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Many popular sources claim that spirituals and other songs, such as "Steal Away" or "Follow the Drinkin' Gourd", contained coded information and helped individuals navigate the railroad, but these sources offer little traditional archival evidence to support their claims. Some scholars who have examined these claims tend to believe that while ...
Follow the Drinking Gourd is an African-American folk song first published in 1928. The "drinking gourd" is another name for the Big Dipper asterism.Folklore has it that enslaved people in the United States used it as a point of reference so they would not get lost during their journey of escape to the North and to freedom.
Peg Leg Joe is a legendary sailor and underground railroad conductor, popularly associated with the song "Follow the Drinkin' Gourd".According to the folklorist H.B. Parks, who collected the song in the 1910s, Peg Leg Joe was an abolitionist who led enslaved people through the Underground Railroad to freedom during the last years of American slavery.
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The text was first published in 1972, in a volume called Les Blancs: The Collected Last Plays of Lorraine Hansberry, [5] which also includes The Drinking Gourd and What Use are Flowers?. A revised text of the play was created in 2016 for the UK's National Theatre by director Yaël Farber , dramaturg Drew Lichtenburg, and Nemiroff's stepdaughter ...
The Drinking Gourd (2 Part), Heritage Music Press, 15/1564h 2000 Heaven (SATB), Mark Foster Music Co., MF 1016, 1999 I Open My Mouth, Hinshaw Music, HMC1168 1990
"Drill, Ye Tarriers, Drill" is an American folk song first published in 1888 and attributed to Thomas Casey (words) and later Charles Connolly (music). It is listed as number 4401 in the Roud Folk Song Index. [1]