ARI Smart Content - Data Table

Click to show on right, Sources for Song below
Bargery Number 273
Music (Given or Suggested) John Raven suggests that it may have been sung to the tune of La Pique (Ref: Victoria's Inferno,pp55-56)
Printer or Publisher Port of Tyne Pilot
Author Ben Mainmast, Pilot, South Shields
Earliest Date 1839
Evidence for Earliest Date The Newcastle and North Shields line opened on 21st June 1839
Latest Date 1839
Evidence for Latest Date The text describes events in the present tense, in particular the line 'But old Shields metamorphosed, as she's been today'
Source of Text FARNE Archive. Song Sheets collected by John Bell
Where Printed Tynemouth and South Shields
Roud Not in the Roud Index
Parsed Title Newcastle and Shields Railway
First Line Well many droll sites have I seen in my time
Source of Music As text
Source Title New song on the opening of the Newcastle and Shields railway
Origin Broadside Ballad

Newcastle And Shields Railway

Suggested tune. see Music comments

[273Notation]

Well many droll sights have I seen in my time,
In many a ship, Jack, in many a clime:
But old Shields metamorphosed, as she's been today,
Why, my old wig from brown, Jack, you see has turned grey.

Chorus: Derry down down,  Down derry down

Why, when I was a lad, Jack, and old mother you know
As women will do, Jack, a-gadding would go,
We talked on't a month, and then WALK'D up to town, [Note 273.1]
And JEM JOHNSON¹'S WHERRY¹ convoyed us all down. [Note 273.2]

When our skipper to custom house hurried, d'ye see,
Outside of a horse, like John Gilpin¹, got he:
And when weary of spurring and playing_the_thong¹
Took a tow of a coal cart to help him along.

Then coaches and steamboats and gigs¹ came in play,
And the hacks and the wherries were all done away;
But the sand banks by water, and high banks by land,
Brought our steamboats "up standing" and gigs to a stand. [Note 273.3]

Howsomever, you see, Jack, some Captains they tell
Sticking fast on a sand-bank as often befell, [Note 273.4]
RAIL'D so hard at the river, as I have heard say
That they got up a RAILROAD - it was opened today. [Note 273.5]

And like the ship's ways, Jack, it stretches among
The hills and the valleys, old Tyneside along;
And the ships lay in line, with a thing at their bow
Like a fiend from the pit, Jack, that took then in tow. [Note 273.6]

For it snorted and roared, and struggled and screamed,
Like the horrible shapes that mayhap we have dreamed;
Then another wild scream, Jack, another deep groan,
And like underground-thunder, the phantoms were gone!

They say it's all science - say it's all bam¹ -
For it either is witchcraft or else it's a sham,
To rush like a thundercloud up to the town;
I'm afeard it will end in their all rushing DOWN


Written for the PORT OF TYNE PILOT, which Journal is published every Friday evening at six o'clock, in the Boroughs of Tynemouth and South Shields. Subscribers¹ names, Advertisements, &c, to be addressed to the Office, north Shields.

 

 

3 across Articles in this Category: click a link

Pleasures Of Travelling By Steam

bar141a: Dates 1838~1840|

Anticipates the benefits of the railway

Newcastle & North Shields Railway

bar564a: Dates 1839~1839|

A sail maker laments the effect of the railway upon river boats.

Newcastle And Shields Railway

bar273a: Dates 1839~1839|

A Tyne river pilot anticipates the impact of steam boats and railways.

My Grandfather's Days

bar542: Dates 1836~----|

A general complaint about political changes and new technology includes references to steam coaches and railways.

Johnny Green's Trip Fro' Owdhum To See...

bar199: Dates 1830~1842|

A weaver describes the railway - notes that it has depressed stage coach trade - but expects new railways to benefit weavers. [199Synopsis] 

Wonderful Effects Of The Leicester Rail...

bar480: Dates 1840~1840|

Looks forward to being able to move people and goods quickly and celebrates the expected demise of the coaching trade.

Oxford & Hampton Railway

bar302: Dates 1852~1854|

A celebration of the new railway and the people who went to see it.

Railway Whistle

bar349: Dates 1839~----|

Discomforts and dangers of railway travel

Dublin Steam Coach

bar099b: Dates 1835~----|

A visitor to Dublin sees the first railway in Ireland and also the road steam coach Erin.

Newport Railway

bar716: Dates 1879~1879|

Celebrating the opening of the line across the Tay Bridge

Reply to Wordsworth

663a: Dates 1847~1847|

An engineer counters Wordsworth's objection to the railways

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