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  1. Jun 23, 2008 · 18.1K subscribers. 2.3K. 608K views 15 years ago. Musical traditions and recollections of eight retired African-American railroad track laborers whose occupational folk songs were once heard on...

    • Jun 23, 2008
    • 608.6K
    • folkstreamer
  2. Jun 22, 2023 · 375 subscribers. Subscribed. 27. 1.5K views 10 months ago #history #arthistory #naturalhistorymuseum. Gandy dancer is a slang term used for early railroad workers in the United States, more...

    • Jun 22, 2023
    • 1642
    • Vintage History
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  4. Sep 7, 2022 · 112 subscribers. Subscribed. 25. 2.7K views 1 year ago GADSDEN. A "Gandy Dancer" was a person who kept railroad tracks in line before there was machinery to do the job. One crew member sang...

    • 2 min
    • 2.8K
    • Anna Mullin
  5. Nov 11, 2010 · Subscribed. 2.8K. 458K views 13 years ago. 1973 16mm film by Jack Schrader and Tom Burton that features field recordings of work chants of Gandy Dancers including aligning songs and chants to...

    • Nov 12, 2010
    • 458.4K
    • folkstreamer
  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Gandy_dancerGandy dancer - Wikipedia

    Gandy dancer is a slang term used for early railroad workers in the United States, more formally referred to as section hands, who laid and maintained railroad tracks in the years before the work was done by machines. The British equivalents of the term gandy dancer are navvy (from navigator ), originally builders of canals, or inland ...

  7. By: Adam Burns. The gandy dancer term has blossomed into folklore over the years, celebrated in several songs, books, and other mainstream mediums. Despite its near mythical status it described a once very common job on the railroad, hard labor. During the era before mechanized maintenance, railroads employed armies of workers to keep their ...

  8. Oct 17, 2023 · He simultaneously motivated and entertained the men and set the timing through work songs that derived distantly from sea chanteys and more recently from cotton-chopping songs, blues, and African-American church music. Typical songs featured a two-line, four-beat couplet to which members of the gang would tap their lining bars against the rails ...

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