Title: Negro Spirituals
1Negro Spirituals
Whitney Walker Courtny Highley Candace
Coble Taylor Madsen Sarah Mirahmadi
2- Negro spirituals are folk songs that originated
among enslaved Africans in America
3- Spirituals were inspired by the religious hymns
of the white revivalists and also shaped memories
from traditional African memories
4- some songs were used to translate messages that
their masters were unable to understand
- Abolitionist a person who demanded immediate
emancipation of slaves - Drinking Gourd Big Dipper and the North Star
- Heaven or Promised land Canada
5- Most spirituals included references to people,
places, or events in the bible. - The black slaves expressed their hope that they
would someday escape to their own promise land
just as the Israelites had escaped to ancient
Israel
6- 1871 the Jubilee Singers from Fisk University,
traveled throughout the United States and to
England singing spirituals to raise money for
their school
- In 1867 a collection of black music called Slave
Song of the United States was published.
7Swing Low, Sweet Chariot
8ChorusSwing low, sweet chariot,Comin' for to
carry me homeSwing low, sweet chariot,Comin'
for to carry me home. I looked over Jordan,And
WHAT did I see,Comin' for to carry me home,A
band of angels comin' after me,Comin' for to
carry me home. Repeat chorus If you get there
before I do,Comin' for to carry me home,Tell
all my friends I'm comin' too,Comin' for to
carry me home.
9(No Transcript)
10- Riding a chariot or train was the way used by
fugitives running to a free country
- Swing low sweet chariot directly refers to the
Underground Railroad
11- Ripley was one of the stations of the underground
railroad. This town was atop a hill, by Ohio
River, Which is not easy to cross. To reach this
place, fugitives had to wait for help coming from
the hill. The words of these spirituals say, I
looked over Jordan and what did I see/ Coming for
to carry me home/ A band of Angels coming after
me.
12(No Transcript)
13Go Down, Moses
14- Go down, Moses was a popular slave song and was
usually sang during their times of rest and
prayer - It is also said to have been sung by
abolitionists to signal escape or rebellion.
15- The lyrics use biblical imagery expressing the
desire for a release from bondage - The opening lines tell Moses to go deep into
Egypt, the land of the oppressors - In the song Egypt symbolizes the Slave States
16- Harriet Tubman signifies Moses because she went
down South 19 times and led more than 300 black
slaves to freedom