks, and that Shuckbiu*gh was conscious of his humorous talents appears from a letter to Sir William Johnson under date of April 18, 1763: I am apt to say somewhat like Scarron, when he was dying, that I may have made more People laugh in my lifetime in this World of America than will cry at my departure out of it . . . When Dr. Richard Shuckburgh was bom I am unable to tell, but it is fairly safe to conjecture that he was bom in England about 1705. That Shuckburgh is a well-known Warwickshire name would not be conclusive, since there exist also Shuckburghs from Limerick, Ireland, but Sir William Johnson, in 1752, made some complimentary remarks to ''Mr. Shuckburgh, stationer, in London," about his brother, the doctor. The latter, in one of his letters, speaks about his friends in England, and, indeed, in 1767 spends a few months in London. In view of this circumstantial evidence, O'Callaghan's statement in his New York Colonial Docimients (vol. 8, p. 244, footnote) that Shuckburgh was of German origin may safely be said to be incorrect. Farmer and Moore reprinted their article on the origin of Yankee Doodle from ''an old file of the Albany Statesman, edited by N. H. Carter, Esq." Such a paper never existed. The facts are these: The "Albany Register" ran from 1788 to 1819, or the first months of 1820. In 1819, Nathaniel Hazeltine Carter had become the editor, and he became the sole proprietor of the Albany Register early in 1820. He changed its name into the New York Statesman for reasons given in the first issue, May 16, 1820. Since the New York Statesman was practically a continuation of the Albany Register some people, exactly as happens to-day in libraries in similar cases, would carelessly speak of the Albany Statesman, meaning either the Albany Register or the New York Statesman (printed at Albany). Farmer and Moore took their article from an old file of the "Albany Statesman, ' ' and the word old would suggest the Albany Register rather than the New York Statesman. The same account^ as Mr. Matthews Yankee Doodle. 158 discovered, appeared in H.Niles's" Principles and Acts of the Reyoiu* tion in America" (1822, p. 372), and there, too, the article was attributed to the '^ Albany Statesman." This would prove nothing, since the incorrect term ''Albany Statesman" might have been the current one for the then defunct Albany Register, but in Niles's Register, November 11, 1826, the same story is actually attributed to the New York Statesman. This would suggest the inference that the story was printed at Albany in the New York Statesman between 1820 and 1822, but as a matter of fact the copy at the Library of Congress proves that the paper was not published between May, 1820, and end of November, 1821, and by 1822 the offices of the New York Statesman had been removed to New York City. There- fore, we have every reason to prefer the older Albany Register as source of the story. So did Mary L. D. Ferris in her article on ''Our National Songs," New England Magazine, 1890 (vol 2, p. 483), but her statement that N. H. Carter himself wrote the article in 1797 for the "Albany Statesman" is woefully absurd, since Carter (1787-18301) was then only 10 years of age. Furthermore, Mr. Frank L. Tolman, the reference librarian of the New York State Library, had the Albany Register for 1797 examined and reexamined for me without finding any article on the origin of Yankee Doodle. Finally, internal evidence absolutely forbids to date the article in question so early, because the author of the article distinctly writes of a "lapse of sixty years" since 1755, which would fix the date of publication of the article about 1815, and incidentally its source as the Albany Register. At any rate, two generations had passed before the tradition that Doctor Shuckburgh "composed the tune" of "Yankee Doodle" found its way into print. If such a tradition is to be accepted as histoiy, its details must be above suspicion. The practical joke of composing a tune and then recommending it gravely as one of the most celebrated martial airs is at least plausible, since even great composers — for instance, Hector Berlioz — are known to have played such jokes on the unsuspecting. It is not plausible, however, that Shuckburgh would have blunted the point of his joke by calling the tune "Yankee Doodle." This name it can only have received after the novelty of the subterfuge had worn off, and the puzzle is, why just "Yankee Doodle?" Such impossibilities in the story, as General Amhert's presence at Albany in 1755 instead of 1758, may be here disregarded as pardonable historical inaccuracies, but the sine qua non is the presence of Dr. Richard Shuckburgh at Albany, N. Y., in the sunmier of 1755 on the Van Rensselaer estate. Now, it is a matter of history that in that year Doctor Shuckburgh was surgeon in the "Four Independent Companies of Foot" at New York, and it is also a matter of easily verified history (see f. i., Sargent's "History 154 Yankee Doodle. of an expedition against Fort Duquesne/' Philadelphia, 1855) that at least two of these companies were ordered by Governor Dinwiddle in 1754 from New York to garrison the fort at Wills Creek, Va., where they still were in 1755, and exactly these troops George Washington had been so anxiously expecting. When the preparations for General Braddock's ill-fated expedition against Fort Duquesne had been com- pleted, these companies, and more specifically Capt. Horatio Gates's company, to which Shuckburgh was attached as surgeon, participated in the campaign, and after Braddock's famous defeat, July 9, 1755, did not until well into October, 1755, reach the vicinity of Albany on their retreat. Now, it is of course possible that Shuckburgh was detailed to Albany and that only Alexander Colhoun, the other sur- geon of the independents, was in the wilderness of Virginia in 1755, hundreds of miles away from Albany, but this possibility is far- fetched, and the burden of proof is on him who asserts Doctor Shuck- burgh to have been at Albany in the summer of 1755. It may be well to add here that the only positive reference to Shuckburgh's where- abouts in 1755 is contained in one of his letters written from New York on November 27, 1755, to Sir William Johnson about the critical condition of Baron Dieskau, who had been taken prisoner by Johnson at the battle of Lake Greorge. Doctor Shuckburgh's case as composer of ''Yankee Doodle" at Albany, N. Y., in the summer of 1755 is further weakened by the tradition in the very family on whose estate he is reported to have exercised his musical imagination. A granddaughter of Gen. Bobert Van Rensselaer wrote to Mr. Albert Matthews (see Elson's National Music of America, p. 140) : The story of '* Yankee Doodle" is an authentic tradition in my family. My grandibther, Brig. Gen. Robert Van Rensselaer, bom in the Green Bush Manor House, was a boy of seventeen at the time when Doctor Shackbeigh, the writer of the verses f and General Abercrombie were guests of his Either, Col. Johannes Van Rensselaer, in June 1768. We have a picture of the old well, with the high stone curb and well-sweep, which has always been associated with the lines written while the British surgeon sat upon the curb . . . The contradiction between this tradition, which leaves us in the dark as to which verses are meant, and the account in Farmer & Moore is striking, and the confusion increases by a quotation of what a J. F. said in a note on Mrs. Volkert P. Douw in the Magazine' of American History, 1884, v. 11, p. 176: ... It was on the farm of the Douw &.mily that the English army, and the six- teen Colonial regiments, were encamped in 1755, under General Abercrombie, previous to the attack on Fort Ticonderoga in the French and Indian war. And it was at this historical spot where *' Yankee Doodle'' was composed by Dr. Shackleferd, and simg in derision of the four Connecticut regiments, under the command of Col. Thomas Fitch, of Connecticut . . . Yankee Doodle. 156 This belated tradition has been quoted merely as a matter of rec- ord. It is clumsily incorrect, because General Abercrombie's ill- advised attack on Fort Ticonderoga did not take place until 1758, because the general did not set foot on American soil until 1756, etc. 9 etc. On the other hand, the Van Rensselaer tradition deserves serious attention, as General Abercrombie actually was at and near Albany in 1758 supervising the preparations for the attack on Fort Ticonderoga, as Doctor Shuckburgh had no known reason for being himdreds of miles away from Albany, and as it is much more plausible that a witty army surgeon from New York should have written humorous ''Yankee Doodle'' verses to an existing familiar and there- fore effective tune, than to have composed such a tune himself. Should the music of the old English time ''Doodle, doodle, doo'' be discovered and foimd to be identical with our "Yankee Doodle,'' we might conjecture that the old time, like so many other old English tunes, was well known in the colonies, and we might then feel inclined not to doubt the Van Rensselaer tradition that Dr. Richard Shuck- burgh, in Jime, 1758, used this tune as an understructure for a himior- ous ballad on the Yankees. But the main problem would still remain imsolved, What verses did he write? Certainly not the verses, "Father and I went down to camp," certainly not the "Yankee Doodle came to town" verses with "Macaroni," "Madam Hancock," "John Hancock," certainly not any verses that allude to General Amherst's victory at Cape Breton on July 26, 1758, certainly not the "Doctor Warren" verse, and most assuredly not any verse full of insulting ill-himiored satire against Americans or even New England- ers, since he would have a difficult task indeed who attempted to falsify history by asserting that about 1758 ill feeling beyond the proverbial, but harmless jealousy between regulars and militia, existed among the British and American troops fighting a common foe. These considerations narrow the possibilities of the Shuck- burgh's authorship down either to verses unknown to us or to such "neutral" ones as — Brother Ephraim sold hia cow And bought him a GommiflBion And then he went to Canada To fight for the Nation. But when Ephraim he came home He prov'a an arrant coward, He wouldn't fi^ht the Frenchmen there, For fear of bemg devoured. But these belong to "Yankee Doodle, or (as now christened by the Saints of New England) the Lexington March," and were not pub- lished until anywhere from 1777 to 1799, and surely will be admitted to bear the earmarks of an origin later, at any rate, than Jime, 1758, 156 Yankee Doodle. and probably after 1770 rather than before. Thus, to sum up, Dr. Richard Shuckburgh's connection with ''Yankee Doodle" becomes doubtful again, and indeed the origin of "Yankee Doodle" remains as mysterious as ever, unless it be deemed a positive result to have eliminated definitely almost every theory thus far advanced and thus by the process of elimination to have paved the way for an eventual solution of the puzzle. LITERATURE USED FOR THIS REPORT. GENERAL. Banks, Louis Albert: Immortal songa of camp and field; the story of their inspira- tion, together with striking anecdotes connected with their history . . . Cleve- land, The Burrows bros. co., 1899 [1898]. 298 p. illus. Sf", Bbinton, Howard Futhbt: Patriotic songs of the American people. New Haven, The Tnttle, Morehouse A Taylor co., 1900. Ill p. 12*. Brown, Jambs Dttff: Characteristic songs and dances of all nations. London, Beyley A Ferguson, c 1901. 276 p. 4'*. BuTTERWoRTH, Hezbkiah: The great compoeerB. Rev. and enl. Boston, Lothrop publishing company, 1894. 5 p. 1., 195 p. incl. plates. 18) cm. pp. 124-160. Cblbbrated folksongs and thbir trub msTORT. Metronome, 1903, v. 19, no. 9, p. 9. Danibll, Carl A.: National airs and who wrote them. Current literature, 1896, vol. 20, pp. 453-454. Elbon, Louis Charlbs: Folk songs of many nations, collected and ed., with preface and annotations. Cincinnati, Chicago [etc.] The J. Church company [1905]. 1 p. 1., 171 p. 28 cm. Elbon, Loins Charlbs: The national music of America and its sources. Boston, L. C. Page and company, 1900 [1899]. vi, v-viii, 9-326 p. 4 port. (incl. front.). 17^ cm. {See aUo his Hist, of Am. Music, 1904, pp. 140-164.) Fbrris, Mart L. D.: Our national songs [illus. fac-similes, especially of letter by Rev. S. F. Smith, dated 1889 and narrating origin of ' 'America "]. New England magazine, 1890. new ser. vol. 2, pp. 483-504. Frrz-OBRALD, S. J. Adair: Stories of famous songs. London, 1898. Johnson, Helbn (Ejbndricx) *^ Mr9, Ro9sUer Johnson:" Our familiar songs and those who made them. More than three hundred standard songs of the English-speaking race, arranged with piano accompaniment, and preceded by sketches of the writers and histories of the songs. New York, H. Holt and co. 1881. xiii, 660 p. 4®. Johnson, Hblbn (Kbndricx) "Mrs. Rossiter Johnson:" Our feoniliar songs and those who made them; three hundred standard songs of the English speaking race, arranged with piano accompaniment, and preceded by sketches of the writers and histories of the songs. New York, H. Holt and company, 1889. xiii, 660 p. 25^ cm. Johnson, Hblbn Kbndrick and Dean, Frbdbric: Famous songs and those who made them . . . New York, Bryan, Taylor & co. 1895. 2 v. 4*. [The American national songs here treated are contained in the first volume.] EoBBift, GusTAv.: Famous American songs. New York, T. Y. Crowell & co. [1906]. xvii, [1], 168, [1] p. incl. front, plates, ports., facsims. 20} cm. MoCartt, William: Songs, odes, and other poems on national subjects. Philadel- phia, 1842. 3v. 157 158 Literature Used for this Report. Mbad, Lbon: The songs of freedom [includes M. Keller's ''The American hymn" with music]. Ghautauquan, 1900, vol. 31, p. p 574-584. Moore, Frank: Songs and ballads of the American Revolution. New York. D. Appleton & CO., 1856. N A60N, Elias : A monogram on our national song. Albany, J. MunseU, 1869. 69 p. 8f*. National Melodies of America: The poetry by Geoige P. Morris, esq., adapted and arranged by Ghas. £. Horn. Part I. New York, 1839. [Review of the col- lection which does not deal with natUmal melodies but rather with/oZJb melodies with a leaning towards negro songs.] Southern literary messenger, 1839. vol. 5, pp. 770-773. National bongs [merely reprint of two prize poems "Sons of America'' and *'01d Glory"]. Iowa historical record, 1895, vol. 11, pp. 329-331. Our National Songs; with numerous original illustrations by G. T. Tobin. New York, F. A. Stokes co. [1898]. 128 p. illust. 24<> [words only.] Preble, Henrt George: History of the flag of the United States of America. Sec- ond revised edition. Boston, A. Williams and co. 1880. 3 p. 71&-768. [Chapter on "National and patriotic songs," also first edition, 1872, used.] Rbddall, Henrt Frederic: Songs that never die . . . enriched with valuable his- torical and biographical sketches . . . Philadelphia National Publishing co. [cl892]. 615 p. 8«. RiKBAULT, Edward F.: American national songs [with music]. Leisure hour, 1876, vol. 25, pp. 90-92. Saffell, W. T. R. : Hail Columbia, the Flag and Yankee Doodle Dandy. Baltimore, T. Newton Kurtz, 1864. 123 p. 8». Smith, Nicholas: Stories of great national songs. Milwaukee, The Young church- man co. [etc. etc., 1899]. 238 p. 2 pi., 18 port. (incl. front.). 19} cm. SoNNECK, 0. G. : Bibliography of early secular American music. Washington, D . C. Printed for the author by H. L. McQueen, 1905. x, 194 p. 29 cm. Spofford, Ainsworth R.: The lyric element in American history. Columbia His- torical Society, Records, 1904, vol. 7. (Same printed separately.) Scuba, John Philip: National, patriotic, and typical airs of all lands, with copious notes. Philadelphia, H. Coleman [cl890]. 283 p. 4\ [Compiled by authority of the Secretary of the Navy, 1889, for the use of the department.] Stevenson, E. Irenaeub: Our ''national" songs. Independent, 1897, vol. 49, nos. 252&-2561. Watne, Fltnn: Our national songs and their writers. National magazine, 1899/1900, vol. 11, pp. 284-296. White, Richard Grant: National hymns. How they are written and how they are not written. A lyric and national study for the times. New York, Rudd A Carleton [etc.], 1861. x, [llHd2 p. incl. front. 23 cm. AMERICA. The author of ''America '^ American notes and queries, 1889/90, vol. 4, pp. 283- 284. Bateman, Stringer: The national anthem: A Jacobite hymn and rebel song [con- tains also references to earlier articles]. Gentleman's magazine, 1893, vol. 275, pp. 33-45. Benson, L. F.: America [and the Episcopal hjrmnal]. Independent, 1897, vol. 49, p. 51. Literature Used for this Report. 159 BouLT, S. H.: God oave the Queen. Good words, 1886, vol. 36, pp. 813-815. Bbowne, C. a.: The story of ''My country, 'tis of thee." Musician, 1908, vol. 13, p. 309. Ghappbll, William : Old English popular music. A new ed. with a preface and notes and the earlier examples entirely revised by H. Ellis Wooldridge. London, Chappell & CO. [etc.]; New York, Novello, Ewer & co., 1893. 2 v. front. {facBim.) 27 cm. First pub. 1838-40 as ''A collection of national English aiis" which was afterwards expanded into his ''Popular music of the olden time.'' (1859. 2 V.) Part of the latter ed. was pub. under title "The ballad literature and popular music of the olden time." [God save our lord the King, vol. 2, pp. 194-200.] Ghbtsandeb, Fribdbich: Henry Carey und der Ursprung des EAnigsgesanges God save the King. JahrbUcher fOr musikalische Wissenschaft, 1863, vol. 1, pp. 287-407. Glabk, Richabd. comp. and ed.: An account of the national anthem entitled God save the kingl . . . Selected, edited, and arranged. London, Printed for W. Wright, 1822. 1 p. 1., [vi-xxviii, 208 p. plates, ports. 23 cm. "Glees:" pp. 137-203. G[bawfobd], G. a. : God save the King [excellent summing up in &ivor of the Jacobite origin]. Julian's dictionary of hymnology, 2d. ed., 1907, pp. 437-440. CuMMiNos, William H[athan]: God save the king; the origin and history of the music and words of the national anthem . London, Novello and company, limited ; New York, Novello, Ewer and co., 1902. v, 126 p.. incl. music, front., port. 20 cm. Engel, Cabl: An introduction to the study of national music; comprising researches into popular songs, traditions, and customs. London, Longmans, Green, Reader, and Dyer, 1866. [Pp. 13-18, instructive remarks on the origin, etc., of "God save the King."] Gauntlett, H. J.: God save the King, a hymn of the Chapels Royal. Notes and queries. Id ser., 1859, vol. 7, pp. 63-64. God 8AVB THE Kino. Gentleman's magazine, 1814, vol. 84, 2, p. 42, 9^100, 323-324, 339, 430, 552. God save the King [on the origin]. Gentleman's magazine, 1836, new ser., vol. 6, pp. 141-142. "God save the King," its authorship [conmiunication from A. W. Thayer, John Moore, B. D. A., and editorial comment]. Dwight's journal of music, 1877, vol. 37, nos. 7, 9, 10. God save the Queen [origin of the words]. Chambers's journal, 1867, 4th ser., no. 206, pp. 775-778. God save the Queen. American notes and queries, 1889, vol. 3, pp. 1-3. Gould, S. Babino: God save our gracious queen [Notes to songs, English Minstrelsie, vol. 1, pp. xxv-xxvii]. [Gbove, Sib Geobge and Kidson, Fbank]: God save the King [r^um^ of the whole controversy]. Grove's dictionary of music and musicians, 2d. ed., 1906, vol. 2, pp. 188-191. Hadden, J. CuTHBEBT.: The "God save the Queen myths." Aigosy (Lend.), 1900, vol. 72, pp. 93-100. The intebnational patbiotio aib Amebica — God save the Queen [with music and facsimile by Rev. 8. F. Smith, 1893 of "America"]. Outlook, 1898, vol. 59, pp. 563-565. 160 Literature Used for this Report. Mead, Edwin D.: The hymn ''America.'' Boston Evening Transcript, October 19, 1908, p. 10. Moore, Aubehtine Woodward: Popular hjrmn claimed by all nations. Musical leader and concert goer, 1904, vol. 8, No. 8, pp. 6-^. ''My country, 'tis of thee " [reprint of an account of its origin in the words of Rev. S. F. Smith]. Mdaic, 1898, vol. 14, p. 107. Myers, A. Walus: God save the Queen. The story of our national hymn. The Ludgate, 1900/01, vol. 11, pp. 148-154. N., J. G.: The history of "God save the King." Gentleman's magazine, 1836, new ser. vol. 6, pp. 369-374. The national hymn [inconsequential note on the origin of "God save the King"]. Atlantic monthly, 1896. vol. 77, p. 720. The story of the hymn "America " [condensed from an article in the N. Y. World, Sunday Jan. 20, 1895]. The Critic, 1895, vol. 26, p. 69. Tafpert, Wilhelm: Wandemde melodien. Eine musikalische Studie, 2. verm, und verb. aufl. Berlin, Brachvogel & Ranft, 1889 [contains interesting remarks on "God save the King"]. 2 p.l., 95, [1] p. 22) cm. W., J. R.: Origin of "God save the King." Gentleman's magazine, 1836, new ser. vol. 5. pp. 594-595. What is our claim to "God save the Kino?" Musical news, 1908, vol. 35, nos. 920-921. Where "America" was first suno [two communications from William Copley Winslow and Edwin D. Mead]. Boston Evening Transcript, 1908, Oct. 27, p. 11. HAIL COLUMBIA Facsimile of "Hail Columbia" by Joseph Hopkinson [dated, March 24, 1838]. Henkehi' Catalogue of autograph letters, etc., no. 738, p. 48. Hail Columbia: Moore's complete encyclopaedia of music [1880], pp. 358-359. Hail Columbia: American notes and queries, 1888/89, vol. 2, p. 18. [KiDsoN, Frank]: Hail Columbia. Grove's dictionary of music and musicians, 2d. ed., 1906, vol. 2, pp. 271-272. [McKoY, William]: Origin of "Hail Columbia" [reprint from Poulson's Daily Adver- tiser ^ Phila., 1829, where article appeared under pseudonym "Lang Syne." (Dawson's) Historical magazine, 1861, vol. 5, pp. 280-282. SoNNEGK, O. G.: Critical notes on the origin of "Hail Columbia." Sammelbftnde d. I. M. G. 1901, vol. 3, pp. 139-166. STAR SPANGLED BANNER Appleton, Nathan: The Star Spangled Banner. An address delivered at the Old South Meeting House, Boston ... on June 14, 1877. Boston, Lockwood, Brooks & Co., 1877. 8^^. 34p. [on the history of the flag, the song, etc.] Browne, C. A.: The story of "The Star-Spangled Banner." Musician, 1907, v. 12, p. 541. Carpenter, John C: "The Star Spangled Banner" [with port, and focsimile]. Century magazine, 1894, vol. 48, pp. 358-363. Chappell, Wm.: "The Star-Spangled Banner" and "To Anacreon in Heaven" [on the authorship of John Stafford Smith]. Notes and Queries (London), 1873, 4th ser., vol. 11, pp. 50-^1. Literature Used for this Report. 161 D0B8BT, Mb8. Anna H. Origin of the Star Spangled Banner [reprinted from Wash- ington Sunday Morning Chronicle]. (Dawson's) Historical magazine, 1861, vol. 5» pp. 282-283. For a nkw National Htmn. North American review., 1906, vol. 183, pp. 047-948. Thb Francis Scott Kbt Mbhorial. Mmisey's magazine, 1898, vol. 20, pp. 326-^326. HiooiNS, Edwin.: The national anthem ''The Star Spangled Banner," Francis Scott Key, and patriotic lines. Baltimore, 1898 [illustrated reprint of the poem with a brief biographical sketch, 12 p. 16^]. Hill, Marion: The Star Spangled Banner. Does it get weighed? Or yet wade? Uncertainty of many school children on the subject. McOlure's magazine, 1900, vol. 15, pp. 262-267 [not historical]. Est, Francis Scott: Poems . . . with an introductory letter by Chief Justice Taney. New York, R. Carter & Bros., 1867 [the letter narrates ''the incidents connected with the origin of the song The Star Spangled Banner" as told the author by Key]. K[n>80N], Frank: Star Spangled Banner. Grove's dictionary of music and musi- cians, 2d ed., 1908. vol. 4, pp. 674-675. King, Horatio: The Star Spangled Banner. Magazine of American history, 1883. Vol. X, pp. 516-517. LossiNG, Benson John: The pictorial field-book of the war of 1812. Facsimile of the original manuscript of the first stanza of "The Star Spangled Banner/' reprinted from Kennedy and Bliss' "Autograph leaves of our country authors;" origin of the hymn narrated in footnote to pp. 956-^58. McLaughlin, J. Fairfax: "The Star-Spangled Banner!'' who composed the music for it. It is American, not English. American Art Journal, 1896. vol. 68, No. 13, pp. 194-195. Mead, Lucia Ambs: Our National Anthem [against "The Star Spangled Banner"]. Outlook, 1903. vol. 75, p. 616. Maryland, Board of pubuc works: The seventh star. Facts and figures about the State of Maryland. Her past greatness and her present prosperity . . . Pub. by the board of public works for the Louisiana purchase exposition. Maryland day, September 12th, 1904. Baltimore, Md. Press of Lucas brothers [1904]. [22] p. front., illus., ports., fecsims. 23} cm. Contains facsimiles. Compiled by [L. H. Dielman]. A MONUMENT TO Francis Scott Eet [by Doyle and port, of K. on p. 128]. The Critic, 1898. new ser. vol. 30, p. 129. The National Anthek [on the official adoption of "The Star Spangled Banner" by the Army and Navy]. Outlook, 1903. vol. 75, p. 245. National htmnologt [on our national anthem with special reference to "The Star Spangled Banner"]. Scribner's magazine, 1907. vol. 42, pp. 380-381. Pinkerton, William: The Star Spangled Banner. Notes & Queries, 1864. 3d ser. vol. 6, pp. 429-430. Preble, George Henrt: The Star Spangled Banner, autographic copies, additional verses, etc. (8°. 7p.) published separately in ed. of 100 copies with facsimile. Boston, 1876. Preble, Geo. Henrt: The Star Spangled Banner. Autograph copies, additional verses, etc. Communicated by Rear Admiral . . . [with facsimile of copy dated Oct. 21, 1840]. New England Historical and Genealogical r^jster, 1877. vol. 31, pp. 28-31. 85480—09 11 162 Literature Used for this Report. Peeblb, Gbo. Henby: Three historic flags and three September victories [contaioB important matter on "The Star Spangled Banner" especially the different auto- graphs]. New England Historical and Genealogical Register, 1874. vol. 28, pp. 17-41. Salisbubt, Stbphbn: The Star Spangled Banner and national songs [Read at a meet- ing of the American Antiquarian Society, in Worcester, Oct. 21]. Dwight's journal of music, 1872. vol. 32, pp. 332-333. Salisbubt, Stephen: The Star Spangled Banner and national airs. [Read before the American Antiquarian Society, Oct. 21, 1872.] American Historical Rec- ord, 1872. vol. 1, pp. 650-^554. Sausbubt, Stephen: An essay on the Star Spangled Banner and national songs. Read before the Society, October 21, 1872. Worcester, 1873. 8*. 15 p. Re- printed from the Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society. Same [second ed.] with additional notes and songs. Worcester, 1873. 8*. 24 p. (ed. of 100). Sausbubt, Stephen: The Star Spangled Banner and national songs. American Antiquarian Society, Proceedings, 1873, pp. 43-53. Sohell, Fbank H.: Our great national hymn "The Star Spangled Banner" and its origin [inconsequential note]. Leslie's weekly, 1898. vol. 87, p. 85. P^BX BELEcnoN OP THE MUSIC FOB THE "Stab Spanoled Bannbb" by Ferdinand Durang.] Iowa Historical Record, 1897. vol. 13, p. 144. Shippen, Rebeoca Llotd: The original manuscript of "The Star Spangled Banner." Pennsylvania Magazine of Hist. Jb Biogr., 1901. vol. 25, pp. 427-428. Smith, F. S. Key: Fort McHenry and the "Star Spangled Banner" [with port, of Francis Scott Key]. The Republic magazine, 1908. vol. 1, No. 4, pp. 10-20. The Stab Spanoled Banner [facsimile of the handwriting of the author, Francis S. Key, dated Washington, October 21, 1840, formerly in possession of Lewis J. Cist]. Smith's American historical and literary curiosities, 2d ser. PhiladelphJA, PI. LV. The Stab Spanoled Banneb: Dwi^t's journal of music, 1861. vol. 19, pp. 37, 39, 46. The Stab Spanoled Banneb: American Historical Record, 1873. vol. 2, pp. 24-25. Stab Spangled Banneb [inconsequential note]. American notes and queries, 1888. vol. 1, pp. 199. The Stab Spanoled Banneb. [Fiu»iniile of four stanzas in autograph of F. S. Key, dated Oct. 21, 1840] Henkels' Catalogue of autograph letters, etc. No. 738, p. 50. "Tanet, Rooeb B.]: ''The Star Spangled Banner" [extract from a letter dated 1856, written to her giving the origin of the words and] Contributed by Mrs. Rebecca Lloyd Shippen. Pennsylvania magazine of history and biography, 1898/99. Vol. 22, pp. 321-325. Wabneb, John L.: The origin of the American National anthem called the Star Spangled Banner. [Read before the Pennsylvania Historical Society, at its meet- ing, 1867]. (Dawson's) Historical magazine, 1867. Vol. 11, pp. 279-280. WiLCOZ, Mabion: America's National song [The Star Spangled Banner] Harper's weekly, 1905. Vol. 49, p. 373. X. The Star Spangled Banner . . . Musical times, 1896. Vol. 37, pp. 516-519. Literature Used for this Report. 163 YANKEE DOODLE. Bansxmbb, Cabounb T.: Yankee Doodle. Lippincott's magazine, 1896. Vol. 58, pp. 138-140. Bbll, William: Yankee, its origin and meaning. Notes and queries, 1853. let ser., vol. 7, p. 103. Boos, J. E.: Where ''Yankee Doodle" was written. American music journal, 1907. Vol. 6, No. 8, pp. 30-32. Gabtbb, N. H.: Origin of Yankee Doodle [repr. without date irom the Albany RegisUr or New York Stateeman] Fanner & Moore 's GollectionB, 1824. Vol. 3, pp. 217-218. Dbab Old Yankbb DoodlbI The song is seven centuries old and four great nations have owned it. Metronome, 1899. Vol. 15, No. 9, p. 10. £. W. C: Yankbb Doodlb. lippincott's magazine, 1876. Vol. 18, pp. 126-128. Flood, Wm. H. Gbattan: The Irish origin of the tune of '' Yankee Doodle. " [With music sheet containing the tune as printed by Aird, 1782, and the tune of *' All the way to Galway" from a MS8. written 1750]. The Dolphin, 1905. Vol. 8, pp. 187-193. J., G. W.: Kitty Fisher. Notes & Queries, 1865. 3d ser., vol. 8, pp. 81-82. LossiNQ, Bbnson J.: The origin of Yankee Doodle [repr. from the Poughkeepsie Eagle]. littell's Living age, 1861, vol. 70, pp. 382-384; Dwight's journal of music, 1861, vol. 19, p. 107. LoBBiNO, Bbnson John. The pictorial field-book of the revolution. New York, Harper & brothers, 1860. [Yankee Doodle National Song of the Revolution] p. 683. MooBB, Aubbbtinb Woodwabd: Young America in musical tones [on origin of '' Yan- kee Doodle**] Musical leader and concert goer, 1905. Vol. 10, Noe. 2-3. Obigin of Yankbb Doodlb. Musical reporter, Boston, 1841. Vol. 1, May, pp. 206- 209. Thb Obioin of Yankbb Doodlb. Various theories of the meaning of the words. Music and literature, 1898. Vol. I, No. 6, p. 10. PoBSON, JuNiOB. Original of the national melody "Yankee Doodle" [satire on the ethymological derivation of the words Yankee Doodle]. Democratic review, 1839. Vol. 5, pp. 213-221; repr. 1855, vol. 35, pp. 125-131. RiMBAUi/r, Edwabd F. Kitty Fisher. Notes A Queries, 1870. 4th ser., vol. 5, pp. 319-320. Yankee Doodle [note on 18th cent, bioadaidee]. Notes and queries (London ) , 1860. 2d. ed. vol. 10, pp. 426. Rtdbb, Jaubs F. The painter of '* Yankee Doodle" [Archibald M. Willard]. New England magazine, 1895/96. New ser., vol. 13, pp. 483-494. SoNNBGK, 0. Q. Yankee Doodle nicht ''made in (jermany." Allgemeine Musik Zeitung, 1907. Vol. 34, p. 381. Sonneck, 0. G. Yankee Doodle (article contributed to new ed. of Grove's Dictionary, 1909). S[QuntE], W. B. Yankee Doodle [comprehensive review of the different theories]. Grove's dictionary of music and musicians, 1st ed., vol. 4, pp. 493-495. A VEBT FUNNT OLD TUNB [Yankee Doodle]. Brainard's musical, 1901. Vol. 3, No. 1, p. 30. Wbstcott, T. Yankee and Yankee Doodle. Notes and queries, 1852. 1st ser., vol. 6, pp. 56-58. 164 Literature U sed for this Report. Yankee, Debivation of. Notes and queriee (Lon.), Ist ser., 1Q51, vol. 3, pp. 260, 437, 461; vol. 4, pp. 13, 344, 392-393; 1852, vol. 5, pp. 86, 258; 1852, vol. 6; pp. 66-58; 1853, vol. 7, pp. 103, 164. Yankee Doodle [miscellaneouB queries and answers as to derivation, origin, etc.] Historical magazine, 1857. Vol. I, pp. 26-27, 58-59, 86, 91-92, 124, 156-157, 189, 221, 279, 314, 375; 1858, vol. 2, pp. 214-215, 280; 1859, vol. 3, pp. 22-23, 189; 1861, vol. 5, p. 123. Yankee Doodle [miscellaneous information on origin of the term, etc.] Magazine of American History, 1877. Vol. 1, pp. 390, 452, 576; 1879, vol. 3, p. 265; 1884, vol. 11, p. 176; 1886, vol. 15, p. 99; 1891, vol. 25, p. 256; 1891, vol. 26, pp. 75, 236. Yankee Doodle [with the old text and additional stanzas] Farmer and Moore's Col- lection, historical and miscellaneous, 1824. Vol. 3, pp. 157-160. Yankee Doodle. Dwight's journal of music, 1853/54. Vol. 4, p. 27. Yankee Doodle [as a popular air of Biscay and Hungary]. Dwight's Journal of music, 1858. Vol. 13, p. 133. Yankee Doodle [notes containing some ctuious etymological information, variants, etc]. American notes and queries, 1889, vol. 3, pp. 161-162; 1889/90, vol. 4, pp. 72, 142; 1890, vol. 5, p. 225. Yankee Doodle [brief sketch with the supposed original text from Isaiah Thomas's collection of broadsides, 1813]. Duycldnck's cyclopiedia of American literature. Philadelphia, 1875. I, pp. 463-464. Yankee, its ettiioloot. Notes and queries, 5th ser., 1877, vol. 7, pp. 126, 387-938; 1878, vol. 10, p. 467; 1879, vol. 11, pp. 18, 38. Yankee [derivation of the words]. Webster's dictionary; Standard dictionary; Bart- lett's dictionary of americanisms, etc.^ <» These notes on the printed Yankee Doodle literature would be incomplete with- out reference to the important but unfortunately unprinted essays by Mr. George H. Moore and Mr. Albert Matthews mentioned throughout these pages. 166 ith Bac . chos's vine, aiid, Vfults. I'll with Bacchus'i vine The news through OIyTnp« Immediately flnv! When old Thunder pretended to give hipiftlt « If thefe mortals are fuffer'd their rcUem^'" "■ rfue^' meie mori^i '"- ■""— - •■—" -" . The devil a goddcfs will ftay nljovc Kai ■■ Hark" already they^ciy^ ' ^ j •' In tranfpoTtsofjoy,', J . \,. „ ■ '• " Awaytothe Tons of Anacrcon^yc'll ((>', . . ■ And there, with good fellows, wt'ft Jeain lo mlwint ■ The m)rtle of Venus with Bacchut'Jvftic. ' The yellow-hair'd God ,and his ninp fully maid=, •■ From He!icon*s tanks will inconiijiem flee, • rdaTh\villbpaftbQt«f tenantlefsthades., / ;,: .' And the ^-forlted hiHa'nicre 4efarlw«)l6e. ■ " " >r,' no fear out, W- do ils«rrayd, . ..J , _ ,V I'll (w-ingc ihe ringleaders.Twarrai log>. fof tUuidatm^Vrt"^'***-* .- 45 iKith-yacchnsH ywe.t r, ■ ^ . -^Apollo 'THE VOCAL ENCHANTRESS." LON[>ON, ITSl. 168 169 PLATE II.— FROM JOHN STAFFORD SMITH'S "I 171 SONG harmoaiicd hy the Author 33 HTTr r \i - vat in fun fW a frw Som of hm^ mon« a «a* in full |C»e »at in fi»ll jfl^ .ti-tion and patron would ' be and m , ti -.flon and patron woul [iiu:-j, 1*11 Jcud jou my naiu= :uid inspire you lu buot ; And besides I'll In^iriict von lik' iliiiiliilli T;,,; .Myiilc ofA^ctms iviili Bacchns'sVine ']■]:.■ m-.« ilirongli Olympic ini Wlicii wld Tli'Uider pretcnlc MUSICAL MISCELLANY," l(M. 180 181 182 f ^^[]/^ T^a/ /^S>^, ^tT~,^ <^:«fco^ ^Je;^,^ ^?:-5?^, PLATES V-VI.— THE KEIM AUTOGRAPH (CA. 1842). IN PC 188 i^a ^;tL. /^^.., r ^^>^^ ^ fc^ _^tcOT^, . « I J t tSSION OF THE PENNSYLVANIA HISTORICAL SOCIETY. 184 185 111! ! mii 186 189 190 si J 191 ^ •111 5 ^. '-^ i^ s v: -V ^ '^^1 z z 111 Ill X »- u. o (A (A UJ i/i . S UJ < s z 3 J O u < X « I. ui < a. 192 193 194 196 H*^^ 4\^ ^ z u ft. Ill X I- u. o z o S III Is oa s 3 O u I. •c 111 xm 197 \ 198 if^'» > ' •♦-. ,i^4% •' '^'^ *•- i« c91ii»bi» p^^l^ Nnd ., hall: te Heroet hw^boni bwj4 v^fiofmij^wvibMb frT* -^^jT. ^*' f?;. ;3r '»' -."^ ^ s^^^^ inrrr ' ' roumiour Ll.ber.ty as a b»!>4^ !!FothPf« lolnd ;. dJJ 1^ pt^Ct* we I Jn4n0rtal PtrHois riff once ir.or<* Defend" ;ouf»j5bl«^ defend your fhore ■ Lft no rude foe vith Impious hand • Let W rude foe wlib I»^piou9 hjind JnTade Ih^ fhHne where facred He* Of toll and blood the weli eajj;tid prl«e . While offering ^eace fincere and ju'ft ' /n hear^n re place a manly truft ' ■ i ••jL- It^at ihnjth and laftict wlU prevail Ar ! every fchrme of bO]i|dag«f Call- I'irm united ,v . /Wing thro the world with loud ftppUu/e .;' *> Rlnr th/o'the world with loud «pol»ufe l .v\* Let etrery'cllme to FrfH om de^r Liften wltlili Kyfult^ar* )r%^^vi\t IH U. AU«- iraeh the Ski?« Flm ' unl J . i^ iVt ut U*^ • s < « .-. .^ ^ ,^ With equaj fkM with gftdUke ^owV . - ;^>/...;$: "^ C He gofern* Jn the feaiild^hwir .^rLi'.'t'p^^ Of horrjd'war of guldet /wl • • « — /f." The haopler X\mti^ of holi«ft .\ >jrta ^mM "tc%-r. ' . v?5<->i> ' ^^ - -^ Ci,*.w- J— PLATES IX-X.-" HAIL COLUMBIA." WlUUGl 199 ■ x _<(,, .#- r .'\ - -? « • f-rv ••tc "t^t .•■ .*• •.* c J ■/u i \ >. :,^- -f (k»kold,|bi^;iaief Who now ^n «ii4i : >U-v .;--y;- • v> -Once «^krf\«iei^ >h tHM^ ftaodi . « > are fli\fl oq heoAi .and y ou ^^ b«^ w flnllUK III dlMiiy . -A flooat obfcuf^ "C^nainM 4if 6 - -,> Wi • 7-5. »• '\f''.*. ■yt^v-r tAiJKEEs .•'.::^^'»*^V •■■•'■ "' ^ Yih* -!>• ■ '^i¥i n — — — —-^^^ — •*r' it 'lljr «iily way to ke^p «ff war. And gutrd'galoft pfHecutfbn,' H at»avt fo br wpM prtparV Vfiih hfaret oT rffolueloh Vaak<^ Poodle letli Unltf , ^ , Yknkee roj»dle Dandy ^ At patrioctyftni maintain our Hcbt, '\knk».^ Poodle ra.»^fl»P6thert let u< 1;-^ ' May foon Se wift'd for h««r airf Te % Whil** Adams pM^% thcnalon • When IVace (hall niVe iYv, natJav AiH itiJJ ci r de^r.faMightVrefilejo guard, . Ajd Coinm^rte^fra»f«m^tte^,P^** lii«#ery fituation . ; ^ . . . '' ' Ma?ikin">* ' >£nkee Oooifli* guard your eoak. Their Yanke^ J^i^^^Mf i|>^^^l^^[^* Yankee Poodte Partdf: J \. Tw>ke<^npV&le"yandyt^ ' frarnoi then i»cr tbrea^ or^boaft^ ' f^ Bwietth Ae^l^i^**^ V)*^** ,* . Vankee Doodle^ Dandy > . ' • ^ ^ RJji«?.^k0e J>jfp'UtT^»^dy« . » - • • • ^ . ■ • * •. • . •♦ . . : « -»i.»- ■;-■.•-■ . ION. PUBLISHED BETWEEN 1798 AND T803. 200 sot PLATE Xl— FBOM S '5 AMUSEMENT." 204' 90t s»af f aaa «u n9 218 214 TKe return of ULYSSES to ITHACA N i ci.f..nr. ^s riTr l ClLf "^ T J* T : -'••^'^Jii I J 1 , ling y-^\yt'ios and thofc chiefs who . out of near, a 3 i mil-lion So luck-i - ly their bsL^^on favd be — fore the vails of r r I -I -I r i I J ibJ . 11 -ion Yankee doodle doodle doo black Negro he .get J I J 1 1 J ■' J J I ^mm ^m m fum - bo And when you come \o '^ ^ i our town well make you drink with " I r J I jj i PLATES XIV-XV.— FROM CHARLES 215 I f rf r bumbo ' ii fiji f J il l III •««« }. 4 * 1 .^Tio halving taken fiicki and burnt that very fiHI qf Cities* .Eeturnd in triumph ^«hi]e the Bards, all ftruck up aiaorous dttti^^s. « * . Such a Yankee doodle 9lc* - i .The Cyclops firft wc vifittd, Vlyfiea nailc him cry oHt, .'JTor he eat his mutton,drank his wine>and then he fokii hiii eye out Yankee doodle kc. 4 .From thcncv we went to Circe's Und^wlio faith a g^irl of fj^nk ift» .ffor (he made us drunk, an cVungVi us all to aises. goats aiid inonkies« Yankee doodle &c« .And then to hell and bark again, then ifchere the Syrens C*ra Swell cadence, tril and (hake^almoil as well a» Matlam Mam. Yankee doodle &.c • 6 ' Tb fell Charybdis next, and then where yawning Scylla grappfes, -SiK men at once and eats them all, juit like fo many apples. Yankee doodle fcc« 7 .From thence to where Appollo*s bulls and ihcep all play and Ikip foj ..Hram whence Ulyfses went alone to the liland of Calypfo, • *- Yankee doodle &c • . 8 And then? he kifsil and toy'd and playVi.tis true upon my life Sir, •Tin baring turn'd his miftrcfs off he's coming to his wife Sir. ^nkee doodle' doo rfrrT t-^ It I U8> *« ::rrt?2: ' ' li « » rninv' rasr.// r^ ^r>.-,i^ ^ grru r.' v vrtf 5-S^^i -- -4 .-:■:) ..TTIER PERKINS' BOOK 1790." 328 229 PLATE XUL— FROM A MSS. COLLECTION ATTACHED TO AN INCOMPLETE COI F THOMAS WALTER'S "GflOUNDS AND RULES OF MUSICK." BOSTON, 17«0. 232 238 2^^ 287 mo 2341 244 346 'IK. i'^i^i ^' f : Bfi? -» •■( jIs-s ^ !«5 ,j ijsl 1 im S S 'SIC f-CKJ ^ -■ ■ -o5 ; Mi s ■ ■aiiis i u-r M •248 INDEX. A., W. S., 90. Abercrombie, General, 96, 154, 155. Adams, John, 46, 52, 69. "Adama and Liberty," 24, 25, 26, 40, 45. Aiken, W. H., 41, 71, 73. Aird, James, 106, 120. Albany Ileg;ister, 152. Albany Statesman, 96, 152. Aldeiman, L. A., 83. "All the Way to Galway," 106, 146-150. ''Altpreussiches Rondo," 72. "America," 73-78. Additional stanzas, 73. Author, 73. Autographs, 7^75. Bibliographical notes, 157-160. Di£ferences in text and music, 73-75. Facsimiles, 73, 74. First sung, 7&-76. God save the King, 75, 77, 78. Origin, 75-76. Original text, 74. American Antiquarian Society, 135. American musical miscellany, 25, 77. American origin of "Yankee Doodle," 100, 128-142, 160-156. American Songster (1800), 25. American Naval and Patriotic Songster, 28. American Republican Harmonist, 25. American Songster, New York, 28. Amherst, General, 96, 153. "Anacreon a poet," 23. Anacreontic Society, 18-20. Anburey, 82, 85, 109. "And now our Senators are gone," 121. Ame, Th. Aug., 104, 106, 108, 120. Arnold, Samuel, 18, 19, 23, 120. Baker, W. S., 53, 62, 63. Baltimore Musical Miscellany, 26, 40. Bangs, Edward, 140-142. Barton, Andrew, 110. 85480—09 ^12 Barton, E. M., 35. "Battle of the Poete," 95. Beanes, Dr. and the St. Sp. B., 8-11. Bell, W., 92. Bellisle march, 125. "Best exchange," 143. Bibliographical notes, 157-164. "Bird of Birds," 28. Biscay origin of "Yankee Doodle," 101, 107, 111. "Blackbird," 135, 138-140. Bordes, C, 111. "Boston Patriotic Song." See "Adams and liberty." Boyle, C. A., 41, 71, 73. "Brave Sons of Ck)lumbia," 25. Breck, Samuel, 129. Brinton, H. F., 54. "British Grenadiers," 125. British origin of song "Yankee Doodle," 96, 99, 103, 105, 107, 110, 128-142. "Brother Ephraim sold his cow," 131, 133. "Buckskin," 82. Buigh's anecdotes of music, 102, 118. C, J., 50, 54, 63, 102, 118. Qa ira, 68. Calliope, 22. Gapron, H., 69. "Captain Gooding," 135, 137, 141. "Captain Davis," 136, 141. "Captain Goodwin," 135, 137, 141. "Captain Washington," 135, 141. Carmagnole, 68. Carr, Benj., 46, 68, 121. Carr, Joseph, 47, 121. Carter, N. H., 152. Chamberlain, J. D., 83. Chappell, William, 18. Charles I and II and Yankee Doodle, 100, 101, 107, 144-115. Cherokee origin of the word "Yankee," 85. 249 250 I nde X. (I Ghetwood, 94. ''Chorus, sung before General Waahing- ton/* 63-66. Cist, L. J., 35. Columbian Anacreontic Society, 24. Columbian songster (1797), 25; (1799), 25. ''Columbians all the present hour,'' 122. "Columbians arise," 26. Come all ye sons of song," 77. Compleat Tutor for the Fife," 67, 122. "Congress, the," 144. Connel, 22. Coverly, Jr., N., 138. Cromwell and Yankee Doodle, 97, 100, 101, 103, 114-115. Cummingham, Wm., 125. Cummings, Wm., 20. Custis, G. W. P., 50, 54, 61-62. "Dansvotrelit,"51. Danza Esparta, 102, 111. Dawes, Judge, 140. Dawes, Th., 77. Dawson's Hist. Mag., 49, 50. "Death or liberty." See Bail Columbia. Deane, Silas, 82. "Defence of Fort McHenry." See "Star- Spangled Banner." "D'Estaing ecUpeed, or Yankee Doodle's defeat," 126, 127. Dibdin's Return of Ulisses, 119. Dibdin's songs (1799), 25. "Did Uttle Dickey," 104, 108, 120. Dielman, L. H., 29-30. "Disappointment, the," 110. Dobbin, R. A., 34. Doodle, derivation o( the word, 89-94. "Doodle doo," 143-145. Dorsey, A. H., 10. Douw, Mrs. V. P., 154. Drummond, 56. Dunlap, Wm., 49. Durang (Charles and Ferdinand), 11-17, 33, 49, 59. Dutch origin of the song "Yankee Doo- dle,'^ 100, 107, 111-113. Dutch origin of the words "Yankee Doo- dle," 91-93. Dutch Yanky, 93. Duyckinck, 100, 111. Duyse, Van, 113. "Early one morning," 140. Ebsworth, T. W., 114. Edes, Benj., 11-12, 13, 16. Elson, Louis C, 15, 22, 46, 54, 58, 70, 78, 91, 104, 109, 112, 122, 154. "Embargo and peace," 26. Emerick, A. G., 49. "Ev'rywhere fine ladies flirting," 143. Eyster, Mrs. Nellie, 13. Ezpata dantza. 111. F., J. T., 84. "Farmer (The) and his sons' return from a visit to the camp," 135, 141. Farmer & Moore, 96, 133, 135, 150-156. Famsworth, C. H., 41, 71, 73. "Father and I went down (up) to camp," 100, 104, 134-142. Father's return from camp, 104. Fayles. See Phile, Philipp. "Federal March," 68. "Federal Overture," 68. Federal song for the anniversary of Ameri- can independence, 49. Ferris, Mary L. D., 35, 53, 69, 74, 75, 153. Feyles. See Phile, Philipp. Fielding, H., 94. Fisher, Lydia (Kitty), 97, 100, 101, 103, 108, 115-117. Fisher's jig, 101, 103, 117-118. Fiske, 108. Flood, W. H. Grattan, 18, 19, 20, 22, 106, 119, 139, 146-150. "For the Fourth of July," 26. "For worms when old," 26. Ford, John, 94. Ford, P. L., 62. Fold, W. C, 135. Foster, William, 25. "Fourth of July, "26. Fox, Gilbert, 44, 46, 47. "Freedom," 26. "From meanness first," 81. Fyles. See Phile, Philipp. G., G. A., 115. G., M. N., 87. Gantvoort, A. J., 41, 71, 73. "General Washington's March," 122. ' ' Gfentleman's Amusement, "66. Gerald, S. J. A. Fitz, 53. Glen, 120. "God Save America," 77. "God save each female's right," 77. God save Geoige Washington," 77. God save the King," 75, 77, 78, 125, 157-160. "Gkxl save the President," 77. II Ind e X. 251 <( God aaye the Thirteen States,'' 77. Gordon, Wm., 82, 84, 95, 133. Gow, 149. Graupner, Gottlieb, 122. Greek origin of the wordfl ''Yankee Doo- dle,'* 94. Griffin, A. P. C, 73. Griswold, RufuB W., 43. Grove's Dictionary, 18, 19, 78, 104, 114, 11& H., S. M., 81, 89. "Hail Columbia," 4^-72. Author. See Hopkinson, Jos. Autographs, 69-70. Bibliographical Notes, 157-158, 160. Composer. See Phile, Philip, and Philip Roth. Differences in text and music, 69-72. Early editions, 46-47. Facsimiles, 46, 160. First sung, 44. Forerunners, 48-49. Melody. See "President's March." Origin, 43. Original manuscripts. See Auto- graphs. Popularity, early, 44-47. Hale, Edward E., 76, 140. Hamilton, Sir F. W., 113. Hancock, John, 98, 129, 130. Hancock, Madame, 129, 130. Hankey, Sir Richard, 18, 24. Harding, 17. "Hark, the Trumpet of War," 26. Hastings, Jonathan, 84. Heckewelder, 86-^9. Hendon, 13, 15. Henkel, S. V., 35, 69. "Here you may see the happy congress," 144. Hero (the), 125. "Hessian Minuet," 125. Hessian origin of "Yankee Doodle," 106, 107, 110, 111. Hewitt, James, 122. Hildebrand, 69. Hogg, 139, 148. Holden, Mrs. Austin, 124. Holmes, 0. W., 39. Hopkinson, Francis, 48, 50. Hopkinson, Joseph, 43, 46, 47, 48, 53, 69. Howard, Mrs. Charles, 34. Howe, Wm., 47. Howell, Richard, 63, 64. Hubach, Otto, 72. Hulbert, J., 124. Hungarian origin of "Yankee Doodle," 102, 107, 111. Hutchinson, 87. "In Years which are Past," 25. Indian origin of the word "Yankee," 85-89. Irish origin of "Yankee Doodle." 106, 14^-150. Irving, Washington, 86. "Jefferson and Liberty," 25. "Jefferson's Election," 26. Jepson, B., 41, 71, 73. Johnson, Sir William, 150-156. Keim, George, 33, 34, 35, 69. Kennedy and Bliss, 33. Key, Francis Scott. Su "Star-Spangled Banner;" own account of origin, 8-10. Kidson, F., 18, 22, 78, 106, 114, 118, 120, 125, 127, 145, 147, 149. "Kitty Fisher's Jig," 101, 103, 108, 117- 118. Kobb6, 73, 76, 105. Kossuth, 102, 111. L.,T. Lincolnshire origin of the jrord Yankee, 91. Leigh, H., 101. Lewalter, 106, 107, 111. Lexington, Battle of, and "Yankee Doodle," 109. "Lol I quit my native skies," 47. Lossing, B. A., 34, 50, 52, 99, 102. "Lovely Nancy," 125. "Low song upon a high subject," 143. Lucy Locket (Lockit), 97, 98, 100, 103, 115. Lydenbuig, 151. Lydia Locket, 97, 98, 115. Macaroni, origin of the word, 126, 127-129. McCarty, 49. McFarland, Paddy, 13. McKoy, Wm., 50, 54, 57, 58. McLaughlin, J. Fairfax, 18. McLaughlin-GUchrist, 41, 71, 73. M'Lean, J., 55. McMaster, J. B., 52. Mahar, James, 35. "Maid's (The) Lamentation," 139. "Marblehead's a rocky place," 134. Marseillaise, 68. "Martial Music of Camp Dupont," 123. Mason, Lowell, 75, 76. / 252 Index. "MasoDic Ode/' 22. Matthews, Albert, 80, 81, 94, 99, 104, 105, 118, 127, 128, 130, 135, 138, 141, 143, 152, 154. Mead, D., 76. Moller, J. C, 69. Moncrie£F, M. T., 102, 118. Montgomerie, Major, 114. Mooney, Jamee, 85, 89. Moore, 6. M., 80, 93, 105, 129, 130. Morier, J., 91. MhIbo, 19. ''Musical Repodtory," 26. Najaf Koolie Merza, 90. "Nancy Dawaon," 97, 115. "Nankee Doodle," 97, 98, 114. Nason, E., 52, 91. National Song Book, 26, 47, 49. National Songster (1814), 30. New American Songster, 28. "New Constitutional March," 68. "New Federal song." See "Hail Colum- bia." "New Hail Columbia," 47. "New Yankee Doodle," 122. "New York Federal song," 46. New York Remembrancer, 25. Nicholson, J. H., 11, 17, 30, 31, 32. "Nightingale," 25. Nile, H., 153. "No more shall tyrants here," 74. Nonsense rhymes and Yankee Doodle, 112. Norwegian oiiginr of Yankee, 91. "Not the fictions of Greece," 25. "Now let rich music sound," 77. "0! how joyful shall I be," 110. ' * 0, say can you see. " See Star-Spangled Banner. O'Callaghan, 150, 152. O'Neill, Francis, 147, 150. "Ode for the fourth of July," 77. "Of the victory won," 26. Omrod, J., 47. "Oppression," 81. Oriental origin of the words Yankee Doodle, 89-91. Oswald, 149. Otway, T., 94. "Our joyful hearts to-day," 73. "Our country's efficiency," 25. "O'er the forest," 26. Paine, Thomas (Robert Treat), 24, 25. Parke, W. T., 18. "PauwelJonas," 113. Persian origin of the words "Yankee Doo- dle," 89-91. Petersfield, 127. Petrie, 147. Pfalz. iS'ec Phile, PhiHp. Pfyle. 5'ec Phile, Philip. Pfyles. iS«6 Phile, Philip. Phazles. See Phile, Philip. Pheil. ^o; Phile, Philip. Phile, PhiUp (Fyles, Pfeil, Phyla, etc.), 49-52, 53-54, 55, 56, 57, 58-61 (bio- graphical notes), 62, 63, 65, 66, 68-69 (proof as composer of the President's March). Phyla. See Phile, Philip. Phyles. i^ee Phile, PhiUp. Phylo. See Phile, Philip. Phylz. 5« Phile, PhiUp. Popularity (early) of Yankee Doodle in America, 108-110. Porson junior, 94. Portsmouth Yankee, 81. Poynton, Thomas, 126, 127. Pre-revolutionary origin of song Yankee Doodle, 96, 97, 99, 101, 107, 108, 114, 115, 128-142, 150-156. Preble, Enoch, 126. Preble, G. H., 13, 14, 28, 29-80, 33, 34-39, 52, 69, 75, 104, 120, 126. President's March, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48. Composer. See Philip Phile and Philip Roth. Early editions, 66-70. Facsimiles. First mentioned in print, 68. History, 49-69. Prussian march, 72. Prince Eugene's march, 125. Ravenscroft, E., 94, 144. "Recess, The," 121. Reinagle, A., 59, 63-65. "Return (The) of Ulisses to Ithaca," 119. Revolutionary origin of song "Yankee Doodle," 95, 96, 98, 100, 107. "Rights of woman," 77. Rimbault, 101, 103, 115, 117-118, 126. Ripley-Tapper, 41, 71, 73. Ritchie, jr., John, 127, 131. Roat. See Roth, Philip. Robinson, Alvan, 124. Rogers collection of autograph letters, 35,69. Rome excis'd, 95. Roots, Philip. See Roth. Index. 253 it It Both, Philip (Johaxm), 50, 52, 54, 55, 56-58, 69. "Roundheads and the Gavalien, " 97, 114. "Royal love song," 143. "Rule Britannia," 49. Ruaaell, Lt. Col., 117. S, F. B. N., 100, 140. S, G. W. v., 93. Sabin, 110. Saffell, W. T. R., 48, 51. Salf, 91. SaUsbury, S., 18, 24, 25, 62. Sands, Samuel, 11, 15, 31. Sazatoga and "Yankee Doodle," 109. "Scaramouch a philosopher," 144. Scheurleer, D. F., 93, 113. Schmidt, John Henry, 121. Scotch origin of the word Yankee, 91. See me just arrived from Francee," 143. Seventh star," 29. Shackbuig. See Shuckburgh. Shaw and Carr, 66, 121. Shaw's Flute Preceptor, 67. Shippen, Mrs. R. L., 17, 30-32. Shirley, J. B., 41, 71, 73. Shuckbuigh, Richard, 97, 104, 108, 130, 150-156. Sicard, 68. Siefert, H. 0., 41, 71, 73. "Sing Yankee Doodle," 79. Skillem, Thomas, 127, 131. Smith, Buckingham, 102, 111. Smith, E., 41, 71, 73. Smith's F. S. Key; account of the St. Sp. B., 11. Smith, John Christopher, 102, 108, 118- 119. Smith, John Stafford, 20, 22, 23, 40. Smith, Nicholas, 54. Smith, Samuel F. See America. Smollett, 93. "Sonatosung . . . 1789," 63. Songster's Companion, 28. Songster's Magazine, 28. Songster's Miscellany, 28. Songster's Museum, 28, 79. "Sons of Columbia." See Adams and Liberty, 26. Sousa, J. P., 36, 41, 53, 72, 123. Spain," 25. Spanish gjrpsy," 144. Spofford, A. R., 36. Spowers, Geoige, 38, 39. Squire, Wm. B., 18, 20, 104, 118, 119, 120, 126. ft it Stanfield, J. F., 25. "Star Spangled Banner," song collection, (Wilmington, 1816), 28. Star Spangled Banner, 7-42. Additional stanzas, 3S-^9. Air of. See "To Anacreon in Heaven." Autographs, Key's of, 12, 17, 31-38. Baltimore American, 1814 account, 8,14. Bibliographical notes, 157-158, 160- 162. Broadsides early, 11, 12, 13, 17, 28, 29, 30, 31, 37, 38. Chappell, W., 18. Composer, 20, 22, 23. Differences in melody, 38-42; in text, 36-38. Durang (Charles and Ferdinand), 11-17, 33. Early appearances in song collec- tions, 28, 29, 30. Edes, Benj., 11-12, 16, 17. Eyster, Mrs. Nellie. Facsimiles, 29, 32-35, 39. First accounts of, 7-12. First printed, 10-12, 16. First sung, 11-17. First text, 37. Harding, 17. Hendon's account, 13, 15. McFarland, Paddy, 13. McLaughlin, J. F., 18. Melody of. See "To Anacreon in Heaven." Nicholson, Judge, 11, 17, 30, 31, 32. Origin of, 7-10. Original manuscript. See Auto- graphs. Popularity, early, 28. Preble, G. H., 13, 14, 28, 29, 30, 33-39. Salisbury, S., 18, 24. Sands, Samuel, 11, 15, 31. Shippen, Mrs. R. L., 17, 30-32. Smith, John Stafford, 20, 22, 23. Smith's, F. S. Key, account, 11. Taney's account of, 8-10, 17, 32. "To Anacreon in Heaven," 13, 17-28. Tune of. See "To Anacreon in Heaven." Warner's, J. L., account, 12, 13, 16. Stevens, G. A., 143, 145. Stevenson, E. I., 53. T., J. H. Taney, R. B., 8-10, 17, 32. 254 Index. Taylor, Raynor, 123. "Temple of Minerva," 48. Thacher, James, 82, 06, 99, 109. Thayer, A. W., 123. "The Frenchman came upon the coast," 143. "The genius of France," 25. "There is a man in our town," 105, 130. Thomas, Isaiah, 100, 138. Thompson, G. and S., 127. Thomson's country dances, 103. Tolman, F. L., 153. Thyla. iSee Phile, PhiUpp. Ticknor, G., 91. "To Anacreon in Heaven," 13, 14, 17-28. America, frequency in, 24-28. Author of words, 20. Oomposer of, 18, 22-23. Editions, early, 20-23. Facsimiles. History of, 18-24. Words, 21. "To Columbia, who gladly," 25, 26. "To old Hiram," 22. "To the gods who preside," 25. Tomlinson, Ralph, 20, 21. "Trip to Halifax," 125. Trumball, John, 87, 109. "Twotoone," 106,120. Tyler, RoyaU, 13^-135, 143. "Uncle Sam," 136. "Union and Uberty," 26. "Union of the gods," 25, 26. Van Rensselaer, 96, 150, 153, 154. Vocal companion, Phila., 1796, 24; Bos- ton, 1802, 25. Vocal enchantress, 22, 40. Vocal magazine (1778), 21. Vocal magazine (1797), 22. W., T. H., 100. Walsh's collection of dances, 101, 117-118. Walters, Henry, 30-33, 37. Ward, E., 94. Warner, J. L., 12, 13, 16. Warren, Dr. Joseph, 132, 133. Washington, George, 46, 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 57, 61, 64, 65, 66, 68, 69, 100, 135, 140, 141. Washington, Mrs. Gboige, 63. "Washington and the constitution," 46. "Washington's March," 50, 53, 61, 122. Watson, J. W., 97, 129. Webster, 87, 89, 90. "Welcome, mighty chief," 63-65. Well met, fellow-freemen," 25, 26. (( Westcott, T., 99. Wheatley, H. B., 128. "When Bibo went down," 26. "When our sky," 26. "When Yankies skill'd in martial rule," 110. White, R. G., 51. Whiting, C. E., 41, 71, 73. "Whittier Perkins' book," 124. "Wild Irishman," 125. "WiU ye go to Sheriff muir?" 148-149. WiUiams, Roger, 88. Willig, G., 47, 67, 70, 121, 122. Wilson, J. J., 26, 47, 49. Winslow, Edward, 89. Winslow, W. C, 76. "Witch of Edmonston," 144, Wolfe, James, 81. "World turned upside down," 109. Wyoming Baid, 43. Yankee Doodle, 68, 78, 79-156. "All the way to Galway," 106. American origin of song, 100, 107, 128-142, 150-156. Analysis of different theories, 107- 156. Ame, Dr., 104, 108, 120. Author. See Origin. Bangs, Edward, author?, 140-142. Beethoven, Ninth symphony, 78. Bibliographical notes, 157-158, 16^ 164. Biscay origin, 101, 107, 111. British origin of song, 96, 97, 98, 99, 103, 105, 107, 110, 128-142. Broadsides, 100, 121, 13&-142. Bunker Hill, 82, 100, 109. Gape Breton, 130-133. Charles I and II, 100, 101, 107, 114:- 115. Characteristics of, 79. CJhorus refrain, 110, 123, 142-145. Composite tune?, 125. Cromwell and Yankee Doodle, 97, 101, 103, 107, 114-115. Danza Esparta, 102, 107, 111. Differences in text or music, 120, 122-125, 12&-142. "Doodle doo," 143-145. Dutch origin of the song, 100, 107, 111-113. Dutch origin of the words, 91-93. Early use in America, 108-110, 115- 117. Inde X. 255 Yankee Doodle — Continued. Early yenionB (printed and dibb.), 106, 110, 120, 121, 122-126, 12&-142. English origin of the words, 94-95, 107. Etymology, 82-95. Facflimilefl, 122. Farmer's (The) and his son's return from a visit to the camp, 141. Father and I went down to camp, 100, 104, 134-142. Fi8(c)her, Lydia (Kitty), 97, 101, 103, 108, 115-116. Fife-major, Grenadier guards, 102,113. Genealogy of accounts of origin, 95- 107. Greek origin of the words, 94. Hastings, Jonathan, 84. Hessian origin, 106, 107, 111. Hungarian origin, 102, 107, 111. Indian origin of the word Yankee, 85^9. Irish origin, 106, 146-150. Lancashire hornpipe?, 144. Lincolnshire origin of ''Yankee," 91. Literature, early use of the words in English, 94-95. Locket (Lockit), Lydia (Lucy), 97, 98, 100, 103, 115. ''Macaroni" in connection with, 126, 127-129. Matthews, Alb., 80, 81, 94, 99, 104, 105, 118, 127, 128, 130, 135, 138, 141, 143, 152, 154. Modem music, use of, in, 79. Moore, G. H., 80. Nickname for New Englanders, 80-^2. Norwegian origin of Yankee, 91. Nursery rhyme, 115. Objections to, 80. Oriental origin of the words, 89-01. Origin of song, different accounts, 95- 107. The same analysed, 107-156. Origin of the words, 128-142. (See dUo words sung to the air.) Persian origin of the words, 89-^1. Popularity (early) in America, 108- 110. Pte-reYolutionary origin, 96, 97, 99, 100, 101, 105, 107, 108, 110, 114-115, 128-142. Yankee Doodle— Continued. Revolutionary origin of song, 95, 96, 99, 100, 107, 128-142. Roundheads and the Cavaliers, 97, 114. Savoyard song?, 113. Scotch origin of the word ''Yankee," 91. Schuckburgh, Richard, 97, 105, 108, 130, 150-156. "There is a man in our town, " 105. Thompson country dances, 103, 117- 118. Tyler, Royall (The Contrast), 133- 135, 143. Ulysses (Smith's), 102, 108, 118-119. Use (early), 108-110. Walsh's coll. of dances, 101, 117-118. " Will ye go to Sheriff Muir," 148-149. Words sung to the air, 97, 98, 99, 100, 105, 110, 119, 120, 122, 123, 125, 126, 128-142. "Yankee Doodle came to town," 98, 100, 103, 105, 114, 125, 129-142. Yankee's (Yankey's) return from camp, 135-138. "Yankee Doodle came to town," 98, 100, 103, 105, 114, 125, 129-142. "Yankee Doodle do," 143-145. "Yankee Doodle is the tune," 79. "Yankee Doodle keep it up," 142-145. "Yankee Doodle, or the Lexington March," 126, 131-133. "Yankee Doodle, or the Negroes fareweU to America," 126. "Yankee Doodle's expedition to Rhode Island," 143. Yankee King, 129, 130. "Yanker didel, doodel down," 100, 112. Yankey Hastings, 84. Yankoo, 83. Yates, R., 81. "Ye friends to this auspicious day," 49. "Ye mortals whom trouble," 23. "Ye sluggards who murder," 56. "Ye sons of Columbia." See "Adams and liberty." Yengee Duniah, 90, 91. Yengees, 86. Yorktown, Yankee Doodle played at, 109. "Young Bibo," 26. "Younglings fond of female chaces," 143. Zeiner, E. J. A., 41, 71, 73. O . r>Cf^r i^.-^ ■?^ ''^. «, r>r/ '._• k* ?^>: i.'/'^ ^4% t^-^ •'/••■ ^1^ rS? .2!LZ?^ St«-*p,n«W Banner. ^^ 3 2044 040 630 ^ AVfB66?6 ^'^ ^^ TTVll :^. ?/i . -Lc' ^vh^ /^■:?^ Tf 7^1^ 'V /-> -^t. rc. v^ ^ ^^ /i» 6 r\j>t^ /^"^ c/-< «^ 9: T^ cJh< 1-1 i^. t-^< >-^ C^ £$: f? "xH^: t •-^ ^^. rf. r> C y. .^. K*N.. ^>- ■V^ f na ^ t /^ Cl /^ vtK /- ^Y^t.- ^^' ^"t'^>St ^5 V > "T'^^ ry^i^ -r';^' '-2r -« « \