“Jim Crow”

A Student’s Guide to Essential Primary Sources
Table of Contents
“Jim Crow”
Overview
Document Text

  You don't have access to this content. Please try to log in with your institution. Sign In

Abstract

“Jim Crow,” or “Jump Jim Crow,” is a piece of popular music that originated in 1828 and was published as sheet music in 1832. The song-and-dance routine was a caricature of Blacks performed by a white actor, Thomas Dartmouth “Daddy” Rice, who painted his face with burnt cork, costumed himself as a plantation slave named Jim Crow, and won nationwide fame performing in theaters across America. Several sources recount that Rice was probably inspired by an elderly Black stableman working in one of the river towns where Rice was performing. The man—with a crooked leg and deformed shoulder, according to some accounts—was singing about “Jim Crow” and punctuating each stanza with a little jump.

Contents