Here's your mule explained

Here's your mule or Where's my mule? (Mister, here's your mule or Mister, where's my mule?) was a Confederate catch phrase during the Civil War, often noted in Civil War histories.[1] It resulted in several Civil War songs, including "Here's Your Mule", "How Are You? John Morgan", and "Turchin's Got Your Mule". It is also credited with contributing to General Bragg's failure to rally his troops at Missionary Ridge.[2]

Origins

Several differing accounts of the origin of the phrase are given. The most common involves soldiers in a camp taking a clever peddler's unattended mule and hiding it. When the peddler discovers the mule missing, he goes around the camp inquiring about it. After a while, a soldier would holler, "Mister, here's your mule." When the peddler went toward the call, a soldier in another part of the camp would yell the same, "Mister, here's your mule." That continued and took the peddler all over the camp. Variation of the story supposedly took place at the Camp of Instruction in Jackson, Tennessee,[3] Beauregard's camp at Centreville, Virginia,[4] and others.

Songs

"Here's Your Mule"

Here's Your Mule
Cover:HeresYourMule1862.png
Caption:Sheet music cover, 1862
Published:1862

"Here's Your Mule" was written by C.D Benson and published in 1862, both by himself in Nashville, Tennessee, and by John Church, Jr. in Cincinnati. The song tells one of the traditional stories about soldiers hiding a farmer's mule and yelling "Mister, here's your mule" while taking the animal from place to place endlessly. The chorus is:

Following John Morgan's 1863 raid, sheet music destined for the Southern market had a chorus pasted in immediately after the final verse:

"Turchin's Got Your Mule"

The Union parodied the song in 1863 with "Turchin's Got Your Mule", an account of John B. Turchin's 1862 foray into Alabama where his soldiers seized Southern goods and property. The song, perhaps written by a cavalryman with the First Ohio,[5] tells of a plantation owner trying to retrieve his slaves and livestock. The first verse and chorus are:

"How Are You? John Morgan"

How Are You? John Morgan
Cover:HowAreYouJohnMorgan1864.png
Caption:Cover, sheet music, 1864
Published:1864

C. D. Benson came out with ""How Are You? John Morgan" in 1864 after John Hunt Morgan escaped from the Ohio Penitentiary in 1863. The chorus is:

"Here's Your Mule" ("My Maryland"/"O Tannenbaum")

A common Confederate version of unknown authorship was sung to the tune of "My Maryland". One stanza of this version is:

Another variant of "Here's Your Mule" using the tune to "My Maryland" ("O Tannenbaum"), also of unknown authorship, was published in Nashville's Daily Union, July 14, 1863. The opening verses is:

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Moore, The Rebellion Record, p. 288: "The cry of 'Here's your mule,' and 'Where's my mule?' have become national and are generally heard when, on the one hand no mule is about, and, on the other, when no one is hunting a mule. It seems not to be understood by any one, though it is a peculiar confederate phrase, and is as popular as Dixie from the Potomac to the Rio Grande."
  2. Pollard, The Lost Cause, p. 457: "The day was shamefully lost. Gen. Bragg attempted to rally the broken troops; he advanced into the fire, and exclaimed, 'Here is your commander,' and was answered with the derisive shouts of an absurd catch-phrase in the army, 'Here's your mule'."
  3. Ridley, Battles and Sketches of the Army of Tennessee, pp. 632-635.
  4. Walsh, Handy-book of Literary Curiosities, p. 753.
  5. Curry, Four Years in the Saddle, p. 326: "While stationed at Fayetteville the First Ohio published a newspaper call the Cavalier, which was edited by William Davis, of Company M. and A. Thompson, of Company D, with T. C. Stevenson and Joe Devreax, of Company D, publishers. The motto at the heading read: 'We Go Where Rebs Await Us.' As will be remembered, it was a spicy sheet, and some poetic cavalryman wrote a parody on Morgan's mule, which ran thus: ... 'Turchin's Got Your Mule'..."