THROUGH
MOUNTAIN MISTS
Early Settlers of Union
County, Georgia
Their
Descendants...Their Stories...Their Achievements
Lifting the
Mists of History on Their Way of Life
By: Ethelene Dyer Jones
The 'Sacred Harp'
Tradition of Singing
Sometimes it is called 'fa-sol-
la"
singing. Passed at first by oral tradition long before they were
published in
tune books, the metrical hymns and psalms of Isaac Watts and others
were an
important part of frontier worship as groups met first in homes and
then in a
church house built where they set aside an acre or so of land for a
church.
This method of singing was
taught in
widely-practiced singing schools in the south, beginning in the 19th
century.
The song leader would announce a tune, known to most people, and then
"line
out" the words to go with that tune. The preacher or the song leader
would
often be the only one in the congregation to have a book. By
repetition, the
members would soon learn the words of the song. When "New Britain C.
M." was announced as the
hymn tune, the singers would know that "Amazing grace! How sweet the
sound," the inimitable words by John Newton (1725-1807), would be sung
to
the announced tune. "C. M." stood for common meter, a metrical count
of syllables in the phrases of the song being 8.6.8.6. The version of
this
beloved hymn we so often sing now was published in Virginia Harmony
in 1831 and repeated in subsequent hymn books even to the
present
day. It was also in Jesse Mercer's Cluster.
Much of this singing tradition
has been
attributed to the "Old Baptists," although other denominations like
Presbyterians, Mennonites and Methodists also sang the old tunes to
sacred
words. Why, then, were so many of them attributed to Baptists? George
Pullen
Jackson formerly a professor of music at Vanderbilt University
in his Story of the
Sacred
Harp, states
that
"freedom" has always been a watchword of the Baptists. Prior to and
during the Revolutionary War, Baptists worshiped freely, without
centralized
religious authority. They wanted no part of the established religious
orders
and state churches practiced in some of the colonies. They did not want
even
their singing linked to what they considered governmentally controlled
denominations.
Most of the Old Baptist tunes
found in the
early years were secular songs with religious texts. They were
remembered tunes
that our ancestors sang in the hills of Scotland, Ireland,
England
and Wales
and
brought to America
with them. These tunes had been "spiritualized" with words written to
show Christian experiences. For example, the minor-key hymn, Wondrous Love was set to the
tune of a
song about Captain Kidd, pirate.
Fortunately
for the hymn, the tune name was
given Wondrous Love,
not Captain Kidd. The
meter in the old folk song in a minor key carries well the words of
"Wondrous Love": "What wondrous love is this! Oh! my soul, Oh!
my soul! What wondrous love is this, oh! my soul! That caused the Lord
of
bliss, To bear the dreadful curse for my soul, for my soul, To bear the
dreadful curse for my soul!" We don't know who penned the words for the
four-stanza hymn in its irregular (12, 9, 6, 6, 12, 9) rhythm. Even
modern hymm
books list the words as being An
American Folk Hymn. It
was published in William Walker's Southern
Harmony in 1835. Benjamin Franklin White collaborated with
Walker
in compiling Southern
Harmony, but when Walker
took the
manuscript to New Haven,
Connecticut to be
published, he did not
include White's name as co-author/compiler.
Evidently, this breached the
friendship of
the two musicians. Ben White packed up his family and moved from Spartanburg, S.C.,
to Hamilton
in
Harris County, Ga. There he became editor of the local newspaper, The Organ. He also
began
working on The Sacred
Harp
songbook. Many of the songs he published in the newspaper. In 1844 the
whole
collection of songs was compiled by B. F. White and Joel King and
published by
Collins Press, Philadelphia.
Subsequent editions came out in 1859 and 1860. The hymnbook was
reprinted in
1968 by Broadman Press, Nashville, Tenn. White and King's Sacred Harp became
the official
music book of the Southern Musical Convention in Upson, County, Ga.,
(1845),
the Chattahoochee Musical Convention, Coweta County (1852), and the
Tallapoosea
Singing Convention in Haralson County (1867) and countless other
Singing
Conventions as they organized in counties after the Civil War. The book
was
popular not only for its songs but for the Rudiments
of Music, a 21-page manual of music instruction which was
often
used by singing school teachers.
The Union County Singing
Convention held at
the court house in Blairsville was an all-day event and well attended
by
singing groups from the mountain areas of Georgia, North Carolina
and Tennessee.
Some of the singing school
teachers of the 1930s and 1940s were the Rev. James Hood and Mr. Frank
Dyer of Union
County,
and Mr. Everett Prince Bailey of Fannin County, GA
and Polk County, Tenn.
Groups of Sacred Harp musicians
still meet and sing the old songs. Noted names among them are
descendants of B.
F. White and the Denson Brothers, Howard and Paine; families of
McGraws,
Kitchens, Cagles, Lovvorns, Parrises, Manns, Drakes and others, some in
the
fifth generation of those who contributed to the Sacred Harp back in
1844.
In Watson B. Dyer's Souther Family History, (1986),
page
154, he printed in our great grandmother's handwriting (Nancy Collins
Souther
[1829-1888], wife of John Combs Hayes Souther [18271891]), a copy of a
song
they were learning at church. She had written the words April 13, 1868. I
was thrilled to see
the words of the song that had been "lined out" as my great
grandmother wrote them. She wrote:
"Come all ye righteous here
below,
O hal-le, hal-le-lu-jah.
Let nothing prove your
overthrow,
O hal-le, hal-le-lu-jah.
But call on Me both day and
night,
O hal-le, hal-le-lu-jah.
And I'll visit you with delight,
Sing glory, hal-le-lu-jah!"
She penned words to other
stanzas as well.
I looked in the reprint of White & King's Sacred Harp
for the song my great grandmother wrote out to help her
memorize
the words. I found the tune, "The Good Old Way" (L.M.-long meter) with
the
refrain, but the words given for the stanzas in the song book were not
a match
for what my ancestor wrote. There were many versions of the stanzas, as
various
people were inspired to write verses to fit tunes. I felt a deep
kinship with
her. The words she wrote fitted a commonly used tune she sang as she
worshiped
in the little New
Liberty Baptist Church
in sight of her
cabin. She had a desire to participate more readily in the services by
knowing
the words to a song they enjoyed singing there. She was the mother of
ten
children. Maybe she gathered them all around and they had a little
Souther
choir at home as she taught them the words to The Good Old Way
tune.
c2006 by
Ethelene Dyer
Jones; published June 22, 2006 in The Union Sentinel, Blairsville,
GA.
Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
[Ethelene Dyer
Jones is a retired educator,
freelance writer, poet, and historian. She may be reached at
e-mail edj0513@windstream.net;
phone 478-453-8751; or mail 1708 Cedarwood Road, Milledgeville, GA
31061-2411.]
Updated June 16, 2018
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