Yes - yes - 57. As others have said, I’d have picked the right march on Washington due to recent publicity, in my case, NPR.
You sent me googling because I vaguely remembered that “John Brown’s Body” had filked another song before being filked for “The Battlehymn of the Republic.” I was pleasantly pleased to find my memory vague but accurate. The tune was originally from the song “Say, Brothers”. Although looking at the lyrics, either they modified the tune somewhat to fit in the extra words in each line, or each of the words in the original had several notes assigned to it.
Yes to both. I was born on August 28, 1963, so the March on Washington and the “I Have a Dream Speech” have special meaning to me, and I have studied their history and collected relevant memorabilia since I was in high school. I also can mark major milestone birthdays by the amount of celebration and commemoration of the March. This year is going to be a big one.
Thanks for all the replies. I realize that there are other times that people marched on Washington, but I was stunned that my colleagues didn’t know the March on Washington (should have capitalized it in the OP), especialy this week and even after I gave them the hint that it happened 50 years ago this week.
The John Brown one came out of a conversation with a colleague, she told me that she had gone to Harper’s Ferry for the weekend, I made some reference to John Brown and she didn’t know what I was talking about. Harper’s Ferry isn’t a big place, I didn’t think you could get out of that town without absorbing something about John Brown just by osmosis. She must of thought that the town just had the creepiest mascot ever, a wild eyed bearded man.
Yes to both. 53 year old American southerner.
And I knew which image of John Brown was going to be linked upthread.
That was on the original Kansas album cover, if I recall correctly.
I did wonder specifically which march on Washington. I thought first of the burning of Washington during the War of 1812, but then thought maybe the OP was referring to the Martin Luther King, Jr. march.
I know a fair amount about both of these events, but it is probably because I am 59, and was born and raised in Maryland, about 80 miles from Harpers Ferry and 40 miles from DC.
Please dont kick me off the board but I am 45, female and have no idea about the first one, and the second one, first thing I thought of was the million man march, but then when I read other replies, I saw it was about the March on Washington from back in the 60s. I remember seeing it on Forrest Gump, that’s when Forrest saw Jenny in the water and they ran to each other, lol. In my defense, I always hated history in school. And geography. So I would definitely flunk out on any geography related questions as well.
I had the same series for the march on Washington but I’m Canadian so the order makes sense
I also knew John Brown and Harper’s Ferry but it took me a minute of thought to place it and I wouldn’t have from his name, Harper’s Ferry was the memory trigger for me.
John Brown was a southern abolitionist that led a failed slave revolt in Harper’s Ferry, WV. I remember that they made a federal armory / magazine either their target, or that’s where they fled to after they were driven from their main target. I want to say the armory was their target. I know a future Important Person in the Civil War was involved in the response to his raid… I want to say Lee but am uncertain about that.
I’m guessing you are referring to British troops marching on Washington during the War of 1812.
47 year old American female. Harper’s Ferry I didn’t remember - honestly - I was thinking it was where the gold rush started (Yes - I somehow confused Sutter’s Mill with Harper’s Ferry because I am an idiot but you guys know that) but the march on Washington I knew because they keep bringing it up on the news (the anniversary). I knew about it before that of course - I can’t imagine anyone today who WOULDN’T know about that. That was a huge part of history.
I had heard of Harper’s Ferry, but couldn’t place it, and when I heard “march on Washington,” I assumed it was the British sacking during the war of 1812. I really should learn some American history.
Note: I posted without reading any of the comments above. I’m a History major (European history) from Canada. 26.