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Cool Songs About Historical Events
Posted on 9/15/25 at 5:03 pm
Posted on 9/15/25 at 5:03 pm
Originally recorded by Kansas Joe McCoy and Memphis Minnie and made famous by Led Zeppelin. It's about the Great Flood of 1927.
This post was edited on 9/15/25 at 5:08 pm
Posted on 9/15/25 at 5:06 pm to Tchefuncte Tiger
You didn't lead off with BONO???
Posted on 9/15/25 at 5:09 pm to Kafka
quote:
You didn't lead off with BONO???
I wanted to lead off with this:
However, I've been reading a lot about the Great Flood so it was on my mind.
This post was edited on 9/15/25 at 5:11 pm
Posted on 9/15/25 at 5:13 pm to Tchefuncte Tiger
plenty of Maiden songs fit this category
Posted on 9/15/25 at 5:18 pm to Kafka
quote:
"The Bells of Rhymney" is a 1938 poem by Welsh poet Idris Davies and a subsequent song, first recorded by Pete Seeger in 1958 and most famously by the folk-rock band The Byrds in 1965. The poem, inspired by the 1926 General Strike and a mining disaster, uses church bells to voice the despair and anger of Welsh mining communities during the Great Depression.
Posted on 9/15/25 at 5:23 pm to Kafka
quote:
The Italian Hall disaster (sometimes referred to as the 1913 Massacre) was a tragedy that occurred on Wednesday, December 24, 1913, in Calumet, Michigan, United States. Seventy-three people – mostly striking mine workers and their families – were crushed to death in a stampede when someone falsely shouted "fire" at a crowded Christmas party
Posted on 9/15/25 at 5:37 pm to Kafka
quote:Tom Dula
Thomas C. Dula (June 23‚ 1844 – May 1, 1868) was a former Confederate soldier who was convicted of murdering Laura Foster. National publicity from newspapers such as The New York Times turned Dula's story into a folk legend. Although Laura was murdered in Wilkes County, North Carolina, Dula was tried, convicted, and hanged in Statesville. Considerable controversy surrounded the case. In subsequent years, a folk song was written (entitled "Tom Dooley", based on the pronunciation in the local dialect), and many oral traditions were passed down about the circumstances surrounding Foster's murder and Dula's subsequent execution.

Posted on 9/15/25 at 5:59 pm to Kafka
5 Sullivan Brothers dying together in WWII
Posted on 9/15/25 at 6:10 pm to Saint Alfonzo
This post was edited on 9/15/25 at 6:22 pm
Posted on 9/15/25 at 6:39 pm to Kafka
quote:
The historical Stagger Lee was Lee Shelton, a black pimp living in St. Louis, Missouri, in the late 19th century. He was nicknamed Stag Lee or Stack Lee, with a variety of explanations being given: he was given the nickname because he "went stag" (attended social events unaccompanied by a person of the opposite sex); he took the nickname from a well-known riverboat captain called Stack Lee; or, according to John and Alan Lomax, he took the name from a riverboat owned by the Lee family of Memphis called the Stack Lee, which was known for its on-board prostitution. Shelton was well known locally as one of the Macks, a group of pimps who attracted attention through their flashy clothing and appearance. In addition to those activities, he was the captain of a black Four Hundred Club, a social club with a dubious reputation.
On Christmas night in 1895, Shelton and his acquaintance William "Billy" Lyons were drinking in the Bill Curtis Saloon. Lyons was also a member of St. Louis' underworld, and may have been a political and business rival to Shelton. Eventually, the two men got into a dispute, during which Lyons took Shelton's Stetson hat. Subsequently, Shelton shot Lyons, recovered his hat, and left. Lyons died of his injuries, and Shelton was charged, tried, and convicted of the murder in 1897. He was paroled in 1909, but returned to prison in 1911 for assault and robbery. He died incarcerated in 1912
Posted on 9/15/25 at 6:58 pm to cgrand
the greatest protest song of all time
Posted on 9/15/25 at 7:01 pm to cgrand
another murder ballad, this one more recent in vintage
Posted on 9/15/25 at 7:03 pm to cgrand
and another, this one even more current
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