Friday, December 13, 2013

Friday Night Steam



Something a little different at Friday Night Steam! 


Gandy Dancer Work Song Tradition



Railroad maintenance crews were nicknamed "gandy dancers" for  




 Gandy Dancers"Gandy dancers" was a nickname for railroad section gangs in the days before modern mechanized track upkeep. The men were called dancers for their synchronized movements when repairing track under the direction of a lead workman known as the "caller" or "call man." The name "gandy" supposedly arose from a belief that their hand tools once came from the Gandy tool company in Chicago (though no researcher has ever turned up such a company that made railroad tools). The name may also have derived from "gander" because the flat-footed steps of the workmen when lining track resembled the way that geese walk. There is, however, no consensus on the origin of the name.
Each group of railroad workers, known as section gangs, typically maintained 10 to 15 miles of track. The men refilled the ballast (gravel) between the railroad ties, replaced rotted crossties, and either turned or replaced worn rails, driving spikes to lock them to the crossties. Spike driving required no group coordination, but the heavy rails had to be carried by teams of men with large clamps called "rail dogs." A lead singer coordinated the effort with so-called "dogging" calls. A good half of a typical workday was spent on the constant chore of straightening out the track (known as lining), and it was from this activity that "gandy dancers" earned their name. When leveling the track, workmen jacked up the track at its low spots and pushed ballast under the raised ties with square-ended picks, often leaning shoulder-to-shoulder in pairs while the caller marked time with a four-beat "tamping" song.

A group of former gandy dancers re-enact their  






Gandy DancerIn the South in general and Alabama specifically, at least through the 1950s, the foreman of a section gang was invariably white and the members of the gang itself almost exclusively African American. The foreman typically positioned himself 50 yards or more from the section gang, squatted down, and examined the length of track for problems. He used visual signals to tell the caller where the track was out of alignment and when it was "lined" properly. At the time, rails typically came in 13-yard (12-meter) lengths. The section gang systematically aligned the rails at the joints and at specified points along its length in a well-defined order.
Section gangs were made up of as few as four men but might include as many as 30 men, depending on the workload. Each workman carried a lining bar, a straight pry bar with a sharp end. The thicker bottom end was square-shafted (to fit against the rail) and shaped to a chisel point (to dig down into the gravel underneath the rail); the lighter top end was rounded (for better gripping). When lining track, each man would face one of the rails and work the chisel end of his lining bar down at an angle into the ballast under it. Then all would take a step toward their rail and pull up and forward on their pry bars to lever the track—rails, crossties and all—over and through the ballast.

After the workers lifted the rails, another group  

Gandy DancersLining track was difficult, tedious work, and the timing or coordination of the pull was more important than the brute force put forth by any single man. It was the job of the caller to maintain this coordination. He simultaneously motivated and entertained the men and set the timing through work songs that derived distantly from sea chanteys and more recently from cotton-chopping songs, blues, and African-American church music. Typical songs featured a two-line, four-beat couplet to which members of the gang would tap their lining bars against the rails, as in this example:
       1           2               3           4                                       "O joint ahead and quarter back"
    1             2            3           4                                   "That's the way we line this track"
When the liners were tapping in perfect time, he would call for a hearty pull on the third beat of a four-beat refrain:
   1                2           3           4                                   "Come on, move it! Huhn! (pause)"
   1                       2           3           4                                   "Boys, can you move it! Uhmm! (pause)"
and so on until the foreman signaled that the track was properly aligned. A good caller could call all day and never repeat the same phrase twice. Veteran section gangs lining track, especially with an audience, often embellished their work with a one-handed flourish and with one foot stepping out and back on beats four, one, and two, between the two-armed pulls on the lining bars on beat three.
In a ceremony at the Smithsonian in 1996, John Henry Mealing (who had worked on the Western and then the Frisco lines) and Cornelius Wright (who had worked on U.S. Steel's 1,100 miles of track), two former callers of this kind of work song in central Alabama, received National Heritage Fellowship Awards as "Master Folk and Traditional Artists" for their demonstrations of this form of African-American folk art.


gandy - gandy dancer - labor - rail - railroad - railroad spikes - railroad tracks - spike - spikes - track - tracks - work - worker

From Appalachia History, "Gandy Dancers" by Dave Tabler (7 January 2008) -- Before railroad work was completely mechanized in the 1950s, railroad calls were an everyday part of the track worker’s ritual. Most of these gandy dancers—the label applied to railway line workers who maintained railroad tracks and kept the rails straight—were African Americans who adapted the work call to railroad work. The term is said to be from the dance-like movements of the spikedriver, plus the name of Chicago-based Gandy Manufacturing Company, who supplied tracklining tools.




 







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This is such an important part of our history that should be told. Without these men, our railroads would not have been built and maintained. So many traditional "work" songs are forgotten,  or hidden from today's generation. It's time to dust them off and listen to them once more....  CM


4 comments:

  1. Great post! I knew of Gandy dancers and think of them whenever I see Maintenance of Way equipment. (MOW)
    I have some pictures of the modern MOW equipment I will send when I can find them. The neatest was a huge machine that removes the gravel (ballast), separates the grit from the gravel and then puts the gravel back discarding the grit. All automatically. Talked to the operators once while they were on break one day a couple of years ago. They were working on the FEC mainline in Jensen Beach, not far from where we live.
    Terry
    Fla.

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  2. Glad you liked it - it was fun looking all the videos that are out there. Lots of old pictures too. Send your pics when you find them!

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  3. Contrary to what they insinuate, most Gandy dancers were probably NOT black, if you consider the nation as a whole. Obviously, in predominately black areas, they would be, but I've met former Gandy dancers that were white, who rarely ever worked with a black crew.

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    1. You're right, It was regional, Gorges. Lots of Irish, Italian, Polish and German immigrants worked on the railroads. The Chinese worked out West and the railroads contracted out many prisoners in chain gangs to do the the line work. It sure was a hard way to make a living!

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