Follow The Drinking Gourd

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  • Опубліковано 21 бер 2022
  • The old man in this chorus was Peg Leg Joe, a sailor-turned-carpenter who had lost part of his right leg in an accident at sea. Joe wintered in the South doing odd jobs, from plantation to plantation. When he wasn’t working he taught the slaves this song containing a secret escape route to freedom in the North.
    The Drinking Gourd is not a gourd, but the Big Dipper with its two pointer stars (Dubhe and Merak) that visually lead to the North Star.By following the North Star the slaves were able to consistently navigate northward.
    When the sun comes back and the first quail calls,Follow the drinking gourd,For the old man is waiting to carry you to freedomIf you follow the drinking gourd.
    Each year when the quails migrated south, the slaves were told to begin their journey northward, which entailed crossing the unnavigable Ohio River. It was too swift and wide to cross, except in winter, when it was frozen and slaves could walk to the other shore on the ice.
    The riverbank makes a very good road,The dead trees will show you the way,Left foot, peg foot traveling on,Following the drinking gourd.
    Peg Leg Joe marked one bank of the Tombigbee River in Mississippi with his easily identifiable footprints. By following them and the dead trees along the riverbank, the slaves could have a safe journey free from plantation owner’s hounds.
    The river ends between two hills,Follow the drinking gourd,There’s another river on the other side,Follow the drinking gourd.
    When the Tombigbee ended, the slaves were told to continue northward, over the hills, to the Tennessee River where the Underground Railroad would help them.
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