Union Maid

"Union Maid"
copyright 1961 and 1963, Ludlow Music, Inc.[1]
Written by Woody Guthrie
Music by Robert Schumann/Kerry Mills
Lyrics by Woody Guthrie, Millard Lampell
Written June, 1940
Language English
Original artist Woody Guthrie
Recorded by Woody Guthrie, Almanac Singers

"Union Maid" is a union song written by Woody Guthrie in response to a request for a union song from a female point of view.[2] Along with "Talking Union", this song was one of the many pro-union songs written by Guthrie during his time as a member of the Almanac Singers. Another member, Pete Seeger writes,

"I'm proud to say I was present when 'Union Maid' was written in June, 1940, in the plain little office of the Oklahoma City Communist Party. Bob Wood, local organizer, had asked Woody Guthrie and me to sing there the night before for a small group of striking oil workers. Early next morning, Woody got to the typewriter and hammered out the first two verses of 'Union Maid' set to a European tune that Robert Schumann arranged for piano ('The Merry Farmer') back in the early 1800s. Of course, it's the chorus that really makes it - its tune, 'Red Wing,' was copyrighted early in the 1900s."[3]

The song's final verse, on women's role in unions was written later by Lampell and other Almanac members. It implores ladies to marry a "Union Man" and be a good "Union Wife". In performance, this verse has been adapted over the years to reflect changing attitudes, or dropped altogether. An alternate version, credited to Nancy Katz, appears in the 1973 (34th) and subsequent editions of the IWW's Little Red Songbook, and starts, "A woman’s struggle is hard, even with a union card".[4]; another version in the 1985 song anthology Carry It On! edited by Seeger and Bob Reiser urges women to "Like Mother Jones, bestir them bones"[5].

This song has also been adopted by supporters of the Philadelphia Union, who will sing the chorus of the song outside of and at matches.

Recordings

External links

References

  1. ^ Rise Up Singing p.259
  2. ^ Old Town School Songnotes, Union Maid
  3. ^ The Incompleat Folksinger, by Pete Seeger, edited by Jo Metcalf Schwartz. Simon and Schuster
  4. ^ "Union Maid", in: Industrial Workers of the World. Songs of the Workers: To Fan the Flames of Discontent. Chicago, Ill: Industrial Workers of the World, 1973
  5. ^ "Union Maid", in: Seeger, Pete and Bob Reiser, eds. Carry It On!: A History in Song and Picture of the Working Men and Women of America New York: Simon & Schuster, 1985