Jump to content

America's Crusaders

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"America's Crusaders"
Song
LanguageEnglish
Written1918
Published1918
Songwriter(s)Charles Fonteyn Manning

"America's Crusaders" is a World War I song with words and music written by Charles Fonteyn Manney. It was copyrighted on August 16, 1918,[1] and published by Oliver Ditson in Boston in two forms: for four-part ensemble of mixed voices[2] and for four-part ensemble of male voices, with baritone soloist.[3]

History

[edit]

Manney was a well-known Boston composer and choir director who also worked as a music editor for Oliver Ditson. For its 1918 Fourth of July concert, the Boston Pops Orchestra asked Stephen Townsend to lead three sets of songs to be sung by a male chorus, and evidently Townsend evidently requested or commissioned Manney to produce a commemorative work.[4] The work is in a cultivated style, with words and rhythm evoking a heroic slow march and textures suitable for upper-class church anthems. As befits Manney's professional standing and experience, it is harmonically sophisticated, though not at all innovative.

Although copyrighted in August, “America’s Crusaders” was only made available in published form in November,[1] as the War neared its end. Hence, though written to support the troops (the lyric opens with "As we go to battle, Motherland, for thee"), it was marketed as a patriotic anthem for general use. Ditson made only a modest effort to promote it,[5] but nevertheless, over the next decade it received several performances by amateur ensembles ranging from church groups to civic organizations to high school ensembles.[6] In the mid-1920s it receded from view, but it was retained in Ditson's catalogue, and Manney renewed the copyright in 1946.[7] Its greatest impact, however, came three years later, when it was sung, in part, at the start and finish of the celebrated television documentary Crusade in Europe.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "America's Crusaders". World War I Sheet Music. Library of Congress. For mixed voices. Retrieved 2 January 2020.
  2. ^ "America's Crusaders". World War I Sheet Music from the James Francis Driscoll Collection of American Sheet Music. Newberry Library. For men's voices. Retrieved 2 January 2020.
  3. ^ "The Symphony Hall Pops". Boston Pops Orchestra Concert Programs, 1918, Season 33. Retrieved 2 January 2020.
  4. ^ "New Music Received". Musical America. December 28, 1918. p. 30.
  5. ^ See, for instance, "Patriotic Services by Presbyterians," Philadelphia Inquirer, November 30, 1918, p. 16; As You Were, 1917-1918. Camp Jackson, SC: Base Hospital. 1919. p. 65.; and School Report of the City of Portland, Maine. Portland, ME: Marks Printing House. 1923. p. 64.
  6. ^ Catalog of Copyright Entries. Part 3. Musical Compositions. Renewals. Washington, DC.: Government Printing Office. 1946. p. 7.