Delia Green

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Delia Green (c.1886 – December 25, 1900) was a 14-year-old African-American murder victim who has been identified as the likely inspiration for several well-known traditional American songs, usually known by the titles "Delia" and "Delia's Gone."

History

According to contemporaneous reports published in Georgia newspapers, Green was shot and killed by 15-year-old Mose (or Moses) Houston late on Christmas Eve, 1900 in the Yamacraw neighborhood of Savannah, Georgia after an argument earlier in the evening. Houston, the newspapers implied, had been involved in a sexual relationship with Green for several months. The shooting took place at the home of Willie West, who chased down Houston after the shooting and turned him over to the city police.

Green's murder and Houston's trial in the spring of 1901 were reported in the Savannah Morning News and the Savannah Evening Press. Although Houston reportedly had confessed to the murder at the time of his arrest, at trial he claimed the shooting was accidental. Other witnesses, however, testified that Houston had become angry after Green called him "a son of a bitch."

Houston was convicted and sentenced to life in prison, on the jury's recommendation of mercy. After serving more than twelve years, he was paroled by Governor John M. Slaton in 1913. Accounts of his later life are sketchy, but he is said to have died in New York City in 1927 after other brushes with the law.

Green was buried in an unmarked grave in Laurel Grove Cemetery South in Savannah.

Songs

Songs based on Green's murder became both common and popular in the next few decades. In 1928, folklorist Robert Winslow Gordon reported to the Library of Congress that he had traced the songs back to a murder in Savannah, and that he had interviewed both Green's mother and the police officer who took Houston into custody. Gordon's research was never published, however, and Green's relationship to the popular songs was essentially unknown until Prof. John F. Garst, working from hints left by Gordon, turned up the details in Savannah newspaper archives.[1]

The songs inspired by Green's short life and murder now split into two forms, both staples of the "folk revival" of the 1950s and early 1960s. One version, usually attributed to Blake Alphonso Higgs (the calypso singer also known as "Blind Blake"), is known as "Delia's Gone," and is explicitly told from her killer's point of view. "Delia's Gone" was prominently covered by The Kingston Trio, Pete Seeger and four times by Johnny Cash. In the music video for Cash's fourth recording, Delia is played by Kate Moss. The second version, generally attributed to Blind Willie McTell, is usually known as "Delia," and is told from a more ambiguous point of view. Among the many singers who have covered "Delia" are Bob Dylan and David Bromberg.

References

  1. "Letters to the editor". Savannah Morning News. Savannah now. 2000-06-23. Retrieved 2012-10-16. 

External links

  • Wilentz, Sean, "Delia", in Wilentz, Sean; Marcus, Greil, The Red Rose and The Briar .
  • Southern Folklore Quarterly 1 (4), December 1937 .
  • Kodish, Debora, Good Friends and Bad Enemies: Robert Winslow Gordon and the Study of American Folksong .
  • Delia Green at Find a Grave
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