Riding Down from Bangor (song)"Riding Down from Bangor" is a song, written by 1871, about a train journey from Bangor, Maine. TextThe words, as published with music in The Scottish Students' Song Book (1897),[1] are:
History and variants"Riding Down from Bangor" was a poem written by Louis Shreve Osborne in 1871 while attending Harvard.[2] The text mentions the Eastern Railroad which ceased only a few years later in 1884 when it became part of the Boston and Maine. At some early point, Osborne's poem was set to music.[1] It was recorded as a traditional song in 1934 by Frank Crumit and in 1950 by the husband and wife duo Marais & Miranda.[3][4] It is the same poem as "The Harvard Student", also titled "The Pullman Train" (attributed to Louis Shreve Osborne, 1871)[5] by Doney Hammontree.[6] Orwell essay"Riding Down from Bangor" is also the title of an essay published in 1946 by the English author George Orwell. In it, he muses on 19th-century American children's literature and the type of society it portrayed. Not to be confusedThe song should not be confused with the folk style song "Day Trip to Bangor", a 1980 hit by Fiddler's Dram about "the day we went to Bangor" in Wales.[7] References
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