ARI Smart Content - Data Table

Click to show on right, Sources for Song below
Bargery Number 099
Music Notation No tune given
Printer or Publisher Not known
Author Anonymous
Earliest Date 1835
Evidence for Earliest Date Steam coach Erin ran through the streets of Dublin
Source of Text Bodleian Library, Harding B 25(22)
Where Printed Probably in Ireland
Roud V52138
First Line I'm a rambling nailor, John Shaw is my name
Variant Set No known variants
Source Title Dublin Steam Coach

Dublin Steam Coach

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I'm a rambling nailor¹, John Shaw is my name
From Belfast to Dublin fair city I came
I thought before I to my work would set to
Of that famous city I would take a view

Derry Down

The 7th of December I chanced to approach [Note 099.1]
Unto Westland Row I beheld a fine coach [Note 099.2]
It ran without horses to Kingstownº that day 
To save the expenses of corn and hay

Its next then to Dame Street I next took my way
When a brand new invention I spied on my way
A steam mill in a window which did me surprise 
A grinding of coffee to make the folks wise [Note 099.3]

To Sackville street next as myself did approach
I saw whizzing past me a thundering steam coach 
In its belly were passengers flying to Howthº [Note 099.4]
But among them my body to risk I'd be loth

By steam they weave cotton by steam they make broth
By steam in the calender¹ they dress the cloth
And if that the time doesn't alter I deem
The poor of the city may live upon steam

By steam they make by steam they grind [malt?]
By steam they make beer by steam they make salt
By steam they make mammers (sic) by it they make saws
By steam they weave tape and by steam they print gauze¹

By steam they cast brass and by steam they cast lead
By steam they make use of the folks when they're dead
There's nothing but steam with the folks will go down
By steam the[y] picked out of my pocket a crown¹

King Solomon said but that cannot be true
That under the heavens there is nothing new [Note 099.5]
Neither him nor his father nor yet his grannson
Ever saw a steam coach through Jerusalem run

Its back to the north on the coach I will steer
In Dublin I pad for my rambling to(sic) dear
Adieu to your steam and adieu to your gass(sic) [Note 099.6]
I will stop in the country with my bonny lass

As smoking hot water makes machines go fast
I will try it on myself when I go to Belfast
But a little improvement on it I intend
To mix whiskey and sugar to drink with a friend.

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bar624: Dates ----~1828|

A young woman persuades her wealthy parents to pay her to take a pleasure ride on the new steam coach

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Richard Trevithick's "Puffing Devil"

John Gilpin's Steam Coach Excursion

bar197: Dates ----~1837|

Gilpin's misadventures driving a steam "coach"

Connaughtman's Adventures in Dublin

bar613: Dates 1835~----|

A country man where he cheated out of money and clothes by a young woman and her accomplices. Mentions a steam coach.

Steam carriages by land

bar557: Dates ----~----|

Fragment noting the arrival of the steam coach.

London sights

bar625: Dates ----~1828|

A countryman is impressed by London including Gurney's steam coach. [625Synopsis] 

Steam Tram Lines

bar418: Dates ----~1886|

Steam bus service in Birmingham and the consequent air pollution

Traffic Through the Streets

bar258: Dates 1882~1884|

Mentions steam trams in Plymouth

Traction Engine, The

bar444: Dates ----~1927|

Song for children

My Grandfather's Days

bar542: Dates 1836~----|

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

New Invented Steam Carriage

bar267: Dates 1827~1828|

Immediate reaction to the steam coach and its impact upon stage coaches.

New Steam Carriage Blown Up, The

bar271: Dates 1823~----|

The dangers of travelling by steam coach

Dublin Steam Coach

bar099a: Dates 1835~----|

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

Steam! Steam!! Steam!!!

bar416a: Dates 1834~1835|

Alludes to the London to Brighton steam coach.

Conveyancing

bar729: Dates 1831~1839|

Refers to a steam coach as a "Gurney" after the engineer Goldsworthy Gurney.

Death of John Thomas Hirst

bar743: Dates 1891~1891|

A tram cleaner killed when the engine explodes. [Fragment]

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