Gandy dancer

Gandy dancer

Gandy dancer is a slang term for workers who maintained railroads in North America.

The term originates from the late nineteenth century. It is often said to derive from the Gandy Manufacturing Company, a Chicago-based tool manufacturing company, but several sources cite an absence of any record of this company's existence. Hand crews used specialized hand tools known as "gandies" (of unknown etymology) to lever rail tracks into position.

Oral history from some railroad towns has it that the term originated from the gandydancer's original job of positioning rails to be nailed to ties. These were carried by the crew straddling the rail at intervals and reaching between their feet to lift and carry it into place, in the process looking like a line of waddling geese. They became known as ganders and the process as gander dancing, ultimately corrupted to gandydancing.

Though rail tracks were held in place by wooden ties ("sleepers" outside the U.S.) and the mass of the stones ("ballast") beneath them, each pass of a train around a corner would, through centrifugal force and vibration, produce a tiny shift in the tracks. If allowed to accumulate, such shifts could eventually cause a derailment; work crews had to pry them back into place routinely.

For each stroke, a worker would lift his gandy and force it into the ballast to create a fulcrum, then throw himself sideways using the gandy to check his full weight (making the "huh" sound recorded in the lyrics below) so the gandy would push the rail toward the inside of the curve. Even with all impacts from the work crew timed correctly, any progress made in shifting the track would not become visible until after a large number of repetitions.

Rhythm was necessary for this process, both to synchronize the manual labor, and to maintain the morale of workers whose exertions produced only a minuscule effect; hence "gandy dancers". The songs sung in this occupation have been recognized as a major influence on later blues music; one such song is reproduced below.

The same ground crews also performed the other aspects of track maintenance, such as removing weeds, tamping down ballast, and replacing rotten ties. The British equivalent is "Navvy" from "Navigator", originally builders of canals or "inland navigations". In the U.S. Southwest and Mexico, Mexican and Mexican-American track workers were colloquially "traqueros".

Typical song lyrics

:Pick an' shovel...huh,:am so heavy...huh,:Heavy as lead...huh,:heavy as lead...huh:Pickin', shov'lin'...huh:pickin', shov'lin'...huh:Till I'm dead...huh:till I'm dead...

Popular culture

One of the most famous compositions of singer/political activist Utah Phillips is "Moose Turd Pie", in which he tells a tall tale of working as a gandy dancer in the American southwest. (In the course of which, he repeats the above claim about the source of the workers' shovels.) Utah's performances often relate the songs and stories of the Industrial Workers of the World, also known as the "Wobblies", whose colorful lingo includes the term gandy dancer, and much more.

References

* [http://blues.about.com/od/blueshistory/a/aa061001gandy.htm Music history and comments on the labor.]
* [http://www.worldwidewords.org/qa/qa-gan1.htm Notes on the term's origin.]
*cite web |last=Phillips |first=Bruce |title=Moose Turd Pie |url=http://www.utahphillips.org/stuff/mooseturdpie.mp3 |format=mp3 |accessdate=2008-01-12


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • gandy dancer — railroad maintenance worker, 1918, Amer.Eng. slang, of unknown origin; dancer perhaps from movements required in the work of tamping down ties or pumping a hand cart, gandy perhaps from the name of a machinery belt company in Baltimore, Maryland …   Etymology dictionary

  • gandy dancer — ☆ gandy dancer [gan′dēdans′ər, gan′dē ] n. [prob. so named because of movements while using tools from the Gandy Manufacturing Co. (Chicago)] [Old Slang] a worker in a railroad section gang …   English World dictionary

  • gandy dancer — noun A railway laborer, especially a member of a crew which carries rails and affixes them to ties. Gandy dancer A section hand or track laborer. See Also: gandy dance, gandy dancing …   Wiktionary

  • gandy dancer — /gan dee/, Railroad Slang. a member of a railroad section gang that lays or maintains track. [1915 20; dancer appar. in reference to the rhythmic movements characteristic of such work; gandy is unexplained; the existence of a Gandy Manufacturing… …   Universalium

  • gandy dancer — noun Etymology: origin unknown Date: 1923 1. a laborer in a railroad section gang 2. an itinerant or seasonal laborer …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • gandy dancer — noun N. Amer. informal a track maintenance worker on a railway. Origin early 20th cent.: of unknown origin …   English new terms dictionary

  • gandy dancer — gan′dy danc er [[t]ˈgæn di[/t]] n. rai a member of a railroad section gang that lays or maintains track • Etymology: 1915–20; of uncert. orig …   From formal English to slang

  • gandy dancer — noun a laborer in a railroad maintenance gang • Hypernyms: ↑laborer, ↑manual laborer, ↑labourer, ↑jack …   Useful english dictionary

  • Gandy — may refer to:In places: * Gandy, Buttcock, a US census designated place * Gandy, Nebraska, a US town * Gandy Bridge, crossing Tampa Bay in FloridaOther: * Gandy dancer, North American slang term for railroad workerPeople with the surname Gandy: * …   Wikipedia

  • Irish diaspora — Emigrants Leave Ireland , engraving by Henry Doyle (1827–1892), from Mary Frances Cusack s Illustrated History of Ireland, 1868 …   Wikipedia

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