Page:Hold the Fort! (Scheips 1971) low resolution.pdf/59

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Fort" were "Hayes, Wheeler a n d Victory," "Victory in the Air," and "Round Our Banner," for which see, respectively: Hayes and Wheeler Campaign Song Book, for the Centennial Year . . . (1876), pp. 20–21, Hayes & Wheeler Campaign Songster Including Biographical Sketches & Constitution for Campaign Clubs (1876), p. 39 [a copy of each of these two books is in Library of Congress]; and the text and citations, below, at note 107.

106. Garfield and Arthur Campaign Song Book, 1880, [compiled by] Republican Congressional Committee, 1879–1881 (1880), p. 15. [Copy in Library of Congress.]

107. Garfield and Arthur Campaign Book, p. 7; Hayes and Wheeler Song Book, p. 11; and Hayes & Wheeler Campaign Song Book, pp. 38–39.

108. Blaine and Logan Campaign Song-Book, 1884, compiled and edited by F. Widdows (1884), p. 16. [Copy in Library of Congress.]

109. Garfield and Arthur Campaign Song Book, p. 11.

110. Blaine and Logan Campaign Song-Book, p. 12.

111. The Prohibition Songster, Words and Music for Prohibition Campaign Clubs, Temperance Organizations, Glee Clubs, Camp-Meetings, Etc., Etc., compiled by J. N . Stearns (1884), no. 28. [Copy in Library of Congress.]

112. Prohibition Songster, no. 55. Other temperance songs of the time and to the tune of "Hold the Fort" were "The Temperance Standard" and J. B. Vinton's and W. Warren Bentley's "Storm the Fort," of which there were two printings with very slight differences. Entire lines in both of these songs were lifted from "Hold the Fort" without acknowledgment. See Band of Hope Songster: A Collection of Temperance Songs . . . , compiled by J. N. Stearns (1885), pp. 7, 62 [copy in Library of Congress]; and Prohibition Songster, no. 10.

113. National American Woman Suffrage Association, Victory—How Women Won It: A Centennial Symposium, 1840–1940 (1940), p. 66. This work contains chapters by Carrie Chapman Catt and others.

114. "Songs of the Suffragettes." Sung by Elizabeth Knight accompanied on the guitar by Sol Julty, Folkways Record Album No. FH 5281 (1958), with notes by Irwin Silber on "A Brief History of the Woman's Suffrage Movement."

115. Compare "Columbia's Daughters" in "Songs of the Suffragettes" with "Hark! The Sound of Myriad Voices" in Booklet of Song, A Collection of Suffrage and Temperance Melodies, compiled by L. May Wheeler (1884), no. 1, pp. 20–21, from which the first verse and chorus are quoted.

116. Booklet of Song, pp. 21–22; and Henry W. Roby, The Suffrage Song Book: Original Songs, Parodies and Paraphrases Adapted to Popular Melodies (1909), p. 10.

117. On Populist songs and Mrs. Lease, see Elizabeth N. Barr, "The Populist Uprising," in William E. Connelley, History of Kansas State and People (5 vols., 1928), vol. 2, pp. 1165–1167; John D. Hicks, The Populist Revolt: A History of the Farmers' Alliance and the People's Party (1961; a reprint of Hicks's 1931 study), pp. 159–160, 167–170; John Greenway, American Folksongs of Protest (Perpetua edition, 1960), pp. 57–63, 210–211; W. G. Clugston, Rascals in Democracy (1940),