John McLellan (songwriter)

John McLellan, who lived in the early 19th century, was a Tyneside poet and songwriter.

Cholera song

According to information published in 1840, McLellan wrote the song "Cobbler o' Morpeth", subtitled "Cholera Morbus".[1] "Cobbler" was a slang term used for the dread disease of cholera. There was a bad epidemic in 1831–1832 and further outbreaks in 1848–1849 and 1853. The last led to 1,533 deaths in Newcastle, despite the opening of emergency hospitals, closure of public institutions such as theatres, quarantining of ships, cleansing streets with fire-engine hoses, excluding bodies from places of worship, and requiring graves to be at least six foot deep.[2]

The song, without comment except the author's name, reappeared in 1850 and was sung to the tune of "Bow Wow".[3] The text is in Geordie dialect.

gollark: They do have a memory. It just isn't very good.
gollark: I have a thing to suspend tabs so they don't use RAM/CPU, so theoretically I can go to hyperscale™ quantities of tabs.
gollark: As of now, I have 755 tabs, which is down from 840 last week.
gollark: If anyone continues to be curious, the graphs are mostly at https://stats.osmarks.net/d/rYdddlPWk/general?orgId=1&refresh=1m (should work unauthenticated), there are guides on the arch wiki and such if you want to set this up on a server, and https://github.com/osmarks/autobotrobot/commit/4e1dc6b337110c20e2d194ee5c4517eea0abaea2 contains the integration code.
gollark: Also active users/channels on my """IRC network""".

See also

Geordie dialect words
The Tyne Songster (W & T Fordyce, 1840)
W & T Fordyce (publishers)
France's Songs of the Bards of the Tyne - 1850

References

  1. The Tyne Songster published by Fordyce, Newcastle upon Tyne, 1840, p. 73.
  2. "Farne archives – The Cobbler of Morpeth". Archived from the original on 21 July 2012. Retrieved 8 May 2012.
  3. Songs of the Bards of the Tyne, published by P. France & Co., Newcastle upon Tyne, 1850, p. 117.



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