George Hill: Difference between revisions

From Folkopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "George Hill was a blacksmith in Dursley, Gloucestershire, and Miss C. M. Newhouse collected several songs from him which were published in the 1934 edition of the Journal of Engl...")
 
(No difference)

Latest revision as of 14:43, 14 December 2011

George Hill was a blacksmith in Dursley, Gloucestershire, and Miss C. M. Newhouse collected several songs from him which were published in the 1934 edition of the Journal of English Folk Dance & Song Society. Miss Newhouse was the Head Branch Teacher of the EFDSS.

The two songs were:
The Tailor and the Crow (Roud 891)
A, Bottle, A Bowl, A Dish and a Ladle (Roud 1505)
George Edward Hill was born in Dursley in January 1872 and although his father, William, was a baker, became a blacksmith. At the end of 1893 he married a girl from Uley, Annie Elizabeth Hurn and the couple lived in the hamlet of Woodmancote near Dursley. He died in June 1944. The Journal reported "Mr. Hill is a self-taught musician with experience of brass bands. Of several songs which he gave to Miss Newhouse, variants mostly of familiar songs, not a note had been in his head for fifty years. But hearing "One man shall mow my meadow," sing at a folk-dance festival recently, started some train of memory which ultimately yielded some half a dozen songs. "A Bowl, A Bottle" was sung by the Gloucestershire team at the All England Festival in the Albert Hall on January 5th, 1934."

Paul Burgess

References:

Journal of English Folk Dance & Song Society 1:3 (1934) pp.136-137