Songs of the Cowboys
This was the first cowboy song book published in America, and Thorp'àö'â+s lyrics were the beginning of the popularization of the American cowboy. This book lists 24 songs that can be learned and sung today.
"1101129666"
Songs of the Cowboys
This was the first cowboy song book published in America, and Thorp'àö'â+s lyrics were the beginning of the popularization of the American cowboy. This book lists 24 songs that can be learned and sung today.
7.95 In Stock
Songs of the Cowboys

Songs of the Cowboys

by N. Howard "Jack" Thorp
Songs of the Cowboys

Songs of the Cowboys

by N. Howard "Jack" Thorp

Paperback

$7.95 
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Overview

This was the first cowboy song book published in America, and Thorp'àö'â+s lyrics were the beginning of the popularization of the American cowboy. This book lists 24 songs that can be learned and sung today.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781557091222
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing SC
Publication date: 05/01/1989
Series: Applewood Books
Pages: 52
Product dimensions: 5.00(w) x 8.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Nathan Howard "Jack" Thorp (June 10, 1867 - June 4, 1940) was an American collector and writer of cowboy songs and cowboy poetry. Starting in 1889, he collected cowboy material while living in New Mexico. His small book Songs of the Cowboys was published there in 1908. It was the first such book ever published, containing the words to only 23 songs, including the now-classic "The Streets of Laredo" and "Little Joe the Wrangler". A greatly expanded second edition was published in 1921. Today, Thorp is credited with being the first person to take a serious interest in collecting and preserving the homespun ballads of the American West.

Thorp was the youngest of three sons of a New York City lawyer and real estate investor. As a child he summered at his brother's ranch in Nebraska, and at nineteen he moved there. Later he moved to New Mexico, where he worked as a cowboy and a civil engineer, operated cattle and sheep ranches, and served as New Mexico's state cattle inspector. He married in 1903, living in Palma (100 miles east of Albuquerque) and Santa Fe before moving closer to Albuquerque in 1935. He died at his home in Alameda, New Mexico, on June 4, 1940.
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