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Adinkrahene

Combahee River Raid

“Mary Had a Baby” commemorates Harriet Tubman and the United States Colored Troops who destroyed major confederate supplies and rescued nearly 800 people from slavery.

Background of the Combahee River Raid

Vienna Carroll
Sharing the story

Tubman partnered with the Second South Carolina Volunteers, a regiment of the United States Colored Troops to plan and execute this raid to destroy wealthy confederate rice plantations and rescue enslaved people.

First, she forged a relationship with the local enslaved community among whom were the folks who had placed torpedoes in the river to blow up Union boats. They gave her the torpedo locations. She also spread the word throughout the community that folks should be ready to escape to freedom when the raid took place.

On the night of June 1st, 1863, and into the 2nd, Tubman and around 300 men including the Second South Carolina Volunteers and a Rhode Island Regiment set off on three ships: the John Adams, the Sentinel, and Harriet A. Weed. When the Sentinel ran aground troops from that ship transferred to the other two boats.

They proceeded upriver to the plantations where they successfully set fire to and destroyed the houses, mills, and outbuildings; and took or torched the stores of commodity rice and cotton, as well as supplies of potatoes, corn, and livestock

Harriet Tubman rescued to freedom nearly 800 people. 

They then went on to rescue to freedom nearly 800 people. Folks didn’t at first believe, but when the ships actually turned up, they were soon on the verge of being sunk, so vigorous was the response. Ms. Tubman brought order, calming folks with a song. She said about that day:

“I nebber see such a sight. We laughed, an’ laughed, an’ laughed. Here you’d see a woman wid a pail on her head, rice a smokin’ in it jus’ as she’d taken it from de fire, young one hangin’ on behind, one han’ roun’ her forehead to hold on, t’other han’ diggin’ into de rice-pot, eatin’ wid all its might; hold of her dress two or three more; down her back a bag with a pig in it. One woman brought two pigs, a white one an’ a black one; we took ’em all on board; named de white pig Beauregard, and the black pig Jeff Davis. Sometimes de women would come wid twins hangin’ roun’ der necks; ‘pears like I never see so many twins in my life; bags on der shoulders, baskets on der heads, and young ones taggin’ behin’, all loaded; pigs squealin’, chickens screamin’, young ones squallin’.”

Harriet Tubman

Mary Had A Baby

Storyteller Corinthia starts her tale with the 1863 Combahee River Raid. In her story, the song her family and neighbors waited for was the now-classic Spiritual “Mary Had a Baby.” When they heard it they knew “Moses” had really come.

Corinthia follows the trail and trials of her family and community to the Union camps, transitioning to freedom, learning to read and write, getting paid to work, and being granted the right to vote (men). She celebrates the 16 Black congressmen of the Reconstruction era and highlights their accomplishments – roads, public schools, 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments, and Civil Rights bills.

First Black Members of the U.S. Congress

Setbacks also are duly noted: the withdrawal of the Union Army troops from the South, the re-establishment of the Southern landowner class, and the Black Codes which practically re-established slavery in all areas of life: land ownership, voting, work and personal liberties.

Spirituals and work songs are interwoven throughout. We had great fun with our audiences singing along at Hofstra University, Gowanus Dredgers, Bayou Theatre, and The Essex and Portsmouth Sea Music Festivals.

Vienna Carroll
New York State Council on the Arts: State of Opportunity

“Mary Had a Baby” is made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature.  

See Us Perform at The Metropolitan Museum of Art!

Join Vienna Carroll & The Folk for an evening of Seneca Village-era Afro-Future Roots music.

February 24 & 25, 2023,
6 – 8:30 pm (come early, there will be lines),
Petrie Court Cafe, Metropolitan Museum of Art,
1000 5th Ave, New York, NY 10028.

With proof of a New York State residency (NY driver’s license/ID card; IDNYC; current bill or statement with a NY address, NY student ID, NY library card) any sized donation. Read more.

Come on out and sing Afro-Future Roots music with us: the classic Spirituals and work songs you know and love, through a modern lens. Celebrate your pride at Black History Month.

Vienna Carroll and The Folk at the Met!
Vienna Carroll and The Folk
Vienna Carroll and The Folks

HARLEM FIELD RECORDINGS

Featuring Vienna Carroll, Vocals; Keith Johnston, Guitar & Backing Vocals; Newman Taylor Baker/Washboard XT – Washboard; and Stanley Banks, Bass. Guests: Melanie Dyer, Henrique Prince, Nioka Workman.

Listen and Purchase CD at https://viennacarrollmusic.com/music

Black Sailors

 – ANTEBELLUM FREEDOM AGENTS AND SEA SHANTEY SINGERS

In the 1800’s Black men, both free and enslaved, comprised 22% of those who worked on the water, the primary way to move goods at that time. They traveled from northern to southern ports, throughout the Caribbean, to Europe, Australasia and Japan and returned to their communities with stories of life outside the slaveocracy of the U.S.

Sailors wrote the first six autobiographies of Black Americans. Active agents on the Underground Railroad, their freedom messages were so stirring that after the rebellion led by sailor, Denmark Vesey, South Carolina enacted the 1822 Quarantine Laws/Negro Seaman Acts, jailing these men when they came to port.

Phyrrus Concer, a Black Long Island Whaler at the opening of Japan 1845

The grave marker for Edmund Moody, a US Black sailor who died in Mangonui, North Island, New Zealand, 1864

Dalyce Newby- Black Sailor in the Civil War

Dalyce Newby – Black Sailor in the Civil War

My play Shallow Brown: Thessalonia and the Free Sailor tells of the love, family, suffering and ultimately triumph of these brave yet unsung freedom fighters and how they helped us free ourselves.

Please enjoy a bibliography about our Black sailor heroes I put together for you, for more information.

NEW JAZZ CHRISTMAS EP! – Classic tunes with a fresh new sound.

Featuring Vienna Carroll, Vocals; Keith Johnston, Guitar & Backing Vocals; Dan Furman, Piano; and Michael O’Brien, Bass. This Jazz Christmas EP includes four songs: Santa Baby, Mary Had a Baby, Christmas Time is Here, and Alone in the World. Hear excerpts below:

Mary Had a Baby – dedicated to Harriet Tubman and US Colored Troops
Santa Baby full song + video
Mary Had a Baby song, first 30 seconds
Christmas Time Is Here song, first 30 seconds
Alone in the World song, first 30 seconds
Mary Had a Baby new Christmas album

Christmas album is only $12.97 and includes the four tracks above, and comes in CD format. CD only ships to U.S. Also, tracks for sale separately only $3.50. Full length digital songs available on Spotify Premium. Share the Christmas spirit, buy a CD for Christmas and music lovers.

Listen and Purchase CD at https://viennacarrollmusic.com/music

CD Release Party a Smash Success!

We all had a fantastic time at the Album Release Party on Friday, March 6, 2020, at the American Folk Art Museum. Vienna Carroll and The Folk played songs from their new album, Harlem Field Recordings, plus older crowd folk favorites. Enjoy the photos and videos!

"Harlem Field Recordings" by Vienna Carroll and The Folk
"Harlem Field Recordings" Album
Harlem Field Recordings
American Folk Art Museum
Photos by award-winning photographer Jane Feldman

Listen and Purchase Harlem Field Recordings

at viennacarrollmusic.com/music/

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ShallowBrown.com - Black Sailors and the Underground Railroad
SinginWidASword - A family escapes slavery together
UndergroundRailroadFestival.org - 1st NYC UGRR Festival and Juneteenth Celebration

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Say It Loud: I’m Black & I’m Proud!

Quakers helped. Mostly, Black people Freed Ourselves through the "Slave Grapevine." Watch the story of African Queens kidnapped, enslaved and resisting. Plus, U.S. Colored Troops and the Slave Grapevine in the Black freedom struggle in the U.S.

Read a brief history of slavery and African rebellions in America freeing ourselves.

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