Roll on Columbia
"Roll on Columbia" is an American folk song written in 1941 by American folk singer Woody Guthrie, who popularized the song through his own recording of it. One of the most popular songs in the history of the United States, it is paean to the harnessing of the Columbia River in the Pacific Northwest to help farms and industry through federally-built hydroelectric power facilties. It became famous as an anthem about American public works projects arising out of the New Deal in the Great Depression.
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2 Lyrics 3 External links and references |
The song was part of the Columbia River Ballads, a set of 26 songs written by Guthrie as part of a commission by the Bonneville Power Administration (BPA), the federal agency goverment created to sell and distribute power from the river's federal hydroelectric facililities, in particular the Bonneville Dam and Grand Coulee Dam. At the time, the agency was facing a controversy because several counties in Washington and Oregon had begun construction of their own dams on the Columbia, outside of the federal jurisdiction. On the recommendation of Alan Lomax, the BPA hired Guthrie to write a set of propaganda songs about the federal projects to gain support for federal regulation of hydroelectricity.
As part of the effort, Guthrie, who was from Oklahoma and knew little about the Pacific Northwest, was driven all around Washington and Oregon to gain inspiration from the sites of the Columbia and its tributaries. Guthrie was glad he was able to tour and get a feel for the area, commenting that "these Pacific Northwest songs and ballads have all got these personal feelings for me because I was there on these very spots and very grounds before."
Of the Columbia River Ballads "Roll on, Columbia" was by far the most popular. Because of the song's message and popularity, it was established as the official folk song of the State of Washington in 1987.
History
Lyrics
The song begins with the chorus and it is sung after each verse. The phrase "darkness to dawn" is a reference about how hydroelectric power was bringing electricity to homes in rural areas, which had never had it before.
The Columbia River rises in British Columbia, in the alpine forests of the Cascades and northern Rockies. The river runs from southern Canada to the Pacific Ocean at the border between Washington and Oregon.
This verse talks about some of the Columbia's tributaries. These rivers themselves are fairly grand and they add to the Columbia's prowess.
Thomas Jefferson's vision of Manifest Destiny, the idea that the United State would exstend from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean, began to be realized when the Lewis and Clark Expedition reached the mouth of the Columbia in 1805.
- It's there on your banks that we fought many a fight
- Sheridan's boys in the blockhouse that night
- They saw us in death but never in flight
- So roll on Columbia, roll on
- At Bonneville now there are ships in the locks
- The waters have risen and cleared all the rocks
- Shiploads of plenty will steam past the docks
- So roll on, Columbia, roll on
- And on up the river is Grand Coulee Dam
- The mightiest thing ever built by a man
- To run the great factories and water the land
- So roll on, Columbia, roll on
- These mighty men labored by day and by night
- Matching their strength 'gainst the river's wild flight
- Through rapids and falls, they won the hard fight
- So roll on, Columbia, roll on