The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #101624 Message #2052022
Posted By: Joe Offer
15-May-07 - 01:06 AM
Thread Name: Lyr Req/Add: Boss of the Section Gang
Subject: ADD: The Boss of the Section Gang
Thank you, Padre, that's the lead I needed.
The Boss of the Section Gang Sung by Mrs. Minta Morgan at Bells, Texas, 1937. Recorded by John A. Lomax. (AFS 922 B2)
I landed in this country A year and a month ago. To make my living at laboring work, To the railroad I did go. I shoveled and picked in a big clay bank, I merrily cheered and sang, For my work is o'er- you plainly see, I'm the boss of the section gang.
Then look at Mike Cahooley, A politician now, Whose name and fame he does maintain And to whom all people bow. I'm the walking boss of the whole railroad, For none I care a dang, My name is Mike Cahooley And I'm the boss of the section gang.
When the railroad president comes 'round He takes and shakes my hand. "Cahooley, you're tough, you bet you're the stuff, You're an honest workingman. They never shirk when you're at work Nor at the boss will flang." They shrink with fear when I am near, I'm the boss of the section gang.
Then look at Mike Cahooley, It's the last of him you'll see, For I must go to my darling wife And happy we will be. Come one and all, come great and small, And give the door a bang, And you'll be welcomed surely By the boss of the section gang.
notes by Archie Green: The immigrant group which contributed most to American folklore was the Irish. Although numerous work songs are known from Irish broadsides, pocket songsters, and folios, this piece about a tough but honest workingman seems unreported as a folksong. Mrs. Morgan told collector Lomax in 1937 that "The Boss of the Section Gang" was carried to Texas by Kentucky boys about 45 years ago. Her sense of time was accurate. During 1893 J.K. Bell of Kansas City published "I'm Boss of the Section Gang' by "Cyclone" Harry Hart. However, I am uncertain that he was the song's original composer. Today Hart's sheet music is a rare bit of Americana, and it is unlikely that his song lives in the memories of traditional singers.
source: the CD booklet from Library of Congress Archive of Folk Song Railroad Songs and BalladsThis is the only version of the song (other than the sheet music) mentioned by Norm Cohen in Long Steel Rail. I couldn't find the sheet music at either Levy or the Library of Congress. -Joe-