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Click to show on right, Sources for Song below
Bargery Number 030
Music Notation The source has been edited to give a tune that fits the text.
Music (Given or Suggested) No tune is given. However; a Morris dance called Travel by Steam was performed to a variant of Swaggering Boney. The use of the phrase 'You may travel by steam' in the chorus suggests that this song may have been sung to a variant of the Morris tune. The dance was certainly performed in the Costwolds. The line from Birmingham to London opened through Banbury in 1838 so the song may have prompted the alternative name of the dance tune.
Printer or Publisher Russell
Author Anonymous
Earliest Date 1837
Evidence for Earliest Date The Birmingham and Liverpool railway opened throughout for traffic on 4th July 1837, the day given in the first line
Latest Date 1837
Evidence for Latest Date It is not likely that a song with such a short period of relevance would have been created more than a few days after the events described. In fact it may well have been written in advance of the events to enable the broadside to be sold as a souvenir of the day.
Source of Text English Folk Dance and Song Society Vaughn Williams Memorial Library Madden Collection 21 (Country Printers 6) [VWML mfilm No.88) Item no.356
Where Printed Birmingham
Roud V9449
Source of Music The Morris Ring https://themorrisring.org/tradition/longborough/music/swaggering-boney (accessed 13Apr21)
Variant Set One of four variants of the same ballad and probably the one from which the other were adapted. See Also 'Opening of the New Railway' 'The New London Railway' 'The Railway'
Source Title A New Song on the opening of the Birmingham and Liverpool Railway
Origin Broadside

Birmingham And Liverpool Railway

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The opening ceremony and the people who went to watch.

[030Notation]
(suggested tune - Click to Show Sources etc. and see Music)

Now folks I will tell you although I'm a clown¹
By steam you may ride with speed up and down,
Now that's all the go I will tell you for why
The people are eager to learn for to fly.

Chorus: You may travel by steam, or so the folks say
All the world over upon the railway

On the 4th of July I recollect well [Note 030.1]
What bustle there was in the morning I'll tell
With lasses and lads so buxom¹ and gay
Delighted and talking about the railway

To view the railroad away they did go
Tis a great undertaking as you very well know
It surpasses all others believe me its true
There's tunnels for miles that you have to go through

Here's coaches and carts to accommodate all
The lame and the lazy, the great and the small
If you wish to ride, to be sure you must pay
To see all the fun sir upon the railway

How pleasant it is for to see them indeed;
The long train of carriages go with such speed -
O dear Mrs Tit where is our daughter?
She will be run o'er by this boing hot water.

Colliers from Hamptonº and Bilstonº likewise [Note 030.2]
And Wedgeburyº nailors¹ are struck with surprise
To see the railroad to be sure they must go
Drest up in their best, they cut a fine show.

The cobbler left the old shoes in the shop
Old women on crutches were seen for to hop
The tailor his customers would not obey
But rode on his goose¹ to see the railway

There was Dumpling Bet with Jack the Moonraker¹
There was buxom young Kit with the Butcher and Baker
And Black Sal from Walsallº with two wooden legs
To see the railroad how she trudged on her pegs

What a treat for young lovers to see Gretna_Greenº
The blacksmith will tie the knot for them by steam
With his hammer and anvil he'll make them obey
And pack them off snugly upon the railway.

In London I've heard there is a machine
Invented for making young children by steam [Note 030.3]
Such dear little creatures full thirty each day
For young engineers¹ to supply the railway

Don't you think with the Tories¹ we've a fine chance
We can send them directly over to France,
And when landed there, if they cannot agree
We will send them by steam to America. [Note 030.4]

Talk of ships on the sea - that is all stuff¹
By water or land you may ride snug enough
If you have got money, your passage to pay
You may ride far and near upon the railway

Now there's Mr Pops and his lovely daughter,
Resolved they are for to travel by water,
This new-fashioned way now friend, do you mind
For the water goes fast and Pops goes behind

To see them come in how the people do flock,
To accommodate all there's lots of prime pop¹,
And ladies drest up in their costume so fine,
There's good ale and brandy whiskey and wine.

So now my good fellows let us be free
Again fill the glasses now merry we'll be
Success to all trades in the reign of our queen [Note 030.5]
And boiling hot water that travels by steam.

 

3 across Articles in this Category: click a link

Jim Crow's Description Of The New...

bar359: Dates 1836~1836|

Comic description of the opening ceremony.

History o' Haworth Railway

bar156: Dates 1867~1867|

A jocular history in dialect prose and verse.

Llanidloes & Newtown Railway

bar224: Dates 1859~1859|

A song written by a Navvy and sold at the opening ceremony.

Opening of the Newcastle and Carlisle...

bar643: Dates 1838~1843|

A detailed account of the first trip on the route, with comments on the historical nature of the event and many local references.

New London Railway, The

bar269: Dates 1839~1840|

 Printed in Sunderland. Sunderland gained a rail route to London via Durham in 1839. The text is identical to Bar301

Newcastle & Carlisle Railway

bar272: Dates 1835~1835|

The opening of the first section of the line.

Newcastle & Carlisle Railway

bar502: Dates 1838~1838|

Probably printed for sale at the opening of the completed line in 1838.

Opening of the New Railway

bar301: Dates 1837~1838|

Probably printed for the opening of the first section of the Birmingham to London railway, 1837 and/or the completed line, 1838.

Railway, The

bar350: Dates 1837~----|

Probably printed to mark the Newcastle-Carlisle railway, 1838 and/or the Newcastle & Shields, 1839

Glasgow and Ayr Railway

bar135: Dates 1840~1840|

A detailed description of the opening ceremony and the inaugural locomotive journey.

Birmingham And Liverpool Railway

bar030: Dates 1837~1837|

The opening ceremony and the people who went to watch.

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