The Harmoneons Explained

The Harmoneons were a blackface musical singing group in the 19th-century United States. The group began as the "Albino Family" in 1843, and later became the "Harmoneon Family."[1] Principal group members included L.V.H. Crosby;[2] Marshall S. Pike (1818-1901);[3] James Power; and John Power[4] Through the years others associated with the group included: F.B. Howe;[5] Francis Lynch; W.H. Mower, manager; T.B. Prendergast; and F.A. Reynolds. In 1847 the Harmoneons performed for President James Polk at the White House.

Known performances

The group sang throughout the U.S., including Baltimore, Maryland (1846-1847, 1850, 1853);[6] Trenton, New Jersey (1847);[7] Portsmouth, New Hampshire (1848);[8] Lowell, Massachusetts (1849); Salem, Massachusetts (1849); Belfast, Maine (1850, 1852);[9] and in Boston at the Melodeon (1849), Horticultural Hall (1849, 1851), and other venues. They also toured in Halifax, Nova Scotia.[10]

My Last Cigar

In the 1860s, the tune of their most famous song, "Dearest Mae," became the tune to which the enormously popular college song, "My Last Cigar," was sung. Though James M. Hubbard has always been credited as the composer of "My Last Cigar," its true tunesmith is James Power of the Harmoneons.[11]

Songs

External links

Images

Members of the troupe
Concerts

Notes and References

  1. New Hampshire Patriot. Sept. 26, 1844.
  2. Edward Le Roy Rice. Monarchs of minstrelsy, from "Daddy" Rice to date. Kenny publishing company, 1911.
  3. Appletons' annual cyclopaedia and register of important events. 1902.
  4. Melodies of the Harmoneons. Boston: G. P. Reed & Co., 1851.
  5. Flyer for Flagg's Hall Worcester. The Harmoneon Troupe... May 2, 1851.
  6. Baltimore Sun. March 16, 1846; etc.
  7. Trenton State Gazette. Aug. 16, 1847.
  8. New Hampshire Gazette and Republican Union. April 25, 1848.
  9. Joseph Williamson. History of the city of Belfast in the state of Maine: from its first settlement in 1770 to 1875. Loring, Short, and Harmon, 1877.
  10. Atlantic Canada Theatre Site. www.lib.unb.ca
  11. Second-Hand Smoke: James Maurice Hubbard and the Search for the Elusive Author and Composer of America's Second Favorite Song THE DOYLESTOWN INSTITUTE. Doylestown Institute Occasional Papers. Morrison. Daniel P.. January 2019 .