John Over The Hazel Green- Gibson (VA) pre1936

John Over The Hazel Green- Gibson (VA) pre1936; Scarborough A

[From "A Song catcher" by Dorothy Scarborough; pre1937. Scarborough's two versions are part of the Virginia repository that is apparently a single version that has spread throughout one area in Virginia. Scarborough's title John Over The Hazel Green (Hazelgreen) is actually the correct name for most of the Virginia versions. Here's some information focus on the Shifflet family from whom three versions were collected (Victoria Shifflett Morris; Raz Shiflett and Robert Shiflett).

The area (although it was found in other locations) of Virginia that the Shifletts lived became the repository for a version of this ballad. The Virgina Folk-Lore Society, under the direction of C. Alphonso Smith (who died in 1924) and later John Stone and Kyle Davis Jr., collected eleven texts and three melodies (Sharp collected one in 1918; Scarborough- two; Davis More Ballads- one; Foss- one).  At the time their book, Traditional Ballads was being completed (c.1928) there were no other versions of John of Hazelgreen collected in the US (that would change as Barry published a version from Maine in 1929).

George Foss, who wrote an excellent article titled,  From White Hall to Bacon Hollow, collected an excellent version in 1961 from Robert Shiflett, who was Raz Shiflett's son (see also Davis H; collected from Raz). Here are some excerpts:


   From White Hall to Bacon Hollow is about a place and about its culture and people. I have granted myself the author's indulgence of selecting a title significant in its double meaning. White Hall to Bacon Hollow is a stretch of twisting country road, Virginia route 810, crossing the line between Albemarle and Greene Counties.

The earliest settlers of importance to the area were members of the Brown family. The patriarch of the Virginia Browns was Benjamin Brown, who began acquiring land in Albemarle County in 1747. He amassed six thousand acres of what was to become known as Brown's Cove. Included in these holdings was a tract patented to him by King George III in 1750.

It is of importance at this point to mention Arthur Kyle Davis, Jr., who was a collector of ballads and folksongs specifically of Virginia. He was not a collector in the same sense as Sharp, that is a field worker and face-to-face gatherer of songs. He was more in the mold of Francis James Child, the great collector-editor of English and Scottish Popular Ballads, that is, he served to gather and organize, to sift and evaluate the field work of numerous amateur, hobbyist and professional collectors. As early as 1929 he produced Traditional Ballads of Virginia; in 1949 he published Folksongs of Virginia and More Traditional Ballads of Virginia, all three under the auspices of the Virginia Folklore Society. A courtly gentleman “of the old school,” he was professor of English literature at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville for a great span of time. It was professor Davis who was Paul Clayton Worthington's teacher at the University during the 1950's and inspired Paul's interest in balladry and folksong.

          Two later collectors who visited and worked in the White Hall-Bacon Hollow area were Richard Chase and professor Winston Wilkinson whose manuscripts are now kept by the University of Virginia. They were the first collectors to record the songs of some of the finest singers in the region, Ella Shiflett and Victoria Shiflett Morris as early as 1935.

          Some of the family names still found in northwest Albemarle County and Greene County date from pre-Revolutionary times: Brown, Frazier and Jones. Other names commonly found are Walton, Powell, Sandridge and Wood. But by far the most commonly found are Morris and Shiflett. This makes the tracing of relationships very difficult since various branches of the family are only very distantly related but share the same name. Robert Shiflett (designated “Raz's Robert,” i.e. Erasmus' son Robert, to distinguish him from the region's numerous other Robert Shifletts) speculates that the family was originally descended from French mercenaries brought over by Lafayette to aid the colonies in their War of Independence.


(A) JOHN OVER THE HAZEL GREEN- Mrs. Addie Gibson, of Roach's Run, gave me (Scarborough) a scrap that she recalled. The title has suffered significant change.

. . . . [1]
As I walk-ed out yonders green wood tree,
And there I spied a pretty fair miss,
And all alone she cried.

You are welcome home, and home, says she.
You are welcome home with me.
And you may have my oldest son
A husband for to be.

No, I don't want your oldest son,
He's neither lord nor king.
For I never intend to be the bride of none
But John over the Hazel Green.

1. The opening line is missing- usually it's "As I were walking one fair May morning," Scarborough does not make this point. The second line would need to be amended as well to: "All out by yonders greenwood tree." The second verse is missing entirely.