Harry S. Miller (born 1867[1]) was a prolific American lyricist, composer, and sometimes playwright who lived in New York and Chicago in the 19th and early 20th centuries and is best known for his song "The Cat Came Back: A Comic Negro Absurdity", published in 1893.
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Born in Philadelphia[1] in 1867 to Isaac D. Miller and Amelia Straub, Miller was the second of four brothers.[2] He was raised in Bellefonte, Pennsylvania,[2] and moved to New York City in 1896[1] to further his career as a lyricist.
Miller's songs were part of Tin Pan Alley, and were sold to various TPA entertainers (for example, vaudeville entertainer Tony Pastor popularized The Cat Came Back[3] and Edward M. Favor popularized I'll Not Go Out with Reilly Any More[4]). He specialized in quatrains and often wrote using a Georgian Black dialect. His contemporaries credited him with the popularization of the terms of endearment "honey" and "baby" in African-American English and the spread of coon songs, as well as the phrase, "Got troubles of my own".[1]
In 1898, Miller wrote The Insurance Agent: An Eccentric Character and Comedy Sketch, a two-man play.
Miller married his wife Levina and moved to Tyrone, Pennsylvania, where they gave birth to their daughter, Gladys Lucille, in 1905.[5]
Most of his music was published by Edward Taylor Paull (and the E.T. Paull Co.), a New England publisher at the time,[6] who also composed "He's Goin' to Hab a Hot Time Bye an' Bye" for Miller.
Many of his songs have been lost, along with their date of publication, including: