- The Ballad of Casey Jones
Infobox Standard
title=The Ballad of Casey Jones
comment="see also"Casey Jones (Grateful Dead)
image_size=
caption=
writer=
composer=Eddie Newton
lyricist=Wallace Saunders, T. Lawrence Seibert
published=
written=about 1900
language=English
form=
original_artist=
recorded_by=Joe Hickerson
performed_by=
Misc= Roud 3247"The Ballad of Casey Jones" is a traditional song about
railroad engineer Casey Jones and his death at the controls of the train he was driving. It tells of how Jones and his fireman Sim Webb raced their locomotive to make up for lost time, but discovered another train ahead of them on the line, and how Jones remained on board to try to stop the train as Webb jumped to safety. It is song #3247 in theRoud Folk Song Index .The song helped preserve the memory of Jones' feat down through the years in its 40+ versions and enhanced Casey’s legendary status to the extent that he has even become something of a
myth ological figure likePecos Bill orPaul Bunyan to the uninformed. Books and pulp magazines about therailroad and its heroes helped to perpetuate his memory as well.Soon after Casey’s death, the song it was first sung by an
engine wiper and friend of Casey’s known asWallace Saunders to the tune of a popular song of the time known as "Jimmie Jones ". He was known to sing and whistle as he went about his work cleaning thesteam engine s. In the words of Casey’s wife: "Wallace's admiration of Casey was little short of idolatry. He used to brag mightily about Mr. Jones even when Casey was only afreight engineer ." But Saunders never had his original versioncopyright ed, and thus there is no way of knowing precisely what words he sang.As railroaders stopped in
Canton, Mississippi they would pick up the song and pass it along. Soon it was a hit up and down theI.C. line . But it was up to others with a profit motive to take it and rework it for a nationwide audience. Illinois Central EngineerWilliam Leighton appreciated the song's potential enough to tell his brothersFrank Leighton andBert Leighton , who werevaudeville performers, about it. They took it and sang it in theaters around the country with a chorus they added. But apparently even they neglected to get it copyrighted.Reportedly Saunders received a bottle of
gin for the use of the song. Nothing more was heard from him after this time and he passed into history as the man who helped to make Casey Jones an integral part ofAmerican folklore .Finally, with vaudeville performers
T. Lawrence Seibert credited with the lyrics andEddie Newton the music it was published and offered for sale in 1909 with the title "Casey Jones, The Brave Engineer". As their intent was to entertain, it was hailed on the cover of the sheet music as the "Greatest Comedy Hit In Years" and "The Only Comedy Railroad Song." This version was the one that was strenuously objected to by Casey's wife for making her appear to have been unfaithful to Casey. The offending lines read: "Mrs. Jones sat on her bed a sighing/Just received a message that Casey was dying/ Said go to bed children and hush your crying/Cause you got another papa on the Salt Lake line." This is similar to a line in the song "Duncan and Brady". She spent her remaining years refuting those lines, once saying "That devil hasn't shown up in 58 years!"By
World War I , dozens of versions had been published and millions of copies were sold, securing the memory of a new Americanfolk hero . PoetCarl Sandburg called the song "Casey Jones, the Brave Engineer" as the "greatest ballad ever written".Recordings
* 1932 American Folklife recording cite web |last=Abbott |first=Francis H. |title=Casey Jones |url=http://www.loc.gov/folklife/Gordon/sound/Caseyjones.mp3 |format=mp3 |accessdate=2008-01-15
*Pete Seeger
*Burl Ives Decca 29129
*Johnny Cash
* "Drive Dull Care Away" -Joe Hickerson -Folk-Legacy Records - 2002ee also
Casey Jones by
The Grateful Dead References
* [http://www.trainweb.org/caseyjones/song.html Ballad of Casey Jones]
*"A treasury of American Folklore," by B. A. Botkin, (American Legacy Press, NT, 1944) pp 241-246)
* April 1932, Erie Railroad Magazine, vol 28, no. 2, p12External links
* [http://cylinders.library.ucsb.edu/mp3s/0000/0636/cusb-cyl0636d.mp3 "Casey Jones"] ,
Bill Murray (Edison Blue Amberol 1550, 1912)—" [http://cylinders.library.ucsb.edu/index.php Cylinder Preservation and Digitization Project] ".
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