Patriot
IT’S GREAT TO BE AN AMERICAN
For long years the members of the Hamm family in Rowan County, Kentucky, both old and young, have gathered on a Sunday in the month of August for their mountain Eisteddfod. Upon this occasion there is friendly rivalry as to whose ballad or poem is best, who speaks his composition best. And the prize, you may be sure, is not silver but a book of poems. This composition of Nannie Hamm Carter was read at their mountain Eisteddfod in August, 1940.
SAD LONDON TOWN
Jilson Setters composed and set to tune this ballad and sang it at the American Folk Song Festival in June, 1941, to the delight of a vast audience. To the surprise of some he pronounces the word bomb, bum, like his early English ancestors.
The aged fiddler also composed and set to tune the following ballad called—
BUNDLES FOR BRITAIN
SERGEANT YORK
His own favorite ballad, however, is that which he composed and set to tune several years ago about Sergeant Alvin C. York, who is Jilson Setters’ idea of “a mountain man without nary flaw.”
A Tennessee mountaineer, who is proud of his “wight of learning” according to his own words, “put together” this ballad which he calls—
NORRIS DAM
THE DOWNFALL OF PARIS