The Rebel Girl Explained

The Rebel Girl
Cover:The Rebel Girl cover.jpg
Language:English
Published:1915

"The Rebel Girl" is a song written or completed by Joe Hill in 1915.[1] The song was published in the Little Red Songbook of the Industrial Workers of the World, and as sheet music in 1915. It is said that Hill wrote the song for IWW orator Elizabeth Gurley Flynn,[2] claimed and proven by Gurley Flynn herself in her memoir.[3] (It has also been claimed that it was inspired Katie Phar and Agnes Fair.)

The song was recorded with modernized lyrics by Hazel Dickens on the 1990 Smithsonian Folkways album Don't Mourn, Organize! Songs of Labor Songwriter Joe Hill.

Hill sent copies of the sheet music with his own art work to both Flynn and the Scandinavian Propaganda League. The IWW used cover art by Arthur Machia in their printed version of the sheet music.

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Notes and References

  1. Book: Rosemont. Franklin. Joe Hill the IWW & the making of a revolutionary workingclass counterculture. 2003. Kerr. Chicago, Ill. 088286-265-0. 1st.
  2. Book: Foner , Philip Sheldon . Philip Foner. The Case of Joe Hill. International Publishers. 14. 1966. 9780717800223. 12 November 2020.
  3. Book: Flynn , Elizabeth Gurley . Elizabeth Gurley Flynn. The Rebel Girl: An Autobiography, My First Life (1906-1926). International Publishers. 5. 1973. 9780717803675. 12 November 2020.