Voice and Spirit
The Alleghanians

- Chapter 6  Part 1  The South Seas  1856-1859 -

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The South Seas
1856-1859
Chapter 6  Part 1

The Alleghanians announced a grand concert at the Athenaeum at 654 Broadway for each evening of the week of Monday, September 15, 1856.  We are not told the group's membership nor are we told whether it included a female voice.  Evidently shows had been going on for some time prior to these dates, though tour details are typically scarce.

A good deal more interesting news came in mid-December, when the Alleghanians announced a concert trip through the South and West with New Yorker Annie Kemp, a contralto, as a member of the group.  The New York Times said she "has made a favorable impression upon the New-York public by her performances at the soirées of the Mendelssohn Union and at amateur concerts during a year or two past."  Evidently the impression she made was indeed quite favorable.  In the spring of 1856, her singing at New York's Stuyvesant Institute, in a program of the American Music Association, was "vehemently encored."

Judged by Annie Kemp's absence from New York show listings, it seems likely she was traveling with the Alleghanians from mid-December 1856 or not much later to about March or April 1857.

After the tour with Annie Kemp, the Alleghanians seemed to vanish; and once again, concert bills and listings present William H. Oakley as formerly of the Alleghanians.  Since, time and time again, we are left to guess what happened, guess we shall.  Chances seem strong that the spring of 1857 is the point when Richard Dunning left the group.  Enough is known of the careers of Oakley and James M. Boulard that it would be hard to believe they did not have the heart to go on.  But if, say, Annie Kemp had other plans or if Oakley and Boulard, for whatever reason, could not come to terms with her, this and the loss of Dunning, combined, seems enough to have put the vocal group into temporary disarray.  We do not know that this is what happened.  It is only one of many possibilities.

: : :

Meanwhile, much was happening in 1857 for past, present, and future Alleghanians and their connections.  This is the year, for instance, that William N. States is said to have married Agatha.  Though their marriage was less than a total success, it seems likely he helped make her European music education possible.

1856 and 1857 must have been the peak years for the publication of scores "as sung by" Carrie Hiffert.  Her time with the Buckley minstrel troupe was doing her presence in the music business a world of good.

The name of Silas S. Steele was appearing as a writer of evidently distinguished burlesques for Buckley's Serenaders.

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"The Alleghanians announced a grand concert":   "The Alleghanians," Advertisement, New York Daily Times, September 15, 1856, p. 5 col. 6.

"A good deal more interesting news came in mid-December":   Would this Annie Kemp be the same person as Annie Kemp Bowler, who seems best known today for having been in the cast of the historic musical play, The Black Crook, from September 12, 1866, to January 4, 1868?   If you have information you would be willing to share having to do with this question, please e-mail us by way of the contact link which appears toward the bottom of the Web page.

"The New York Times said she has made a favorable":   "Musical," New York Daily Times, December 16, 1856, p. 4 col. 4.

"In the spring of 1856, her singing at New York's":   "American Music Association," New York Daily Times, April 4, 1856, p. 4 col. 4.

"After the tour with Annie Kemp, the Alleghanians":   Advertisements, show listings, and announcements of meetings from this time speak of William H. Oakley as being formerly with the Alleghanians.  But there is nowhere near enough material readily available to give any real idea as to how numerous these advertisements, listings, and announcements are or how long the period lasted.  At first, I thought that, through much of the 1850s, Oakley kept leaving the group only to later sign on again.  But the times, up to this point, when he has been often called an ex-Alleghanian have proven also to be times when signs of activity on the part of the group cannot be, or have not been found.  So it seems much more likely that the Alleghanians' concert-giving career had been suspended during these periods or the company had broken up altogether . . . at least for the moment.

Three very great changes, at this time, are on the horizon for the Alleghanians.  Two new members will join the company, while Carrie Hiffert will return.  This vocal ensemble will soon become also an instrumental group.  And the Alleghanians will then start on the most extensive and exotic tour of the company's entire career.  Apparently these changes had as great an affect on Oakley as on anybody, though we do not yet have a lot of details.  This research project is currently following the theory that the tour with Annie Kemp and the group's down time that followed were, taken together, the beginning of the end for Oakley as an Alleghanian on America's and the world's concert stages.  Some of the information currently at hand, having to do with William H. Oakley, is contradictory; and we will have to go into this more in the book-length second edition of Voice and Spirit, which is, at present, in a first rough draft state.


Page 2

Frederick Buckley married Fanny Brown on January 29, 1857, according to "Burnt Cork and Tambourines" at the CircusHistory.org website.  She had lately been appearing as an actress on Broadway at the new Burton's Theatre.  Apparently a separation of the new couple quickly followed, and this marriage was generally not mentioned in Buckley family biographical materials which were consulted in preparation for this work.  The wedding may have been a low-key affair.  The only reporting of it seen to date ran in the February 4, 1857, issue of the Long Island Star.

This Fanny Brown appears to be the actress by that name who subsequently mixed with the Bohemians, a short-lived though fascinating literary crowd  -  headed by former Jesse Hutchinson boarder Henry Clapp, Jr.  -  that met in colorful-sounding late-evening sessions at Pfaff's German restaurant in a Manhattan basement on Broadway near Bleeker Street.

A family history blog (Web log) declares that this Fanny Brown was the actress who achieved perhaps a little more fame than she would have wanted when her picture was found on the corpse of President Abraham Lincoln assassin John Wilkes Booth.

J. B. Packard, whose published works appear to have come mostly in the form of songbooks and hymnals, nonetheless had an 1857 score of his "Ella Lee: Song of the Southern Land" issued by Oliver Ditson & Co.

The printed sheet music of "O, Come to the Forest" said this piece was "composed, arranged and fraternally inscribed to his old friend, J. B. Packard, (of Boston, Mass.) by C. Marsh."

Mary Durgin started teaching music at age 15, according to letters she wrote to a niece in the mid-1890s.  An 1873 Alleghanians songster said that Mary received her music education when she was quite young, and her early entry into the world of teaching is further evidence for this, on top of her start as a featured vocalist in concerts well before she reached her teens.  Mary quickly learned that she did not know the answers to all the questions that arose during the lessons she taught.  As she put it, "[I] discovered many things to learn myself."  Mary taught music, as opportunity permitted, from this time to about the mid-1880s.

D. G. Waldron, who had a financial interest in the California publication Spirit of the Times, was traveling around the state and sending back news correspondence, while simultaneously managing several entertainment acts.

And as noted earlier, William H. Oakley was singing solo around the region once again.

An Alleghanians lineup of some sort came together sometime later in the year.  Though always a vocal group, in 1857 the Alleghanians diversified its programs with "wonderfully sweet music" by taking up the popular art of Swiss bell-ringing.

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"Frederick Buckley married Fanny Brown on January 29":   I have been unable to find either Frederick Buckley or Fanny Brown in the 1860 United States Census.  If you have located either of these two in the 1860 census and you would be willing to share what you have learned, please e-mail us by way of the contact link toward the bottom of the Web page.

"She had lately been appearing as an actress on Broadway":   At least one online source consulted for this booklet could be taken to say that Fanny Brown made her New York City debut in the early 1860s.  Clearly, though, she made her debut in New York on Broadway no later than the early days of 1857.  Since it would be of no known importance to this study, I did not backtrack to see whether Fanny Brown was appearing at Burton's or elsewhere in New York prior to 1857, though it certainly seems possible that she was.   A few weeks after Fanny Brown's run at the new Burton's Theatre, one of the big theatrical names of the 19th-century was booked into Burton's Theatre:  Edwin Booth.

"The only reporting of it seen to date ran in":   "Long Island Star Newspaper (Marriages)," www.bklyn-genealogy-info.com/Newspaper/LIStar.Marriage.html, accessed May 31, 2007. This Web document is currently posted at the Brooklyn Genealogy Information Page website which appears to be a valuable online information resource.

"A family history blog (Web log) declares that this":   Citing information sources which require access to a specific Web document can be chancey.  Addresses, for instance, may change, as a site is switched from one host to another.  Web logs or "blogs," it seems to me, may be lots chancier.  Any reader who would like to check the Web log in question would probably be best served by using his or her favorite search device, such as Google (search engine) or Yahoo (general directory), for a search which combines the terms, "frederick buckley" with "fanny brown".  Google and Yahoo are the main two search devices that I use.  But lately I have had serious success with the meta-search engine, Metacrawler.  And Metacrawler has been drawing a great many hits from a new-to-me search engine, Windows Live, from Microsoft.

As uneven, shall we say, as the World Wide Web may be as a gathering of information sources, this booklet literally would not be possible without it.  Our own postings are intended to serve the dual main purposes of being high quality information sources and tapping into the phenomenal interactivity of the Web.  Much of the information posted here is built on a foundation of contacts with other researchers who we could not possibly have encountered any way other than over the Internet.

"J. B. Packard, whose published works appear to have":   "Ella Lee: Song of the Southern Land," lyrics: Author unknown, music: J. B. Packard, first line of text: "Lay her where the woodbine clingeth To the dark magnolia tree" (Boston: Oliver Ditson & Co., 1857).

"The printed sheet music of O, Come to the Forest":   "O, Come to the Forest," lyrics: Author unknown, music: C. Marsh (Chicago: Higgins Brothers, 1857).

"An 1873 Alleghanians songster said that Mary":   Alleghanians, The Alleghanians, Vocalists and Swiss Bell Ringers' Songster: Sketches and Travels ([New York?]: s.n., [1873?]), 11.  The cataloguer  -  at Brown University, one would imagine  -  who created the standard library catalog record for this title thought this Alleghanians songster would have been printed/published in New York.  This is not at all likely.  For all practical purposes, the group was based in southern New Hampshire in and around 1873, and a southern New Hampshire city (Portsmouth would be a good bet) or Boston would be a far more likely place of publication.

"As she put it, I discovered many things to learn":   Mary P. Waldron to Florence E. Chipman, San Francisco, June 1, 1895.

"D. G. Waldron, who had a financial interest in":   Alleghanians, The Alleghanians, Vocalists and Swiss Bell Ringers' Songster: Sketches and Travels ([New York?]: s.n., [1873?]), 5-6, at p. 6.

"An Alleghanians lineup of some sort came together":   Dale Cockrell, in a short profile of the Alleghanians in the New Grove Dictionary of American Music, thought the group's world tour started in 1857 and ended in 1860.  See Dale Cockrell, Alleghanians capsule biography, in H. Wiley Hitchcock and Stanley Sadie, eds., The New Grove Dictionary of American Music (New York: Grove's Dictionaries of Music Inc., 1986, 1988), 1:30).  The Alleghanians actually may have returned to New York in 1861.   I wonder whether this difference, 1860 versus 1861, could shift the tour's starting year forward to 1858.  Much more research is needed, but there is some reason to think that Carrie Hiffert still may have been with Buckley's Serenaders into early 1858.  If this is so and if she traveled to California with the men of the group, then a departure date sometime in the first half of 1858 would be necessary.  There is also at least one scrap of information that might place William H. Oakley in the Northeast in early 1858.

Professor Cockrell followed with a point that might be seen as having some special importance.  He noted that, by this time, the Alleghanians had added music from Europe, including English and German songs and Italian and French arias, to the group's earlier repertoire.  Carrie Hiffert, for one, was able to sing in several languages.  It seems likely she also spoke those languages, which must have been helpful as the group traveled well beyond the bounds of the United States.  D. G. Waldron, a future agent and group manager, spoke Spanish, which skill was said later to have helped ease the Alleghanians through South America on their way home from travels across the South Seas.  Other Alleghanians who came later also had ability with one or more languages in addition to English.

"Though always a vocal group, in 1857 the Alleghanians":   Alleghanians, The Alleghanians, Vocalists and Swiss Bell Ringers' Songster: Sketches and Travels ([New York?]: s.n., [1873?]), 3.

It is unfortunate that, once again, we are not told how or even why the Alleghanians vocal group became also a band of bell ringers.


Page 3

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Through parts of 1857, arguably the main Alleghanians action did not involve the group at all but, instead, was happening at Buckley's Opera House on Manhattan in New York City.  After all, by every appearance the Alleghanians became inactive for a time in 1857, while comic prima donna Carrie Hiffert starred in shows night after night.

On Monday, February 9, Buckley's Serenaders presented the "first night of the allegorical, operatic, patriotic and melodramatic sketch, entitled 'Honor to Dr. Kane; or, Affairs in the Arctic Regions.'  By the whole strength of the company."  At the end of advertisements came a note saying, "On Friday evening, Feb. 13, benefit of Miss C. Hiffert, on which occasion will be performed Lucrezia Borgia."

In mid-April the Buckleys were presenting what appears to be a comic send-up of Father Kemp and His Old Folks Troupe.  Advertisements came with a possible oddity.  They boasted of " . . . negro minstrelsy, in all its phases, with G. Swain Buckley and R. Bishop Buckley."  Why is Frederick Buckley not also named?   He appears to have been quite scarce around this time which, perhaps not incidentally, was a couple months after his wedding.

Then came reference to one of the main stars among these Serenaders.  "Wednesday evening, April 15, benefit of Silas Steele, author of the burlesques, &c., &c."  Around the time of the opening of the new Buckley's Opera House and for who knows how long after, this company was presenting new burlesques at an amazingly fast rate.  Silas S. Steele was at the creative heart of Buckley's Serenaders, writing short-form theatrical pieces as well as contributing song lyrics, &c., &c.

Next came what one would imagine was a sad event.  "Monday evening, April 20, farewell benefit and last appearance of W. Percival, upon which occasion he will perform The Baron in Cinderella."  It would be interesting to learn why William Percival left Buckley's Serenaders and what he was headed for next.  He had been a key player in the troupe.

On Saturday, May 23, 1857, Buckley's Opera House closed "in consequence of the great preparation for the production of Aladdin; or, The Wonderful Lamp.  It will be produced on Monday, May 25, with entirely new and correct Chinese Scenery, Dresses and Appointments.  National Characteristic Novelties, never yet produced upon the stage; the whole at a cost of upwards of Seven Thousand Dollars."

Evidently the Buckley's Aladdin was a considerable and amazing production.  The company's advertising for the week of Monday, May 25, 1857, spoke of a "Glorious Chinese feast of scenes, music, mirth and enchantment.  Monday evening, May 25th, first week of a grand original, musical, magical and semi burlesque spectacle of Aladdin; or, The Wonderful Lamp, by Silas S. Steele, with nearly twenty new, correct and generous Chinese scenes, by the celebrated artist, Mr. T. Bartholomew, of Boston; new, splendid and appropriate Chinese costumes, by Mr. Taylor; machinery by Mr. Droze; properties by Mr. Leak; original and characteristic Chinese music by Mr. F. Buckley; and the whole produced at a cost of upwards of seven thousand dollars."

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"At the end of advertisements came a note saying":   "Buckley's Serenaders," Advertisement, New York Daily Times, February 9, 1857, p. 5 col. 5.

"Wednesday evening, April 15, benefit of Silas Steele":   "Buckley's Serenaders," Advertisement, New York Daily Times, April 13, 1857, p. 2 col. 3.

"Silas S. Steele was at the creative heart of":   The creative heart of Buckley's Serenaders seems to have been staffed mostly by lyricist and script-writer Silas S. Steele and composer Frederick Buckley, though other members of the company contributed as well.

"Monday evening, April 20, farewell benefit and last":   "Buckley's New Hall," Advertisement, New York Daily Times, April 20, 1857, p. 3 col. 3.

"On Saturday, May 23, 1857, Buckley's Opera House":   "Buckley's Serenaders - New Hall," Advertisement, New York Daily Times, May 18, 1857, p. 6 col. 4.

When one considers the Buckley family's interest in avoiding the vulgarities that helped characterize the minstrel show genre, it seems surprising that this advertisement uses the word, "nigger."  Speaking of the week's presentations, the ad said, "And on Thursday and Friday, May 21 and 22, the opera of Lucrezia Borgia; with the Mississippi Steamers and Mississippi Niggers."

This project has all it can manage, trying to pull together even most of the basics of the Alleghanians' career history.  The uses of language regarding matters related to race is far beyond its scope.  Nonetheless, at the very least the "Mississippi Niggers" passage in this advertisement is worth noting here.  On the face of it, this seems to be quite strange and very much out of character.

"The company's advertising for the week of Monday":   "Buckley's Serenaders," Advertisement, New York Daily Times, May 25, 1857, p. 6 col. 3.

"Monday evening, May 25th, first week of a grand":   An earlier version of Silas S. Steele's Aladdin was staged at the Boston Museum in the 1840s.  See Favorite Melodies From the Grand Chinese Spectacle of Aladdin or the Wonderful Lamp, lyrics: S.S. Steele, music: T. Comer (Boston: Prentiss & Clark, O. Ditson, 1847).


Page 4

Composing this characteristic "Chinese" music may have been a part of what earlier was keeping Frederick Buckley busy and out of the public eye, at least as far as the Buckleys' advertising is concerned.

Company members would color their faces to get just the desired look.  Afternoon starts were planned to accommodate families and schools.  This Buckley company was definitely no ordinary minstrel troupe.

The week of Monday, June 15, was originally to have been the last week of Buckley's season.  Advertising noted "On Friday evening, June 19, a complimentary testimonial to Miss C. Hiffert."  For some reason, though, they extended their season for another week, with Carrie Hiffert featured in the "Sweep's Song," a piece she was noted for singing earlier in the decade.  The program concluded with an "Explosion on the Mississippi Steamboat."

Later, an advertisement proclaimed that "Buckley's Serenaders new hall, No. 585 Broadway, opposite Niblo's Garden, will open for five nights only, commencing Tuesday evening, Aug. 11, 1857."  After promoting spots in the show featuring Bishop, Swaine, and Fred Buckley, the ad announced that "Miss C. Hiffert, the celebrated vocalist, will appear.  Burlesque on the Hutchinson Family."

Advertising that week included this announcement:  "The Messrs. Buckley's respectfully announce to their friends and the public that this will be the last opportunity (for some months) of seeing them as Ethiopian performers, as they go West in a few days with an entire new entertainment in white faces."

These advertisements did not say explicitly that Carrie Hiffert would be traveling west with Buckley's Serenaders.  It appears, though, that she may have gone somewhere following her August shows with the minstrel troupe.  For many periods, Carrie's name appeared often, here and there, in advertisements for New York theatrical and musical productions.  After these August shows, it looks as though she disappeared from New York stages.

Buckley's Serenaders, in the meantime, returned to New York and reopened their hall for the winter season on Monday evening, December 21.  Newspaper advertising announced the "Return of the old favorites, Buckley's Serenaders, from Philadelphia, where they were nightly received by most brilliant and crowded audiences, comprising the beauty, the literati and fashion of the Quaker City."

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"Composing this characteristic Chinese music may have":   Since Frederick Buckley maintained a lowered public profile for weeks or even months following the start of a marriage that we are given to understand was troubled, it is tempting to think that a cause and effect relationship may have been at play.  It would be very interesting to know whether Fred Buckley appeared nightly on stage with the Buckley company through this period.

"Advertising noted On Friday evening, June 19, a":   "Buckley's Serenaders," Advertisement, New York Daily Times, June 15, 1857, p. 6 col. 3.

"For some reason, though, they extended their season":   "Buckley's Serenaders," Advertisement, New York Daily Times, June 22, 1857, p. 6 col. 2.

"Later, an advertisement proclaimed that Buckley's":   "Buckley's Serenaders, New Hall," Advertisement, New York Daily Times, August 11, 1857, p. 3 col. 5.

"Advertising that week included this announcement":   "Buckley's Serenaders, New Hall," Advertisement, New York Daily Times, August 15, 1857, p. 6 col. 1.

"Newspaper advertising announced the Return of the old":   "Buckley's Opera-House," Advertisement, New York Times, December 19, 1857, p. 6 col. 2.


Page 5

A song, "At Last I Am Engaged," is dated 1858 and was published "As sung by Miss Hiffert of Buckleys Opera Troupe."  One might surmise from this that Carrie Hiffert was singing at Buckley's Opera House in New York as late as the first weeks or even first months of 1858, though this is far from a sure thing.  What is known is that, by the summer of 1858, Carrie was singing in California as a member of the Alleghanians.

Whether the Alleghanians Vocalists and Swiss Bell Ringers traveled to California in 1857 or 1858 is, at present, unknown.  But none of the dates we have for the group, on this California tour, are any earlier than 1858.  Whether Carrie Hiffert traveled to the West Coast with the Alleghanians or met the company there is also currently unknown.

Summer 1858 news correspondence from California reported success for burnt-cork minstrels, while the actor's trade was "nearly gone."  This correspondence went on to say that, "At Sacramento, the Alleghanians, with Miss Hiffert, who is very popular, gave concerts last week, but did not draw as well as they deserved."  This last phrase is of some special interest, in that it could be evidence of a lack of promotion of the Alleghanians' efforts.   A career-shifting change in the group's booking and publicity arrangements was on its way.

The lack of readily-available details of this period in California is not at all surprising.  But this was a very important trip, and it is highly frustrating to know so little about it.  We do know from a diary which has been posted on the World Wide Web for close to ten years or maybe even longer that a party including Abels Helmans took in an Alleghanians concert at Yreka, California, and "heard some good singing."

This lineup of the Alleghanians was touring with "The Aurora Waltzes," piano music composed by Joseph Labitzky which this quartet was playing on the Swiss bells.  We were told that, back in 1846, it was the Alleghanians' "endeavor to please, not to astonish;" but handbell music of this nature possibly accomplished both.

"Robert Toi Que J'aime," a song whittled out of the Giacomo Meyerbeer opera Robert le Diable, was another notable piece from the Alleghanians repertoire during this long, wide-ranging tour.

Frank Stoepel, in 1859, published piano music titled "San Francisco Thrill: Schottische."  And no doubt San Francisco was a thrill in 1859 for these Alleghanians.

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"Whether the Alleghanians Vocalists and Swiss Bell Ringers":   William H. Oakley, too, had a score published in the Northeastern United States and dated 1858.  It is "Morris Cadets Quick Step," music: W. H. Oakley (Boston: Oliver Ditson & Co., 1858).  This is not one of Oakley's more Alleghanians-like titles.  It appears he may have been a well-rounded, versatile musician.

Unfortunately, the Copyright Office's deposit copy of neither "At Last I Am Engaged" nor "Morris Cadets Quick Step" is available at the present time at the Library of Congress' American Memory website, so information about the dates of these copyright deposits is not readily available right now.  It would be well worth checking back later at the American Memory site.

Based on information given in this work  -  data that is not overwhelming, but it is what we have  -  it is my belief that the Alleghanians left the East Coast for California sometime in the first few months of 1858.

"This correspondence went on to say that, At Sacramento":   "Affairs in California," New York Times, July 16, 1858, p. 2 col. 1.

"We do know from a diary which has been posted on the":   "Diary of Abels Helman," homepages.rootsweb.com/~helman/ahdiary.htm, accessed April 24, 1999.

"This lineup of the Alleghanians was touring with":   "The Aurora Waltzes Composed for the Piano Forte by Labitzky," music: Joseph Labitzky (Philadelphia: A. Fiot, 1840).

"Robert Toi Que J'aime, a song whittled out of the":   "Robert! Robert! Toi Que J'aime," cavatina from the opera Robert le Diable (1831) composed by Giacomo Meyerbeer, [The libretto was written by Eugene Scribe and Germain Delavigne.], first line of text in English: "Ah Robert, idol of my heart" (Boston: Oliver Ditson, [1844-1857?]).

"Frank Stoepel, in 1859, published piano music titled":   "San Francisco Thrill: Schottische" by Stoepel (San Francisco: A. Kohler, 1859).

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"Thus far the Lord hath led me on."   - Isaac Watts

One of the main goals for this first edition of Voice and Spirit has been to lay the foundation for an eventual revised, greatly expanded second edition.  Thus far the Lord has led us on.   A full-length biography of the Alleghanians is very much needed, and it is starting to look feasible.  Whether it would take the form of a traditional, hardcopy book or remain as a World Wide Web-only publication is yet to be seen.  Either way, I am hoping many readers of these pages will keep an eye out for Voice and Spirit II.  If it is possible to make a full-length Alleghanians biography happen, my plan is to do it.

Alan Lewis,  August 14, 2007



Voice and Spirit

We've roamed over mountain,

We've crossed over flood,

We've traversed the wave rolling strand.

Though the fields were as fair

And the moon shone as bright,

Yet it was not our own native land,

No no no no oh

It was not our own native land.

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Alan Lewis. Voice and Spirit: The Alleghanians (Vocal Group). 1st ed.
Brattleboro, Vermont: Published by the author. 2007.

Copyright © 2007 by Alan Lewis.
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Massachusetts, MA, Mass.; Minnesota, Minn., MN; New Hampshire, N. H., NH; New Jersey, N.J., NJ. Essex County, Hillsboro County, Hillsborough County, McLeod County. Lynn Massachusetts, Hutchinson Minnesota, Amherst New Hampshire, Milford New Hampshire, Mont Vernon New Hampshire, Orange New Jersey, City of New York City. Cellist, cello, fiddle, fiddler, melodeon player, violin, violinist, violoncello. Philip Jordan, Philip Dillon Jordan, Philip D Jordan Singin Yankees, Phil Jordan, Ludlow Patton The Hutchinson Family Scrapbook. Index: Singing Yankees. 1860, 1870, 1880, 1900, 1910, 1920, 1930. Birth, born, death, died, divorce, divorced, maiden, marriage, married, single, unmarried. The Boston Globe. Alleghanian singing group, Alleghenian singing group, Anniversary, audience, band, biography, chorus, church, the Civil War, company, compose, composer, composition, concert, convention, entertain, entertainment, folk music, folk songs, folksongs, group, hand bells, hand-bells, handbells, harmony, instrument, instrumental, lyricist, lyrics, meeting, musician, N E, NE, NEMS, New England Music Scrapbook, Northeast, Northeastern, practice, profile, program, quartet, quintet, rehearsal, rehearse, repertoire, research, show, singer, song writer, songwriter, stage, temperance, tour, trio, troupe, verse, vocal, vocalist, words. Bullock, Jesse, Swiss Bell Ringers, Swiss Bell Ringing. Alleghanian Singers, Alleghanian Vocal Group, Alleghanian Vocal Troupe, Alleghanian Vocalists, Alleghenian Singers, Alleghenian Vocal Group, Alleghenian Vocal Troupe, Alleghenian Vocalists, the Alleghenians, James Boulard, James Madison Boulard, James M Boulard, J M Boulard, Annie Kemp Bowler, Florence Chipman, Florence Ednah Chipman, Florence E Chipman, Richard Dunning, Mary Durgin, Mary E Durgin, Miriam Goodenow, Miriam Gertrude Goodenow, Miriam G Goodenow, Caroline Hiffert, Caroline E Hiffert, Miss Carrie Hiffert, Miss Hiffert, Miss Annie Kemp, William Oakley, William Henry Oakley, William H Oakley, W H Oakley, Jesse Packard, Jesse Bullock Packard, Jesse B Packard, J B Packard, Marie Packard, Mary Packard, Mary E Packard, Miriam Robb, Miriam Gertrude Goodenow Robb, Miriam Gertrude Robb, Miriam Goodenow Robb, Miriam G Robb, Caroline Schnaufer, Caroline E Schnaufer, Carrie Schnaufer, Caroline Schnauffer, Caroline E Schnauffer, Carrie Schnauffer, Caroline Snaufer, Caroline E Snaufer, Carrie Snaufer, Caroline Snauffer, Caroline E Snauffer, Carrie Snauffer, Agatha States, Agatha Mandeville States, Agatha M States, Agatha States, Agatha Gaynor States, Agatha G States, Agatha States, Agatha Mandeville States, Agatha M States, Frank Stoepel, Franz Stoepel, Fraz Stoepel, F Stoepel, Daniel Waldron, Daniel Gilman Waldron, Daniel G Waldron, D G Waldron. Fanny Brown Buckley, George Buckley, George Swayne Buckley, George S Buckley, G Swayne Buckley, George Swaine Buckley, G Swaine Buckley, Richard Bishop Buckley, R Bishop Buckley, Fanny Brown Carlo, T Comer, Thomas Comer, Germain Delavigne, the New York Times, the New York Tribune, William Percival, Charles Pfaff, William States, William Noyes States, William N States, Silas Steele, Silas Sexton Steele, Silas S Steele, S S Steele. Voice and Spirit: The Alleghanians: Chapter 6: Part 1: The South Seas 1856-1859 Made from an older version of what is now templatedownloadta.htm