
Each version adds new pieces to the puzzle, adds fresh nuances to the story, while also bringing contradictions. 4 But there are numerous versions of John Henry songs including folk ballads, chain gang, construction crew, and bluegrass. The song originated in the late 1800’s, and traditionally the songs were either ballads or hammer songs (work songs used by laborers or prisoners to make their work more efficient and break the monotony). Told not only as a folk tale but also in song, the account has stretched its vines in so many directions that it is hard to tackle the subject. While facts are debatable, the legend is unstoppable. Each year in September the Leeds Folk Festival is held to commemorate John Henry and the contest that supposedly took place in that area. Another possible location is Leeds, Alabama at the Coosa Mountain Tunnel or the Oak Mountain Tunnel of the Columbus & Western Railway. There are no records of a steam hammer being used at Big Bend in West Virginia, so some say it took place 40 miles away at Lewis Tunnel in Virginia.

But as the story goes, John Henry stood out as the man that competed with the newly invented steam hammer, a machine that could do the work of these valuable men-a machine that would eventually drive them out of their needed employment.īe aware that there are conflicting accounts as to where this competition took place. It is believed that John Henry worked for the C&O railroad during the Reconstruction Period, and at one point they ran up upon Big Bend Mountain, a rock over a mile wide that had to be conquered by drilling through its heart.

It was terribly hard work and many died from exhaustion or silicosis due to the constant exposure to dust.
#John hold the hammer kid show drivers#
Steel drivers used their hammers to drive spikes or drills into mountains to create passes for the railroads. He was said to be a freed slave that worked as a steel driver. So who was John Henry really? He was described as a towering 6 foot tall, 200 pound strong black man, born in the mid 1800’s probably in North Carolina or Virginia. The name and steel-driving solitude stay the same.” 1 From verse-to-verse, generation-to-generation, the storyĬhanges to suit the singer. He’s a hero to Woody Guthrie, a warning to Mississippi John Hurt, an inspiration to the chain gang.

Geoff Edgers said in his Analysis of John Henry Music, “John Henry, as ultimate working-class hero, has been embraced by disparate groups: black prisoners, white mountain musicians, college folk revivalists, elderly blues singers…The connector is this valiant battle, man against machine, man against boss, man against the power structure that keeps his people (African-Americans? Laborers?) in chains. Whether he was a true historical figure or a fictitious hero carved into the minds of common Americans by oral tradition, his story has given inspiration to generations. One of the most colorful characters in American folklore is the legendary John Henry.
