Johnny Roach

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"Johnny Roach" is an American song written by blackface minstrel composer Dan Emmett. The song was first published in 1859. The lyrics tell of a slave who has escaped to the Northern United States. He laments his lost plantation home and realizes that he really belongs in the South:

To Canada old John was bound
All by de railroad underground;
He's got no clothes—he's got no "tin"
He wishes he was back agin.[1]

The song is notable for being the first printed reference to the South as “Dixie’s Land”:

Gib me de place called "Dixie's Land,"
Wid hoe and shubble in my hand;
Whar fiddles ring an' banjos play,
I'll dance all night an' work all day.[1]

A portion of the chorus was repeated in "Dixie" with slight variation.[2]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b Quoted in Nathan 244.
  2. ^ Nathan 254.

[edit] References

  • Nathan, Hans (1962). Dan Emmett and the Rise of Early Negro Minstrelsy. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.