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Lyr Req: Blacksmith of Brandywine (Pat Garvey)

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Lesley N. 17 Jan 99 - 10:51 AM
Don Meixner 17 Jan 99 - 10:59 PM
Sandy Paton 17 Jan 99 - 11:16 PM
Don Meixner 17 Jan 99 - 11:20 PM
Lesley N. 18 Jan 99 - 12:34 AM
rich r 18 Jan 99 - 09:50 AM
Lesley N. 19 Jan 99 - 07:06 PM
Don Meixner 23 Jan 99 - 12:56 AM
Lesley N. 23 Jan 99 - 04:59 PM
GUEST,Tom Lucatorta 04 Jan 07 - 07:13 PM
GUEST 24 May 07 - 09:25 PM
Susan A-R 25 May 07 - 01:59 PM
GUEST,Elisabeth in Florida 17 Sep 07 - 12:55 AM
Jim Dixon 19 Sep 07 - 12:23 AM
Ref 19 Sep 07 - 08:23 PM
michaelr 20 Sep 07 - 01:18 AM
GUEST,Stephanie 20 Sep 07 - 04:03 PM
GUEST,Papa Smith 29 Dec 09 - 09:16 PM
GUEST 29 Dec 09 - 10:50 PM
GUEST,999 29 Dec 09 - 11:04 PM
GUEST,Irish Tom 02 Sep 18 - 08:13 PM
Jim Dixon 05 Sep 18 - 01:58 PM
GUEST,Hunky-yo 10 Nov 20 - 03:48 AM
GUEST,calonkat 01 Jan 22 - 12:29 AM
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Subject: REQ: Blacksmith of Brandywine
From: Lesley N.
Date: 17 Jan 99 - 10:51 AM

Does anyone have any information on The Blacksmith of Brandywine? It was evidently done by the New Christy Minstrels and was supposedly based on an actual occurrance. It'sabout a blacksmith whose family was killed by a company of British soldiers. He came home, found them dead, picked up a fifteen-pound sledge, set off after them. He managed to kill about twenty of them with a hammer before they shot him enough times to kill him.

Is this a traditional tune or something the Minstrels wrote? Does anyone have the lyrics - even better a single line midi or gif that I could use to make a midi?

I'm in a Colonial/Revolution Mood at the moment - any suggestions for songs to sequence?


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Subject: RE: REQ: Blacksmith of Brandywine
From: Don Meixner
Date: 17 Jan 99 - 10:59 PM

I heard this song from a New Christy Minstrals recording about America Folk heroes. Its based on the discovery of a body found after the battle of Brandywine. A colonial, armed with a single jack had dispatched 20 Hessian mercinaries. All the songs were supposedly based in fact. Also on the record was a song called "El Camino Real" an interesting song about the fight to free California.

The only person I have ever heard sing this song outside of the NCM is a friend in Atlanta named Michael Waters. I can supply the lyrics but it will take time.

Don Meixner


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Subject: RE: REQ: Blacksmith of Brandywine
From: Sandy Paton
Date: 17 Jan 99 - 11:16 PM

These Mudcateers are astounding! You ask about a song you've been looking for for years, and an answer pops up eight minutes later. Incredible! Well done, Don.

Sandy


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Subject: RE: REQ: Blacksmith of Brandywine
From: Don Meixner
Date: 17 Jan 99 - 11:20 PM

Sandy,

I is merely skill, speed, agility, and the will to win.

Don


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Subject: RE: REQ: Blacksmith of Brandywine
From: Lesley N.
Date: 18 Jan 99 - 12:34 AM

I'm impressed!

The bad news is that I didn't turn up the song in any track searches in Amazon, CDNow or CD Universe. What a bummer.


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Subject: RE: REQ: Blacksmith of Brandywine
From: rich r
Date: 18 Jan 99 - 09:50 AM

As cited above, Blacksmith of Brandywine can be found on the New Christy Minstrels album :"Land of Giants" (Columbia CS 8987- stereo or Columbia CL 2187 -mono). The song is not traditional but was written by Pat and Victoria Garvey. The twosome also wrote a song called "The Loving of the Game" that was recorded by Judy Collins on the album "Judith" and is also found on several JC collection re-releases. "The Blacksmith of Brandywine" has been recorded at least 2 other times. Once on a cacsette by Michael Longcor titled "Lovers, Heroes & Rogues". Searching for Michael Longcor on the web reveals that this cassette has apparently been reissued and the necessary information is there. An apparent third recording was by Julie Ecklar on an album called "Brandywine". There have also been a couple parodies of the song that probably best fall into the "filk" category. I saw the lyrics to one of them and had no idea who they were talking about. The NCM album can be found around the used record venues. I bought a copy about 3 months ago and will transcribe the words as soon as I can. As for the historical accuracy, I cannot verify, if it is true or based on a nugget of fact or merely a 1777 "urban legend". The NCM album has songs about Joe Magarac, John Henry, Paul Bunyan, Stormalong, Johnny Appleseed et al., characters that are much more legend than history. A web site dedicated to the Phildelphia campaign of the Revolution (Brandywine, Germantown, Paoli, Battle of the Clouds etc) in 1777 did not describe the incident of the song. Furthermore the song itself describes part of the "events" occuring in Chestertown, which is in Maryland a ways away from the site of the Brandywine battle. There is also a town of Brandywine in Maryland. So it is at least possible that the "incident" if true happened in Maryland. Some historical expert will need to discover this. I personally do not trust RAndy Sparks liner notes as the last words on historical facts.

rich r


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Subject: RE: REQ: Blacksmith of Brandywine
From: Lesley N.
Date: 19 Jan 99 - 07:06 PM

How interesting - another traditional song that isn't!

I've come to believe we should trust very few notes on albums as historical facts. One album with all Carolan tunes does not, in fact, have all Carolan tunes - and I get people who argue with me because it was on the notes for the CD...

Of course, being a historian I don't think you can necessarily believe anything that is written and should even be suspect when two people write the same thing because they could be relying on the same source or have the same agenda...

Getting off my soapbox... Thanks for the info.


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Subject: Lyr Add: THE BLACKSMITH OF BRANDYWINE (Pat Garvey)
From: Don Meixner
Date: 23 Jan 99 - 12:56 AM

Lesley, here you go. The song is pretty basic with no abundant story. As I recall, most of the songs from the album are. I like this one and El Camino Real best of the bunch. Both these songs have a shred of believable history in them. What gem of fact that goes to create a legend is often nearly as good as the legend itself. Revolutionary War buffs I know swear this is based in fact. Just as Molly Pitcher's story was. People do amazing things when called upon by conscience.

Don
^^
THE BLACKSMITH OF BRANDYWINE
Pat Garvey

As we marched into Brandywine, it was a sight to see:
A giant of a man with a hammer in his hand beneath the old oak tree,
And all around him on the ground, in fatal disarray,
Lay a score of men who'll never fight again, or travel on the King's highway.

CHORUS: Make it one for Washington and all his gallant men,
One for the girl that once was mine;
Make it one for the darling boy I'll never see again,
And one for the blacksmith of Brandywine.

We dug his grave, covered him o'er, and sadly wept a tear,
Spent the day ridin' on our way till we met with a musketeer.
From him we learned the story of this brave and angry man,
Who undertook the British enemy with a hammer in his hand. CHORUS

In Chestertown there lived a man away from the cannon's roar.
Of manner mild, his woman and child, no man could ever love more;
But the Tories spoke of a plot one day to waylay Washington,
And he left his home and family alone. To the general he did run. CHORUS

His errand done, he journeyed home but sorrow there he found.
By British guns his wife and son lay still on the cold hard ground.
Well, that blacksmith reached for his heavy sledge and he gave a practice swing,
And they say on the line at Brandywine, they hear that hammer sing.

CHORUS: Make it one....

And don't forget the blacksmith....


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Subject: RE: REQ: Blacksmith of Brandywine
From: Lesley N.
Date: 23 Jan 99 - 04:59 PM

Thanks Don! As legends go I like this one much better than the cherry tree or the silver dollar across the Potomac!


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Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Blacksmith of Brandywine
From: GUEST,Tom Lucatorta
Date: 04 Jan 07 - 07:13 PM

I took this information from an old ebook on the web:
THE BLACKSMITH AT BRANDYWINE

Terrible in the field at Brandywine was the figure of a man armed only
with a hammer, who plunged into the ranks of the enemy, heedless of his
own life, yet seeming to escape their shots and sabre cuts by magic, and
with Thor strokes beat them to the earth. But yesterday war had been to
him a distant rumor, a thing as far from his cottage at Dilworth as if it
had been in Europe, but he had revolted at a plot that he had overheard
to capture Washington and had warned the general. In revenge the Tories
had burned his cottage, and his wife and baby had perished in the flames.
All day he had sat beside the smoking ruins, unable to weep, unable to
think, unable almost to suffer, except dumbly, for as yet he could not
understand it. But when the drums were heard they roused the tiger in
him, and gaunt with sleeplessness and hunger he joined his countrymen and
ranged like Ajax on the field. Every cry for quarter was in vain: to
every such appeal he had but one reply, his wife's name--Mary.

Near the end of the fight he lay beside the road, his leg broken, his
flesh torn, his life ebbing from a dozen wounds. A wagoner, hasting to
join the American retreat, paused to give him drink. "I've only five
minutes more of life in me," said the smith. "Can you lift me into that
tree and put a rifle in my hands?" The powerful teamster raised him to
the crotch of an oak, and gave him the rifle and ammunition that a dying
soldier had dropped there. A band of red-coats came running down the
road, chasing some farmers. The blacksmith took careful aim; there was a
report, and the leader of the band fell dead. A pause; again a report
rang out, and a trooper sprawled upon the ground. The marksman had been
seen, and a lieutenant was urging his men to hurry on and cut him down.
There was a third report, and the lieutenant reeled forward into the
road, bleeding and cursing. "That's for Mary," gasped the blacksmith. The
rifle dropped from his hands, and he, too, sank lifeless against the
boughs.


MYTHS AND LEGENDS OF OUR OWN LAND, by Charles M. Skinner, Vol. 3. ON AND NEAR THE DELAWARE


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Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Blacksmith of Brandywine
From: GUEST
Date: 24 May 07 - 09:25 PM

Thanks so much. My mom taught this song to us and I wanted to find all the lyrics for my girls since we are studying the Revolutionary War. Even though this may be more legend than fact, it's a nice insight into the mindset of those who were willing to lay down everything for the start of this country. Thanks to all who answered the original poster!


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Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Blacksmith of Brandywine
From: Susan A-R
Date: 25 May 07 - 01:59 PM

Wow, two NCM posts in one afternoon. Now I really have to go and listen to that album (see the Joe maggerac thread)

There was a time when I knew all of those songs by heart. I could probably still get pretty far with El Camino Reyal and Johnny Appleseed.


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Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Blacksmith of Brandywine
From: GUEST,Elisabeth in Florida
Date: 17 Sep 07 - 12:55 AM

Another great source for this song is Charlie Zahm's album "The American Scrapbook" (http://charliezahm.com/albums17.html). His rendition of the song is so rich and beautiful! There's a sample piece there on his site, or you can see him perform it (very low quality, and he actually messes up one line, which I've never seen him do before this) on YouTube here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pcjzUbbnhCk


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Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Blacksmith of Brandywine
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 19 Sep 07 - 12:23 AM

Google Book Search finds a version of the story in "Blanche of Brandywine, or, September the Eleventh, 1777: A Romance, Concerning the Poetry, Legend, and History of the Battle of Brandywine" by George Lippard, Philadelphia : G.B. Zieber & Co., 1846. The book is classified as fiction. Click to view.

Lippard retold the story in "Washington and His Generals: Or, Legends of the Revolution," Philadelphia : T.B. Peterson, 1847. Click to view.


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Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Blacksmith of Brandywine
From: Ref
Date: 19 Sep 07 - 08:23 PM

Thanks for the memory! I remember seeing the NCM do this on the old "Hootenanny" TV show.


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Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Blacksmith of Brandywine
From: michaelr
Date: 20 Sep 07 - 01:18 AM

Guest 9:25 -- I would hardly call the legendary blacksmith's condition an "insight into the mindset of those who were willing to lay down everything for the start of this country". He was obviously insane with grief and rage, not involved in a struggle for independence of his colony.

Cheers,
Michael


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Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Blacksmith of Brandywine
From: GUEST,Stephanie
Date: 20 Sep 07 - 04:03 PM

I live a couple of miles from the battlefield,and had an interesting experience a few years ago.I knew the song from the NCM's and more recently had heard Tom O'Carroll sing in on numerous occasions at O'Friels Irish pub (sadly now defunct)in Wilmington De.I was in Pete Renzetti's shop in Dilworthtown(I think before I had heard Tom sing the song) looking for info on an old metal helmet.I knew Pete slightly,enough to know he was a ironmonger,and then for whatever reason asked if he'd ever heard of the Blacksmith of Brandywine,heaven knows why, as I hadn't thought of the song in years plus I had always assumed it took place in Chester Pa --or possibly West Chester,given artistic license.He looked at me with a raised eyebrow and said"You are standing in his shop"whereupon he went upstairs and brought down a sketch of the blacksmith dead with bodies all around him under a huge tree.I always thought it an odd occurance.


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Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Blacksmith of Brandywine
From: GUEST,Papa Smith
Date: 29 Dec 09 - 09:16 PM

Here's a fella singing the song
Don't forget the Blacksmith of Brandywine.
He does it really fine.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AnJjrRQCNEI

Enjoy


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Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Blacksmith of Brandywine
From: GUEST
Date: 29 Dec 09 - 10:50 PM

Apologies if this has already been posted. I'm inna hurry.

It's a real pain in the arse when someone has already posted stuff that some idiot comes along and re-posts the same stuff. If I'm guilty of that, sorry.


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Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Blacksmith of Brandywine
From: GUEST,999
Date: 29 Dec 09 - 11:04 PM

I keep forgetting to put the 999 in the "From:" rectangle.


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Subject: "My Last Farewell"
From: GUEST,Irish Tom
Date: 02 Sep 18 - 08:13 PM

I am looking for the music to the Irish song " MY last FAREWELL" THE SONG IS ABOUT pADRIG PIERCE THE REBEL WHO WAS SHOT BY THE ENGLISH IN 1916. I am looking for a book with the song in it or a music sheet with the words and music. Is there some one who can help me? Thank you very much.


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Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Blacksmith of Brandywine (Pat Garvey)
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 05 Sep 18 - 01:58 PM

Irish Tom: Lyrics to MY LAST FAREWELL have been posted here in another thread.


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Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Blacksmith of Brandywine (Pat Garvey)
From: GUEST,Hunky-yo
Date: 10 Nov 20 - 03:48 AM

I was listening to the New Christy Minstrels version of this song, on my IPad, while waiting in doctors office. Little girl sitting next to me asked what I was listening to, put one ear bud in her ear. We listened to song, I explained what it was about.

Big mistake. Her mom said I needed to mind my own business, not spread lies about our warmongering nation.

Ouch.


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Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Blacksmith of Brandywine (Pat Garvey)
From: GUEST,calonkat
Date: 01 Jan 22 - 12:29 AM

I've been gathering what I can about this song and trying (in a very lazy way) to get to the original (purely because I like it). I can't find a version before Lippard published it first in 1846. Pat Garvey was inspired by the shortened version in a Time Life history. All the versions I've been able to find are at: http://www.calonsong.org/CalontirSongs/blacksmithstory.htm and the information Mr. Garvey gave me on the song itself is at: http://www.calonsong.org/CalontirSongs/blacksmithsong.htm

If anyone knows of an older version, I'd appreciate a pointer towards it.


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