History of Oregon Literature/Chapter 28

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CHAPTER 28

Song Writers and Songs Since 1860

Oh, you hungry Lucille from Coquille,
You seem to be made out of steel,
Your eyes, they shine brightly,
You do things, uprightly,
In a way that's a shame to reveal.
C. R. MOORE. BANDON HIGH SCHOOL OPERA, 1909

Why haven’t we had Oregon cowboy songs? Why can’t we point to a whole logging minstrelsy? Perhaps wheat lends itself to economics more than to music, but isn’t it to be expected that we would have ballads of the salmon fisherman, of the hop pickers, of the berry harvesters, and in varied celebrity of the Oregon apple? And why no sweet resonance to match the fragrance of the haystacks?

Pete French’s cowboys on the great P-Ranch in Harney County and the riders on all the far stretching ranges of Eastern Oregon sang plaintive melodies of other trails, of other herds and of lonely nights under other skies than their own. The logger has been sartorially original and has clothed himself in distinctive garments, but his songs, if he sang any, were not of his own making nor in expression of his own calling. Stewart H. Holbrook, a Portland writer who knows the big woods and those who work in them, confirms the lack of Oregon timber songs which a fairly diligent and resourceful search could not turn up in printed records.

When you come to think of it, Oregon’s main industries are of a curiously silent sort—the cattle ranges located amidst the austere soundlessness of the desert; the noise of the timberman's saw and ax unaccompanied by human voices, and meals dispatched quickly and with taciturnity in the mess house; the forest ranger blending with the stillness of his umbrageous trails; the salmon fishermen working in the meditative quiet of all fishing; the hush of autumn upon the apple.

With the exception of the poems of Ella Higginson, the lyrics of Oregon poets have not been extensively set to music. In the list given in this chapter will be recognized the names of several authors with reputations in Oregon literature, but the great bulk of Oregon songs have had their words written by those without a clear title otherwise to the name of poet. An examination of the list will show that this has not meant the substitution of genuine folk origins for professional versifying, but rather that the musicians have had a disposition to write their own lyrics, not always to the advantage of the literary aspects of the songs. The De Moss family, for instance, were inspiring in their pioneer musical citizenship, but the stanzas they themselves wrote do not incorporate sentiment or diction of significant quality or permanent appeal. In fact, the list taken as a whole does not speak too highly for the libretto part of Oregon songs.

The output has not been prolific—about 80 songs for 75 years. It probably does not represent fully the creative attitude that existed. No doubt, the difficulty and expense of securing publication has been a deterring factor. When the Society of Oregon Composers held a two-months contest for the Oregon State Song, there was a total of 212 entries. Also, many compositions by Oregonians have been left out of this bibliography, which gives only those with texts that deal in some way with Oregon and excludes all instrumental pieces. The most productive period in Oregon song writing was conspicuously the decade from 1910 to 1920. For some reason, during those ten years half of all the songs in the list were written and published.

As has already been observed, many of the things one would expect to be celebrated in Oregon song have been almost entirely overlooked. The favorite themes have been Oregon itself, roses, pioneers and special occasions.

The list, with some exceptions in the grouping of lyrics by the same author, is chronological, and has been separated into three 25-year periods—1860-1885, 1885-1910, 1910-1935.

Oregon Suits Me. Anonymous. Tune—"Battle Hymn of the Republic." New York. The School Singer, Mark H. Newman and Company.

Exact date not determined but probably in the 60's. The song tells about the disadvantages of Missouri, Kansas and North Dakota in two stanzas, each with the closing line "But Oregon suits me" and with the following chorus:

I am satisfied with Oregon.
I am satisfied with Oregon.
I am satisfied with Oregon,
The good old web-foot state.

The Oregon Farmer's Song. Written and sung by John Minto for the first Oregon State Fair, 1861.

Published in the Oregon Historical Quarterly, June, 1908; also in Rhymes of Early Life in Oregon.

A Granger's Love Song. By John Minto. 1867.

Composed to fill a lack in the collection of songs used by the Salem Grange Patrons of Husbandry. Published in Rhymes of Early Life in Oregon.

The Pacific Railroad. Words by M. B. C. S. Boston. The Golden Robin. Oliver Ditson Company. 1868.

Campaign Songs. By Abigail Scott Duniway. 1871, 1872. The first of these appeared in the New Northwest for Septem- ber 8, 1871, Tune—"Ten Thousand Miles Away"; the second in the New Northwest for September 22, 1872, Tune—"Wait for the Turn of the Tide." Oregon is not mentioned by name in these songs but they are included to show that song writing was also one of the many gifts possessed by Mrs. Duniway. "The Song of the Ten- Cent Postage Stamp," probably not sung by anybody but her fic- tional characters, was given in Captain Gray's Company, 1859. Suffrage Hymn, by her in 1912, was set to music by Mrs. Alfred E. Clark and published in Portland by Sharp and Mack. Song of the Pioneers. Words by Samuel A. Clarke. Tune— "Tramp, Tramp, Tramp." Pioneer Transactions, 1876. Samuel A. Clarke, the subject of an earlier chapter in this book, was the author of Sounds by the Western Sea. His verse is melo- dious and it is surprising that he did not write more song lyrics. Oregon. Words and music by Charles H. Jones. Portland. Wiley B. Allen. 1895. Charles H. Jones was for twenty-three years editor of The Ore- gon Teachers' Monthly. He was a native of the Waldo Hills in Marion County, where he was born in 1864.. He was graduated from the Monmouth Normal School in 1888, and taught at St. Helens, Eugene, McMinnville and Salem. He compiled The West- ern Songster in 1921, printed many songs in his magazine, and was popular as a leader of singing at the teachers' institutes. Sweet Oregon. Words and music by Henry S. De Moss. 1895. The Oregon Sunday Journal for October 5, 1913, described the De Moss family as follows: "Half a century ago, De Moss and his wife, both good musicians, crossed the plains from Missouri to Oregon to engage in Missionary work. They sung to and prayed for Indians on the upper Columbia River until they nearly starved. On account of Indian wars, missionary work became unprofitable. By this time and a little later five children were born. The mother and father sang, and the children took up singing as they learned to talk. Cowboys rode for miles to hear the De Moss children and their mother and father sing. They came at all seasons of the day and night, out in what is now Union County. The children were wakened from bed to sing just one song for some passing pioneer stockman or plainsman. Then it was song after song until the little ones were tired out. Some of them came

as far as twenty miles on Sunday to hear the De Moss family sing. It became such a popular place that the De Moss family were exhausted physically, financially and from a point of provisions. "Dr. Hines came along one day—he was a young man then—and he heard the family sing and liked it. He also learned that they were in need and were getting nothing for their entertainment. He happened to have an organ and the elder De Moss traded a cow for this instrument. After that they gave many entertainments and charged admission. The De Moss family has ever since been on the road, and it has traveled in every way and everywhere where it is possible for a human being to go." Oregon—A Jubilee Hymn. Words by Col. Frank V. Drake. Tune—"Red, White and Blue." Pioneer Transactions, 1896. Pioneer Song. Words by Mrs. J. M. McCully. Tune— "Auld Lang Syne." 1896. Published by George H. Himes, together with another song, Ore- gon, by Col. Frank V. Drake, and a poem, "Pioneer Day," by Ella Higginson, on "Half Century Anniversary of Treaty with England whereby Oregon—historic Oregon—came under the jurisdiction of the United States." Our Emblem Flower. Words by Ena M. White; music by Gertrude Adams. Oregon Native Son, May, 1899; The Musical Pastime, Wiley B. Allen Company, 1899. Peerless Oregon. Words by W. C. Kantner; music by Clif- ford W. Kantner. Oregon Native Son, May, 1899. Sacajawea Lullaby. Words and music by Ziporah Harris. Portland. Wright's Music House. 1903. This is one of the most charming of Oregon songs. The first stanza is as follows: Shu, shu, shu, shu, Little papoose go to sleep, Shu, shu, shu, shu, Sacajawea sings to you, In all the wigwams camp fires are low, Sunlight was sleepy long, long ago, Sacajawea's baby must sleep, While mother watches, her papoose keep. She's Sleeping 'Neath Oregon's Tall Pines. Words by Francis H. Edwards; music by Bayard E. Foote. Port- land. Wright's Music House. 1903.

My Old Oregon Home. Words by Francis H. Edwards; music by Bayard E. Foote. Portland. Lipman Wolfe & Company. 1905. The Beautiful Oregon Shore. Words and music by W. J. Crawford. Salem. Oregon Teachers' Monthly. 1903. My Sweet Willamette Maid. Words and music by Nat Kren. Portland. Graves and Company. 1905. Oregon, Our Oregon. Written for the Lewis and Clark Centennial, 1905. Words by Inez E. Adams Parker. Tune—"Maryland, My Maryland." Pioneer Trans- actions, 1928. The Mission Bell. Words by Agnes D. Campbell; music by David B. Campbell. About 1902. Salem. The West- ern Songster. 1921. This was the youthful production of two members of a talented family—the brother and sister of the great educator who was presi- dent of the University of Oregon. Agnes Campbell is now a novelist and artist. David Campbell is a well-known musician of the Pacific Coast and lives in Portland. When he was asked over the telephone when it was published, he had forgotten about the song until re- minded of it by the inquiry. He was about ten years old when he composed the music for it. Land of Oregon. Composed by Rob Roy Parrish; arranged by C. W. Kantner. Independence. Rob Roy Parrish. 1904. Rob Roy Parrish, the harness maker and poet of Independence, is considered more fully in the chapter "Minor Poets from 1870 to 1900." Our Good Old Pioneers. Words by Rob Roy Parrish; music by Z. M. Parvin. Independence. Rob Roy Par- rish. 1906. Z. M. Parvin was at one time head of the music department of Willamette University and president of the Northwestern Normal School of Music in Salem. In Grand Old Oregon. Words by Rob Roy Parrish; music by Z. M. Parvin. Independence. Rob Roy Parrish. 1907. The Pioneer Mother's Lullaby. Words by Mrs. Sarah

Fisher Henderson; music by Edward J. Finck. Pioneer Transactions, 1906. Edward J. Finck was one of two talented brothers. He was born in Bethel, Missouri, in 1851 and came to Oregon in 1862 with his parents, who were members of the Aurora Colony. He was the com- poser of two instrumental pieces with Oregon titles—Belle of Ore- gon and Belle of Portland. He helped form the Amateur Musical Society in Portland in 1875, the first regular orchestral organization in the city. In 1888 he won first prize in a national competition for the best method of piano playing. He died in 1915 and is said to have left much unfinished work in manuscript. The other brother was Henry T. Finck, for many years music critic of the New York Evening Post and author of the books Pacific Coast Scenic Tour and The Golden Age of Music that contain charming Oregon references and recollections. When This Old Town Was New. Words and music by June MacMillan Ordway. Portland. Graves and Company. 1905. Also in Pioneer Transactions, 1907. Mrs. James MacMillan Ordway has written much verse on pio- neer and patriotic themes, particularly for the Annual Pioneer Re- unions. She is the author of Oregon Summer Days, and Oregon, a drama. Born on Tualatin Plains in 1865, she began writing rhymes in girlhood. Her father, Captain J. H. MacMillan, was president of the North Pacific History Company of Portland, publisher of Elwood Evans' richly illustrated two-volume work on Oregon and Washington. Drifting Down the Fair Willamette. Words by Alden Har- ness; music by J. Young. Salem. Oregon Teacher? Monthly. 1908.

Alden Harness is a book dealer and poet of Roseburg, who has published some pamphlets of verse and whose poem on Joaquin Miller is printed in this book. Sunrise on Crater Lake. Words by Alden Harness; music by Grace Estelle Ward. Salem. The Western Songster. 1921.

The Green Hills of Oregon. State song. Words by William Ashton Blake; music by Edward J. Finck. Portland. Graves and Company. 1908.

Oregon, Dear Oregon. Words by Ethel M. Morris; music by Z. M. Parvin. Salem. Oregon, My Oregon! Words by Mae Beddle Finke. Tune—“O Tannenbaum”. Eugene. The author. 1909.


1910–1935

I Am a Son of an Oregon Son. Words and music by Nate Saylor. Portland. Welch Printing Company. 1912.

The Umpqua Is Calling for Me. Words by Charles Grissen; music by Z. M. Parvin. Portland. Roy Marion Wheeler Publishing Company. 1912.

Oregon, She Flies With Her Own Wings. Words by Elizabeth Kane Stephens; music by Francis Richter. Portland. Eilers Music House. 1913.

Beautiful Oregon. Words by Ruth J. Allen; music by John R. Sweeney. Salem. Oregon Teachers’ Monthly. 1915.

I Love Oregon. Words by Ruth J. Allen; music by Caroline Keppel. Salem. Oregon Teachers’ Monthly. 1915.

Land of Oregon. Words by Ruth J. Allen; music by J. McPherson. Salem. Oregon Teachers’ Monthly. 1915.

Echoes from Multnomah. Words by H. S. De Moss; music by George G. De Moss. The author. 1915.

O Oregon, My Oregon. Words by Mrs. Lillie Wells Carey; music by D. Albert Carey. Arranged by Z. M. Parvin. Salem. Oregon Teachers’ Monthly. 1915.

Our Oregon. Words by R. Allen; music by John T. Pike. Salem. Oregon Teachers’ Monthly. 1915.

The Golden Sunset Trail. Words and music by W. Ross Winans. Portland. The author. 1915. Souvenir of the Panama-Pacific Exposition.

The Linchpin Wagon. Words by Carson C. Masiker. Tune —“Wait for the Wagon.” Pioneer Transactions, 1915

and 1928.
In Memory of Auld Lang Syne. Words by Carson C. Masiker. Tune—“Auld Lang Syne.” Pioneer Transactions, 1923 and 1926.

In Praise of the Hardihood and Stick-to-it-iveness of the Oregon Pioneers.

Ashland the Beautiful. Words and music by Henry George Gilmore. Portland. Sweeney, Warney and Straub. 1915.
Dear Old Portland Town. Words and music by Harry L. Stone. 1916.

Harry L. Stone, now a retired citizen, was for many years secretary of the Portland Y. M. C. A.

For You a Rose in Portland Grows. Words and music by Daniel H. Wilson. Portland. The author. 1916.

Dedicated to the Royal Rosarians, Portland, Oregon.

Roses. By Daniel H. Wilson. Portland. 1927. “Trio for Ladies' Voices.”
Oregon Dixie. Words by Charles H. Jones; music by Dan E. Emmett. Salem. Oregon Teachers’ Monthly. 1916.
Oregon. Poem by E. K. Stephens; music by Francis Richter. Portland. Eilers Music House. 1918.
Defenders of the Rose. By Carl R. Moore. Portland. McDougall Music Company. 1919.

March song. Official Rose Festival song.

Glorious Old Oregon. Words by W. T. Rigdon; music by Z. M. Parvin. Salem. W. T. Rigdon. 1920.
Mr., Mr. Robin. Words by Frances Gill; music by Katherine A. Glen. Boston. C. W. Thompson & Company. 1920.

Frances Gill, an Oregon poet, is author of The Little Days and Windy Leaf.

Oregon, My Oregon. Words by J. A. Buchanan; music by Henry T. Murtagh. Portland. Irving Sklare Music Publishing Company. 1920.
The Oregon State Song. In December and January, 1919-1920, the Society of Oregon Composers conducted a contest for the Oregon State Song. A total of 212 song manuscrips were received and are preserved by the Oregon Historical Society. J. A. Buchanan's Oregon, My Oregon was the song selected.
Portland, Oregon Rose Song. By Albert Howell Lowry. Mountain Observatory Music Press. 1920.

Shriner's Song. Words by J. U. G. Morrison; music by George D. Ingram. Portland. J. U. G. Morrison. 1920. Written for 1920 Imperial Shrine Convention held at Portland.

The Mountain Linnet. Words by Edmond Meaney; music by Katherine A. Glen. Boston. C. W. Thompson & Company. 1920.

Willamette Rose. Words by Mrs. M. Birmingham; music by Virgil Edwin Isham. Portland. Mrs. M. Birming- ham and R. M. Wheeler. 1920.

Beautiful Oregon Rose. Words and music by H. Edward Mills. Portland. The Prospero Press. 1921.

No Land Like Oregon. Words and music by C. R. Moore. Arranged by Z. M. Parvin. Salem. The Western Song- ster. 1921.

Oregon. Words by Metta B. Evans; music by Daniel H. Wilson. Oak Grove. Metta B. Evans. 1921. Patriotic state song.

The Oregon Grape. Words by Eva Emery Dye; music by A. M. Sanders. Salem. The Western Songster. 1921.

Mrs. Eva Emery Dye is the well-known Oregon novelist to whom a chapter is given in this book.

At the Portland Fair. Words by Edward Blomseth; music by Daniel H. Wilson. Portland. Daniel H. Wilson. 1922.

That Beautiful Home of the Rose. Words and music by Adelaide Dorothy Graham. Portland. The author. 1922. Whitman’s Ride. Words and music by Minnie Roof Dee. Portland. Daniel H. Wilson. 1922.

Dear Old Oregon. Words and music by Joan Billings. Portland. J. M. Burke and Charles W. Reynard. 1923.

On the Oregon Trail. Words by Edward Sedgewick; music by Henry R. Cohen. San Francisco. Sherman Clay Company. 1925.

Oregon, A Garden of Roses. Words and music by C. W. Paula. Oakland. R. E. Richards. 1925. The Old Columbia Shore. Words and music by Bertha E. Hughey. Portland. The author. 1925. Flying Thru’. Words by Lou Miles Hancock; music by Daniel H. Wilson. Portland. Liberal Printing Com- pany. 1927. Portland's Own Lindy Song. Pioneers, Dear Pioneers. Words by Charles T. Dickinson. Tune—“Maryland, My Maryland,” or “Martyn”. Published in the program for the Reunion of the Ore- gon Pioneer Association, 1935; also in Pioneer Trans- action, 1928.

The Land I Love the Best. Pioneer Transactions, 1928. About Oregon but the author and composer not given. The Thirty-Third Star. Words and music by Carl Sumner West. Portland. J. K. Gill Company. 1929.

Champoeg Memorial Song.

Portland County Jail. Included in Carson J. Robison's Collection Mountain Ballads and Old Time Songs. Chicago. M. M. Cole Publishing House. 1930. Dreamy Oregon Moon. Words by Walter Hirsch; music by Maurice Staub. Portland. Irving Sklare Music Publishing Company. 1931. On To Oregon. Words and music by Ruby Wilson Retherford. Portland. Retherford Studio. 1931. Where Roses Grow. Words by Lynn Cowan; music by John Caldwell. Portland. Irving Sklare Music Publishing Company. 1931.

March On To Oregon. Official American Legion Convention Song. Words and music by Alan Green. Portland. Irvi ing Sklare Music Publishing Company. 1932.