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"Kelly's Irish Brigade"
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| The Warner Collection "Yankee" John Galusha |
One of the great musical characters they met in their travels was "Yankee" John Galusha, who was 80 years old in 1939. He had spent his life in the North Country of the Adirondack Mountains of New York State, in and around the village of Minerva, and was well-known for his remarkable abilities in memorizing long stories and songs in the Irish oral tradition. Yankee John's antecedents were said to be Irish, as were those of his neighbors, and he knew many an Irish song, a number of them referencing the American Civil War. His connection to the conflict was close—he had two older brothers who had served in it, and brother Stillman died at home in March 1865 of wounds received while fighting with the 96th New York Infantry Regiment nine months earlier at Cold Harbor, Virginia.
| A key to unearthing the song was "Yankee" John Galusha, an 80-year-old singer with a prodigious memory for long stories and songs in the Irish oral tradition. |
Due to the politics of the time and the quotas imposed on the states by the Federal government (Pennsylvania's governor feared credit for the regiment would go to New York, the Irish Brigade being formed of regiments principally from that state), they would never join that fabled unit, serving instead with another outfit of equally tough reputation: the "Philadelphia Brigade." Although the song provides a fairly accurate history of the regiment through the end of 1862, the unit went on to fight many battles, including the July 1863 battle of Gettysburg—the 69th Pennsylvania's finest combat hour among many—and served with distinction to the end of the war.
Aided by the Internet, further research would reveal that the song was in the extraordinary collection of the Library of Congress, and had been published in 1863 as a broadside (lyric sheet with no music notation), by J. H. Johnson, Song Publisher, Stationer & Printer, No. 7 N. Tenth St. 3 doors above Market, Phila, under this title:
The broadside lists the song's air (melody) as "McKenny’s (McKenna’s) Dream." To our great fortune, Frank Warner had every song he found transcribed into music notation, and consequently, "Yankee" John's rendition of this was there in its full glory. The melody turned out to be a classic, though not necessarily the "McKenna's Dream" mentioned above. That melody was found in "Old Irish Folk Music & Songs" by P.W. Joyce (Dublin, 1909), and though it sounds in many ways similar to "Yankee" John's version, it is difficult, as anyone who has delved into folk music can attest, to determine if it is precisely the same tune, as variations in folk music are known to be endless. For myself, "Yankee" John's was the preferred version, although in my arrangement I took it from a 4/4 time signature to that of 6/8, giving it more of the rhythmic feel of a jig.
The broadside also revealed the song had 10 verses instead of John's eight, though may be "Yankee" John had only seen eight. Broadsides of the same lyric were often printed in different versions by different publishers during the Civil War (copyright laws being lax, to put it mildly), and some of these versions were often abbreviated. He also had one verse out of chronological order, and had mispronounced the name of the 69th's later commander, Colonel O'Kane ("O'Keene" according to
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| Historical Art Prints The 69 Pennsylvania withstands the onslaught of Pickett's Charge on a day when the regiment truly was the "Rock of Erin," as depicted here by artist Don Troiani. For a larger view, click here. |
"Yankee" John Galusha should not only be forgiven for any minor mistakes, but remembered with great reverence for the astounding wealth of historical songs his great memory has bestowed upon us. Frank and Anne Warner should be remembered with no less esteem. It is my sincere hope that the release of this recording will also help to ensure that the memory of the fighting 69th Regiment, Pennsylvania Volunteers, and the great sacrifices of its men, will never be forgotten.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Author David Kincaid, pictured right at Gettysburg, has been the lead singer and guitarist with the rock group, The Brandos, for quite some time. A Manhattan resident, Dave is a keen student of the Irish experience during the Civil War, and re-enacts with Co. I, 116th Pennsylvania Volunteers. His new album, "The Irish-American's Song," can be ordered online from Haunted Fields Music.
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