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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 36. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones). Search the whole document.
Found 30 total hits in 12 results.
Mount Vernon, Knox County, Ohio (Ohio, United States) (search for this): chapter 1.46
Albert Pike (search for this): chapter 1.46
Old Dan Tucker (search for this): chapter 1.46
How Dixie came to be written.
Dixie, the most popular song of the South during the Civil War, was written by a Northern man, Daniel Decatur Emmett, who was born at Mount Vernon, Ohio, in 1815.
Young Emmett began life as a printer, but soon afterward gave up type-setting to join a band of musicians connected with a circus company.
He discovered that he had a talent for conposing songs used by clowns and he reeled them off in numbers, and with much success.
Old Dan Tucker made a great hit. Emmett became so popular that he concluded to try New York City, at the Old Gotham Theatre.
His performances, with the help of two companions, were of a mixed negro song and dance kind, and the little company was billed as The Virginia Minstrels.
They took the New York crowd by storm, and the result was the negro minstrel shows which have ever since had so great a run.
The company went abroad and had great success in England.
Even royalty became enthusiastic, and the present King, who
Dan (search for this): chapter 1.46
Americans (search for this): chapter 1.46
Dan Emmett (search for this): chapter 1.46
Daniel Decatur Emmett (search for this): chapter 1.46
Bryant (search for this): chapter 1.46
1859 AD (search for this): chapter 1.46
1861 AD (search for this): chapter 1.46