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Timeline of music in the United States (1850–1879)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Timeline of music in the United States
Music history of the United States
Colonial erato the Civil WarDuring the Civil WarLate 19th centuryEarly 20th century40s and 50s60s and 70s80s to the present

This timeline of music in the United States covers the period from 1850 to 1879. It encompasses the California Gold Rush, the Civil War and Reconstruction, and touches on topics related to the intersections of music and law, commerce and industry, religion, race, ethnicity, politics, gender, education, historiography and academics. Subjects include folk, popular, theatrical and classical music, as well as Anglo-American, African American, Native American, Irish American, Arab American, Catholic, Swedish American, Shaker and Chinese American music.

Contents

1850


  • Henry Wehrmann and his wife become the most prominent engravers in the Southern music publishing industry.[15]
  • Self-consciously old-fashioned concerts, in period dress, presenting the music of the colonial-era United States become popular; they are known as Old Folks Concerts, and are first organized by Robert Kemp.[16]
  • The San Francisco opera tradition begins in 1850 and boasts international stars and a lively set of local performers by the middle of the decade.[17]
  • Popular songs become more "haunting and mawkish, the forerunner of the modern 'hurtin songs".[18]

1851

Lewis Henry Morgan, first ethnologist to perform a study of northeastern Native Americans.

1852

Catherine Hayes, one of the early stars of San Francisco opera

1853

  • Brooks K. Mould releases "Garden City Polka", the first copyrighted music published in Chicago. This is the beginning of that city's publishing industry.[33]
  • Firth, Pond & Company publish The Brass Band Journal, which includes the first band music to use the saxhorn.[3]
  • Frederick Law Olmsted gives one of the earliest depictions of an African American field holler, describing it as "a long, loud musical shout, rising and falling, and breaking into a crescendo... like a bugle call".[34]
  • George F. Root, William Bradbury and Lowell Mason organize the first Normal Musical Institute, a school offering training for music teachers, located in New York.[24][35] Root and Bradbury, with Thomas Hastings and Timothy Mason, collaborate on The Shawm, a popular collection of church music which they advertise as selling more in its first year of release than "any previous similar publication".[36]
  • Louis Antoine Jullien, a French conductor, forms an orchestra in New York, to great acclaim; his prominent use of the quadrille helps to spur the development of sheet music for that dance.[37]
  • Louis Gottschalk begins his concert career in the United States, already a renowned composer from his work in Europe.[38]
  • The first opera performed in Chicago is Lucia de Lammermoor.[39]
  • Virtuoso Norwegian violinist Ole Bull attracts an unprecedented 10,000 people to a concert in Memphis, Tennessee.
  • Phillip Werlein enters the music publishing business in New Orleans. He will go on to become one of the principal publishers of that city in the mid-19th century.[40]
  • Stephen Foster's "My Old Kentucky Home, Good Night" represents a radical shift in his approach to composition, abandoning the use of dialect and imparting a "blatant message (that) undoubtedly affect(s) working-class minstrel show audiences (who) would soon be called on to shed their blood to bring about the end of slavery in the United States".[14]
  • William Henry Fry's Santa Claus: Christmas Symphony is first performed. It is a controversial piece, and is probably the first American composition to use the saxophone. It also uses special effects that will not become common elements in such pieces until the following century, including a toy trumpet, sleigh bells, a whip, and the use of a double bass to make the sound of howling wind and a dying traveler.[41]
Mid 1850s music trends
  • Minstrel shows begin their second decade of popularity growing towards a "more limited, stereotyped portrayal of black characters."[42]
  • Saxhorns come to dominate the music of military bands.[43]

1854

1855

  • The Board of Music Trade of the United States, a trade cartel, is formed by the twenty-five biggest music publishing companies in the country,[50] instituting price controls on sheet music for European classical music, which will remain in place until 1885.[51] The Board will also fight music teachers, who sell sheet music to their students.[52]
  • George F. Bristow's Rip Van Winkle is said to be the first successful opera on an American subject, Washington Irving's short story Rip Van Winkle.[53] It is also the first American opera based on a subject by a contemporaneous author.[54]
William Joseph Hardee
  • Henry Wadsworth Longfellow publishes a long poem called The Song of Hiawatha, which sparks a surge of interest in Native American culture; this helps to inspire many later attempts at fusing elements of Native American and European-derived musics.[55] Longfellow's work inspires many composers like Charles Crozat Converse's "The Death of Minnehaha".[56]
  • Louis Grunewald, one of the major music publishers of the Civil War era in New Orleans, enters the business for the first time.[57]
  • William Joseph Hardee publishes a two volume manual Rifle and Light Infantry Tactics: For the Exercise and Manoeuvres of Troops When Acting as Light Infantry or Riflemen. It contains the "General Calls" that will signal all the important events in daily military camp life for both the Confederate and Union armies in the coming Civil War.[58]

1856

  • W.C. Peters and Son, a music publishing company, releases a collection of hymns that is the first such collection published in the American Midwest.[59]

1857

  • Edmund Dédé is possibly the first black North American to graduate from the Paris Conservatory.[47]
  • Joseph William Postlewaite, a free African American, begins leading bands in the St. Louis area, also composing several pieces, including the popular "St. Louis Greys Quick Step".[47]
  • Louisville, Kentucky becomes the first city in the country to include music education in the primary grades.[60]
  • Oliver Ditson's music publishing business begins collaborating with John C. Haynes; the duo will be one of the major publishers of the American Civil War, and will boast of publishing half of the songs printed in the country in the 1870s.[61]
  • The National Association of Music Teachers is formed.[52]
Late 1850s music trends

1858

1859

  • "Dixie", a song by Dan Emmett premiers onstage in New York, soon becoming a rallying cry for both sides of the Civil War. The song will eventually become an iconic symbol of the South.[14][69]
  • James Hungerford, in his novel, The Old Plantation, and What I Gathered There in an Autumn Month, becomes one of the first to transcribe a melody from an African American slave song, a "boat song" from Southern Maryland.[70]
  • Patrick Gilmore, an Irish American bandleader, debuts his band in New York; the ensemble's professional and grandiose performances will make it one of the most popular of the Civil War era.[8][71]

1860

Early 1860s music trends
  • Music and theater in the South suffer, both in the lead-up to and initial stages of the Civil War, as few Southerners patronize performances. In particular, opera suffers as many opera managers and performers moved to Europe for the duration.[72]
  • Johann Sebastian Bach's organ music grows in popularity as well, due in no small part to the work of John Knowles Paine.[73]
  • Armand Blackmar and his brother, Henry, open a music publishing business in New Orleans. They will become one of the most prominent Southern publishing houses during the Civil War.[74][75] This year also sees the entry into the publishing business of John Schreiner of Macon, Georgia,[76] the most adventurous publisher of the war era.[66]
  • "The First Gun Is Fired! May God Protect the Right!" by George Frederick Root is inspired by the Battle of Fort Sumter, the first fighting of the American Civil War. The song is published only three days after the attack.[66]
  • With the death of Joch C. Walker, his company becomes known as Evans & Cogswell, the most important lithographer and printer in the Confederacy.[15]
  • San Francisco is home to 145 opera performances, making this year a watershed for opera, both in San Francisco and in the United States. An estimated 217,000 seats were sold in the year, in a city with a population of about 60,000. This level of popularity is unheard of in any North American city at any point in history.[77]
  • "The Palmetto State Song" is published, first of "what was to become the Confederate music collection".[78] It is the first published Confederate sheet music.[79]

1861

Clara Louise Kellogg, a prominent American vocalist.
  • The American Civil War begins. Before it ends, it will have a profound impact on American music, spurring the publishing of patriotic songs on both sides, the migration of African Americans, and their styles and instruments, to new locales and the mixing of the musics of many peoples and regions in diverse military units.[80] The Civil War will also stimulate the production of brass instruments and drums.[81]
  • The Battle of First Manassas is among a number of early Southern victories that are "confidently celebrated in broadsides and sheet music, no matter how insignificant the outcome". Other important victories include the Battle of Wilson's Creek and the Battle of Belmont.[82]
  • Clara Louise Kellogg, a professional soloist, debuts at the New York Academy of Music, soon becoming a company manager and major figure in American opera history.[83]
  • Thomas Baker publishes the first "sheet-music publication of any black spiritual", Song of the Contrabands.[84] Harriet Tubman's "Go Down, Moses" is the first spiritual published with music in the United States.[85][86] It is also the most famous contraband song, or those spirituals which refugee slaves (contrabands) brought to Fortress Monroe, Virginia; for many white northerners, these songs became their first significant contact with spirituals.[87]
  • Harry Macarthy writes "The Bonnie Blue Flag", which becomes a popular Confederate anthem[14] after he performs it for the Texas Rangers and other soldiers at the Academy of Music in New Orleans. The success of the song and his "Personation Concerts", which feature impersonations of dialects and accents, made him the "best-known and best-loved entertainer of the Civil War"[88]
  • A fire destroys Hibernian Hall, the major theater of the city of Charleston, South Carolina; though the Hall is rebuilt, it never regains its former reputation.[89]
  • The most comprehensive collection of hymns in American history, Hymns Ancient and Modern, is first published. By the time its second edition is released in 1875, it will be by far the dominant Anglican hymnal in the country.[90]
  • A secessionist attack on Union troops in Baltimore inspire James Ryder Randall to write "Maryland, My Maryland". The song became perhaps the most enduring of the era and reflects the bitter partisanship of border states like Maryland. It is eventually chosen as the state song of Maryland.[91][92] The song is set to music later that year by members of the Baltimore Glee Club, including the prominent pro-Confederate Cary family, most famously Hetty Cary.[93] During the attack, the military musicians drop their instruments and flee.[94] Four bandsmen die, the first such casualties of the Civil War.[95]
  • Jefferson Davis is inaugurated President of the Confederacy in Montgomery, Alabama. Local bandleader Hermann Arnold, adapts "Dixie" into a military quickstep for the event. The song energizes the crowd, and Davis concludes that "Dixie" should be the national anthem for the Confederacy. Notable alternative versions are soon proffered, including the defiant "war song" version of Albert Pike and one by Henry Troop Stanton, known at the time as the "Poet Laureate of Kentucky".[96] A number of popular songs are published later in the year, celebrating Davis, most famously including "Our First President's Quickstep".[97]
  • The Northern Army, having already occupied Port Royal, South Carolina, sends an educational mission to care for the large African American population; Lucy McKim Garrison is among the northern visitors, and her study is the "first account of (African American spirituals) that attempted to describe some of their characteristic features". Her work will later be used in the influential collection Slave Songs of the United States.[98][99]
  • Congress authorizes the hiring of musicians in varying amounts for infantry, cavalry and artillery units in the U.S. Army.[95]

1862

General Dan Butterfield,composer of "Taps", after the bloody Seven Days Battles. of the Civil War
Mid 1860s music trends
  • American bands begin touring widely across the country, a practice formerly associated mostly with renowned European performers.[8]
  • The Civil War leads to greater female participation in music throughout the nation, in part due to the absence of male performers and managers fighting in the war. Other factors include the precedent-setting wave of English female composers during the same era, the growth in recognition for the composers of parlor songs and dances and the birth of a specialized wave of magazines and other businesses catering to female clientele.[111]
  • Major Confederate music publishing houses arise throughout the South, including that of Armand Blackmar of New Orleans, and later, Columbus, Georgia, Joseph Block of Mobile, Alabama, and John Schreiner's business headquartered in Macon, Georgia. Other music publishing firms in the South are located in Richmond, Virginia, Augusta, Georgia, Savannah, Georgia, Charleston, South Carolina and Columbia, South Carolina.[112]
  • A distinctive Irish-American song tradition takes shape, while the Irish begin to enter the theater business in large numbers.[113]
  • Community professional bands begin flourishing across the country. Wind ensembles are especially popular.[114]

1863

1864

  • The ever-diminishing food ration of the Confederate army soldier is cut again, leading to a fresh array of songs popular among soldiers and complaining of the poor food situation.[125]
  • George F. Root publishes "Tramp! Tramp! Tramp! (The Prisoner's Hope)"; the song is about being a prisoner of war, and is popular among Northern soldiers, selling one hundred thousand copies in six months. This year's "All Quiet Along the Potomac Tonight" by John Hill Hewitt and "Tenting on the Old Camp Ground" by Walter Kittredge are also popular hits.[14]
  • General Jeb Stuart is killed at the Battle of Yellow Tavern; Stuart, who was both a "'man's man' admired widely for his courage, and a 'lady's man', the heartthrob of the Confederacy", was a noted banjoist who led his men into battle singing. He was the "most flamboyant figure in the Confederacy".[126]
  • Despite the increasingly desperate military position of the South, the capital city of Richmond, Virginia is home to a large amount of merrymaking and festivities, including regular parties held by Jefferson Davis and his wife, Varina.[127]
  • Sheet music and broadsides popular among Southerners, especially soldiers, reflect the battered Confederate military efforts, celebrating the sacrifices of Southern soldiers, also stressing the "common bond of sacrifice between men in the field and women at home". Songs described women enduring hardships and learning to endure without the comforts that had previously been ordered from the industrious north.[128]

1865

  • En route to his second inauguration, Abraham Lincoln is perceived as cowardly sneaking through the city of Baltimore to avoid a potential assassination plot. The incident inspires a number of popular Confederate songs ridiculing Lincoln, whose behavior and appearance are criticized in much of Confederate popular music.[129]
  • Benjamin Jepson, one of the first primary school music teachers in the country, leads the introduction of music education into the public school system of New Haven, Connecticut.[23]
  • George Bruce and Daniel Emmett publish The Drummers and Fifers Guide, an important pedagogical work of the Civil War.[130]
  • The first African American minstrel troupes are formed, beginning with the Georgia Minstrels, led by W. H. Lee and based originally out of Macon, Georgia;[131] the second, and more historically notable line-up, is led by Charles "Barney" Hicks, and tours the Northeast, inspiring a wave of imitators.[132][133] It will be the most successful black minstrel group.[134]
  • The Oberlin College-Conservatory is one of the earliest and most influential music conservatories.[24]
  • Theodore Thomas forms an orchestra that he led both artistically and financially, in stark contrast to the norm at the time. Under his leadership, the orchestra is soon viewed as perhaps the best in the country.[135] Thomas will go on to play a "major role in bringing symphonic music to the American people".[136]
  • Tony Pastor's Opera House opens, marking the beginning of the development of vaudeville.[14]
  • An article entitled "The Negro Dialect" by William Francis Allen in The Nation is one of the first to use the word spiritual in a musical sense.[137]
Late 1860s music trends
  • In some urban areas, a cappella Norwegian and Swedish American choruses become commonplace, while Lutheran colleges begin sponsoring concert choirs.[64]

1866

  • The Black Crook premiers at Niblo's Garden in New York City, using a melodrama and a French ballet troupe whose venue burnt to the ground while they still rehearsed. The "result was an unprecedented triumph", and the show's mixture of "melodrama, dance, music, extraordinary special effects, and mild eroticism... dazzled far beyond any previous theatrical conception".[14] The show is one of the major events in the early history of the extravaganza. Music was credited to Thomas Baker, author of "Transformation Polka".[138] The venue was the managed by the first female theatrical manager in the country.[139]
  • George B. Loomis begins teaching music. He will be the first superintendent of music in the Indianapolis public school system, and will publish Loomis' Progressive Music Lessons, a commonly used music education book in Indiana and surrounding states. He will also co-found the Indiana Music Teachers Association, one of the first such organizations in the country.[140]

1867

The Black Crook finale

1868

  • John Thomas Douglass' Virginia's Ball is the first documented opera composed by an African American;[54] it is now lost, but was performed at least once, in New York in this year.[155]
  • "Shí naashá is composed to commemorate the Navajos' release from a four-year stretch of imprisonment at Fort Sumner, New Mexico. It will become "probably the best known Navajo song".[156]

1869

  • Alice Fletcher records a delegation from Leech Lake in Washington, D.C., the first recording of Ojibwe music.[157]
  • Lew Johnson organizes his first permanent black minstrel troupe, in St. Louis, Missouri; he will be the most well-regarded minstrel show manager of the era.[158]
  • Bandleader Patrick Gilmore organizes a National Peace Jubilee in Boston, featuring more than 11,000 performers - soloists, a choir, an orchestra and others. The event inspired a wave of interest in instrumental music across the country.[24] Music historian Richard Crawford has called this the "high-water mark in the influence of the band in American life".[159]
  • Gardiner A. Strubes' Strubes Drum and Fife Instructor is adopted by the U.S. Army as the manual for training field musicians.[45]
Fisk Jubilee Singers

1870

Early 1870s music trends

1871

1872

  • Preacher Dwight Moody and singer Ira Sankey, having published a wildly popular series of books entitled Gospel Hymns and Sacred Songs, perform in a series of concerts that establish a religious revival in the urban north.[171] Their travels "firmly (establish) the gospel hymn as an effective song genre for use in Sunday Schools and revival meetings".[172]
  • Ned Harrigan and Tony Hart begin a run at the Theatre Comique in New York, marking "their big breakthrough". They will become most famous for the song "The Mulligan Guards", with music by David Braham.[173]
Dwight Moody

1873

  • San Francisco begins passing laws limiting the use of ceremonial Chinese gongs.[27]
  • John Singenberger organizes the American St. Cecilia Society, an important organization in the revival of the Roman Catholic masses and motets of Palestrina. The Society sought "to restore to the liturgy Gregorian chant and polyphony in the style of Palestrina".[177]
  • Patrick Gilmore, a popular bandleader, organizes a band for the Twenty-second Regiment of New York, soon becoming the most influential professional music ensemble in the country.[8]
  • P. T. Barnum adds an African American jubilee choir to his act, calling himself the first to use a "full band" of African Americans in a "menagerie and circus".[178]
  • Barber William T. Benjamin forms the first African American opera company, and the first opera company of any kind in Washington, D.C., based out of a local Roman Catholic church.[179]
Mid 1870s music trends

1874

Scribner's Magazine

1875

1876

1877

Late 1870s music trends
  • The golden age of Chinese theatre in the United States begins.[27]

1878

1879

References

Notes

  1. ^ Abel, pg. 249
  2. ^ Keeling, Richard. "California". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 412–419. and Herzog, George (1928). "The Yuman Musical Style". Journal of American Folklore. 41 (160): 183–231. doi:10.2307/534896. JSTOR 534896. and Nettl, Bruno (1954). North American Indian Musical Styles. Philadelphia: American Folklore Society. ISBN 9780292735248.
  3. ^ a b Hansen, pg. 223
  4. ^ Chase, pg. 144
  5. ^ Crawford, pg. 186
  6. ^ Horn, David. "Impresario". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 548–549.
  7. ^ Burk, Meierhoff and Phillips, pg. 207
  8. ^ a b c d Preston, Katherine K.; Susan Key, Judith Tick, Frank J. Cipolla and Raoul F. Camus. "Snapshot: Four Views of Music in the United States". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 554–569.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  9. ^ Clarke, pg. 57
  10. ^ Southern, pg. 106
  11. ^ a b c d Crawford, pg. 193
  12. ^ Bird, pg. 320
  13. ^ Crawford, pg. 210
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Cockrell, Dale and Andrew M. Zinck, "Popular Music of the Parlor and Stage", pgs. 179–201, in the Garland Encyclopedia of World Music
  15. ^ a b Abel, pg. 258
  16. ^ Chase, pg. 136
  17. ^ Crawford, pgs. 191–194
  18. ^ Abel, pg. 136
  19. ^ Abel, pg. 133
  20. ^ Crawford, pg. 427
  21. ^ Southern, pg. 103
  22. ^ Levine, Victoria Lindsay. "Northeast". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 461–465. and Morgan, Henry Louis (1962) [1852]. League of the Ho-dé-no-sau-nee or Iroquois. Secaucus, New Jersey: Citadel Press.
  23. ^ a b c Birge, pg. 65, citing Francis M. Dickey's The Early History of Public School Music in the United States
  24. ^ a b c d e f Colwell, Richard; James W. Pruett and Pamela Bristah. "Education". New Grove Dictionary of Music. pp. 11–21.
  25. ^ Chase, pg. 256
  26. ^ Shanet, Howard. "Eisfeld, Theodor(e)". New Grove Dictionary of American Music. pp. 24–25.
  27. ^ a b c Zheng, Su. "Chinese Music". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 957–966.
  28. ^ Crawford, pg. 235
  29. ^ Blum, Stephen. "Sources, Scholarship and Historiography" in the Garland Encyclopedia of World Music, pgs. 21–37
  30. ^ Southern, pg. 210
  31. ^ Elson, University Musical Encyclopedia, pg. 102
  32. ^ Chase, pg. 204
  33. ^ a b Pruter, Robert; Paul Oliver and The Editors. "Chicago". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. Retrieved July 9, 2008. {{cite book}}: |author2= has generic name (help)
  34. ^ Darden, pg. 44
  35. ^ Chase, pg. 143
  36. ^ Chase, pg. 142; Chase cites an advertisement from 1855.
  37. ^ Crawford, pgs. 285–286
  38. ^ Chase, pg. 291
  39. ^ Burk, Meierhoff and Phillips, pg. 163
  40. ^ Abel, pg. 267
  41. ^ Chase, pg. 312
  42. ^ Crawford, pg. 217
  43. ^ Crawford, pg. 274
  44. ^ Rasmussen, Anne K. "Middle Eastern Music". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 1028–1041.
  45. ^ a b U.S. Army Bands
  46. ^ Burk, Meierhoff and Phillips, pg. 181
  47. ^ a b c Wright, Jacqueline R. B. "Concert Music". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 603–613.
  48. ^ Burk, Meierhoff and Phillips, pg. 152
  49. ^ Birge, pg. 80
  50. ^ Sanjek, David; Will Straw. "The Music Industry". Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 256–267.
  51. ^ Horn, David; David Sanjek. "Sheet Music". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music. pp. 599–605.
  52. ^ a b Clarke, pg. 251
  53. ^ Chase, pg. 310
  54. ^ a b Kirk, pg. 386
  55. ^ Crawford, pg. 393
  56. ^ Cornelius, pg. 9
  57. ^ Abel, pg. 268
  58. ^ Abel, pg. 145
  59. ^ Snell and Kelley, pg. 31, citing Wetzel, pgs. 203–230
  60. ^ Birge, pg. 79
  61. ^ a b c Cornelius, pg. 19
  62. ^ Chase, pg. 163
  63. ^ Crawford, pg. 181
  64. ^ a b Levy, Mark; Carl Rahkonen and Ain Haas. "Scandinavian and Baltic Music". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 866–881.
  65. ^ Chase, pg. 240
  66. ^ a b c Cornelius, pg. 18
  67. ^ Laing, Dave. "Root & Cady". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music. p. 592. Laing notes that Root & Cady "published most of the bestselling popular songs associated with the American Civil War".
  68. ^ Kearns, Williams. "Overview of Music in the United States". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 519–553.
  69. ^ Crawford, pg. 264
  70. ^ Crawford, pg. 411
  71. ^ Crawford, pgs. 287–289
  72. ^ National Conference of Music of the Civil War Era, pg. 11, cited to Ottenberg, pgs. 111, 117
  73. ^ National Conference of Music of the Civil War Era, pg. 12
  74. ^ Abel, pg. 265
  75. ^ Cornelius, pg. 17
  76. ^ Abel, pg. 270
  77. ^ Crawford, pg. 194
  78. ^ a b Abel, pg. 255
  79. ^ Walter B. Edgar (1998). South Carolina: A History. p. 355.
  80. ^ Crawford, pg. 258
  81. ^ Bastian, Vanessa. "Instrument Manufacture". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 526–529.
  82. ^ Abel, pg. 119
  83. ^ Snell and Kelley, pg. 8
  84. ^ Crawford, pgs. 413–415
  85. ^ Darden, pg. 96
  86. ^ Malone and Stricklin, pg. 26
  87. ^ Chase, pg. 220
  88. ^ Abel, pgs 52–53, 60-61, 63; Abel compares Macarthy's role in the South to that of Bob Hope during World War II.
  89. ^ Abel, pg. 243
  90. ^ Horn, David. "Hymnals". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music. pp. 580–583. Horn notes that the hymnal "obliterated other Anglican opposition".
  91. ^ Crawford, pgs. 260–261
  92. ^ Elson, University Musical Encyclopedia, pg. 81; Elson calls it the "only distinctive anthem" among state songs.
  93. ^ Abel, pg. 70
  94. ^ Cornelius, pg. 42
  95. ^ a b c U.S. Army Bands
  96. ^ Abel, pgs. 33–37
  97. ^ Abel, pgs. 98–99
  98. ^ Chase, pg. 220–221
  99. ^ Darden, pg. 99
  100. ^ Crawford, pg. 263
  101. ^ Abel, pg. 164
  102. ^ Abel, pg. 148
  103. ^ Abel, pg. 43
  104. ^ Abel, pg. 196
  105. ^ Chase, pg. 155
  106. ^ Abel, pg. 176
  107. ^ Abel, pgs. 109–111
  108. ^ Abel, pgs. 74–75
  109. ^ a b Abel, pg. 240
  110. ^ Abel, pgs. 120–122
  111. ^ a b Snell and Kelley, pg. 19
  112. ^ Abel, pgs. 245, 248
  113. ^ Crawford, pg. 484; Crawford cites this claim to Marks, Edward B. (1934). They All Sang: From Tony Pastor to Rudy Vallee. New York: Viking., who adds that theater audiences were also often Irish.
  114. ^ Crawford, pgs. 454–455
  115. ^ National Conference of Music of the Civil War Era, pg. 17, citing Pugh
  116. ^ Abel, pg. 191
  117. ^ Abel, pgs. 269–271
  118. ^ Horn, David; David Buckley. "War and Armed Conflict". Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 389–395.
  119. ^ Abel, pgs. 105–107
  120. ^ Abel, pg. 113
  121. ^ Abel, pgs. 259–260
  122. ^ Laing, Dave. "Musicians' Unions". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 785–787.
  123. ^ Abel, pg. 122
  124. ^ Darden, pg. 97
  125. ^ Abel, pg. 167
  126. ^ Abel, pgs. 111–112
  127. ^ Abel, pgs. 180–181
  128. ^ Abel, pg. 123
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Further reading

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