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110 Verses Jim Crow Still Alive! ... [and:] New Verses. Dinah Crow

110 Verses Jim Crow Still Alive! ... [and:] New Verses. Dinah Crow

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110 Verses Jim Crow Still Alive! ... [and:] New Verses. Dinah Crow

by Minstrelry

  • Used
Condition
Creased, folded, minor marginal losses at edges
Seller
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
New York, New York, United States
Item Price
€21,267.00
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About This Item

Philadelphia: Published and sold at No. 9 North Eighth St, 1830. Double sheet broadside with vignette images. Folio (18 x 21 inches). Creased, folded, minor marginal losses at edges. Double sheet broadside with vignette images. Folio (18 x 21 inches). UNRECORDED DOUBLE BROADSIDE, JIM CROW & DINAH CROW. "Jump Jim Crow" is believed to have originated in the late 1820s by a blackface minstrel performer Thomas Dartmouth Rice. The earliest known broadside songsheets were published in the 1830s, with the racist genre peaking in popularity over the next three decades prior to the Civil War.

"Images of black identity created by minstrel shows satirized blacks as singing, dancing, grinning fools. Actors/musicians blackened their faces with burnt cork and used other make-up material that demeaned African Americans for the pleasure of the viewing audience. It was the first example of the way American popular culture would exploit and manipulate blacks and their culture to entertain and benefit whites ... Within ten years of the character's creation, the term Jim Crow was used as a negative nickname for African Americans" (The History of Minstrel Shows and Jim Crow, https://glc.yale.edu/outreach/teaching-resources/teacher-professional-development-programs/past-teacher-development-15)

Printed together on a single large sheet, the imprints at the bottom of each side suggests that the print was made to be separated into two broadsides, though are here still joined together. Neither broadside is recorded.

The broadside at the left, titled 110 verses Jim Crow still alive includes two woodcut vignettes of Jim Crow, at work cutting fire wood with a bucksaw and dressed as a gentleman. The verses begin: "De way to bake a hoe cake / Ol Virginny nebber tire / Stick the hee cake on the foot / and hold it to de fire"; and with the repeating chorus: "So I wheel about / I turn about / I do just so / And ebery time I wheel about / I jump Jim Crow."

The broadside on the right, titled New Verses Dinah Crow, includes three woodcut vignettes of a well-dressed Dinah Crow with well-dressed Jim Crows on either side of her. The verses begin: "O gentlemen an ladies / I'd hab you all to know / Dat here is Miss Dinah / A full sister to Jim Crow"; and with the repeating chorus: "I wink and smile / and play o just so / And ebery one dat see me / Admire Miss Crow."

Although no printer is identified on this broadside, newspaper advertisements for the imprint address suggest the work to have been a promotional piece produced by sundries store in the 1830s. The May 17, 1836 issue of the Public Ledger notes a robbery at the store of Emily Hopkins, No. 9 North Eighth street, where she was "robbed of a large quantity of goods, consisting of handkerchiefs, shirts, laces, bobbinets, collars, bosoms, Ladies' caps, gloves, prints of various description..." By the early 1840s the address was noted as a wholesale and retail jobbing store and dry goods business of Lawrence B. Connoly (or Connelly); by 1845 the address was a dry goods store belonging to M. Egolf; and two years later was a lamp establishment belonging to H. Fairbank. It would therefore seem likely that the broadside was printed for and sold by Emily Hopkins sometime prior to 1840.

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Details

Seller
James Cummins Bookseller US (US)
Seller's Inventory #
334847
Title
110 Verses Jim Crow Still Alive! ... [and:] New Verses. Dinah Crow
Author
Minstrelry
Format/Binding
Double sheet broadside with vignette images. Folio (18 x 21 inches)
Book Condition
Used - Creased, folded, minor marginal losses at edges
Quantity Available
1
Publisher
Published and sold at No. 9 North Eighth St
Place of Publication
Philadelphia
Date Published
1830
Keywords
Americana | African American History
Bookseller catalogs
Americana;

Terms of Sale

James Cummins Bookseller

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About the Seller

James Cummins Bookseller

Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Biblio member since 2009
New York, New York

About James Cummins Bookseller

Founded in 1978 by James Cummins, the firm has grown to include two New Jersey locations as well as the main store at 699 Madison Avenue (between 62nd and 63rd Streets) in New York City.Hours: Monday - Friday 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. (During July & August, until 4:00 p.m. on Fridays.)The Madison Avenue store is a seventh-floor oasis for book-lovers, a quiet and pleasantly furnished book room with a carefully chosen, expertly catalogued and broad-based selection of fine and rare books, autographs, manuscripts, and works of art. We have built notable private collections for American and international clients. Our stock is always changing, and our steady input from private buying and public auctions assures our clients of new surprises (and temptations!) at each visit. Our stock covers a wide range of collecting interests, with particular emphasis in the following fields: British and American Literature, Sporting Books, Private Press and Illustrated Books, 19th-Century Color Plate Books, Americana, Travel, Sets and Fine Bindings, History, and Authors' Manuscripts and Letters. Our catalogued inventory exceeds 50,000 titles, much of which can be searched on the internet. In addition, our New Jersey warehouse contains over 400,000 books in all subject areas. We might have the books you're looking for.

Glossary

Some terminology that may be used in this description includes:

Edges
The collective of the top, fore and bottom edges of the text block of the book, being that part of the edges of the pages of a...
Vignette
A decorative design or illustration placed at the beginning or end of a ...
New
A new book is a book previously not circulated to a buyer. Although a new book is typically free of any faults or defects, "new"...
Folio
A folio usually indicates a large book size of 15" in height or larger when used in the context of a book description. Further,...

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