B. A. Botkin (1901–1975)
Author of A Treasury of American Folklore
About the Author
Works by B. A. Botkin
A Treasury of New England Folklore: Stories, Ballads and Traditions of Yankee Folk (1947) 189 copies
A Treasury of Railroad Folklore: The Stories, Tall Tales, Traditions, Ballads and Songs of the American Railroad (1953) — Editor — 152 copies, 2 reviews
New York City Folklore: Legends, Tall Tales, Anecdotes, Stories, Sagas, Heroes and Characters, Customs, Traditions and Sayings (1976) 38 copies, 1 review
Sidewalks of America; folklore, legends, sagas, traditions, customs, songs, stories, and sayings of city folk (1954) 22 copies
The Illustrated Book of American Folklore: Stories, Legends, Tall Tales, Riddles, and Rhymes (1958) 5 copies
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Other names
- Botkin, Benjamin Albert
Botkin, Benjamin A.
Botkin, B. A. - Birthdate
- 1901-02-07
- Date of death
- 1975-07-30
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Harvard University (B.A., 1920)
Columbia University (M.A., 1921)
University of Nebraska (Ph.D., 1931) - Occupations
- folklorist
scholar
editor
compiler - Organizations
- Federal Writers' Project
- Relationships
- Gershwin, George (first cousin)
Gershwin, Ira (first cousin) - Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- East Boston, Massachusetts, USA
- Places of residence
- Boston, Massachusetts, USA
- Place of death
- Croton-on-Hudson, New York, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- Massachusetts, USA
Members
Reviews
This is an incredibly well researched and occasionally fascinating book that, I believe, may not be for me. I found some of the stories very interesting and some of them offer a revealing look at the feelings of the participants in the Civil War, but at the end of the day, they are very short stories, and it is a very long book. I think I've realized that, for me to enjoy a book of this length, I need it to be one continuous narrative, fiction or non-fiction. That being said, as something show more that someone dips into and out of, I can see this being an incredibly fascinating work. show less
A Treasury of railroad folklore : the stories, tall tales, traditions, ballads, and songs of the American railroad man by B. A. Botkin
A Treasury of Railroad Folklore is a large collection of short articles on all aspects of U.S. railroading from the 19th Century to the date of publication in 1947. The book is split into five parts: Iron Horses and Iron Men, Apprentice Years, Vanishing Types, Main Line and Sidetrack, and Blues, Ballads, and Work Songs. Each part has an introduction and then is subdivided into topic categories comprised of a number of short articles. The short articles run the gamut from strictly historical show more to strictly personal.
Iron Horses and Iron Men contains stories about railroad work and railroad heroes. Two of the more interesting stories concern Jesus Garcia, the hero of Nacozari, and the adventures of Harry Easton, the engineer of the Bostonian during the New England Hurricane of September 1938.
Apprentice Years is a collection of stories about people and happenings from the beginnings of railroads in the U.S. up through the 1940’s. There are the usual articles about the Andrews raid and Lincoln’s work as a lawyer for the Rock Island Railroad as well as articles about the first train dispatching/control by telegraph and how the Nickel Plate railroad got its name.
Vanishing Types is about people and “the other” railroads – boomers, bandits, hoboes, and cracker-barrel railroads. In addition to vanishing types the section describes vanishing practices as well such as pie-cards, train butchers, nailing a drag, “Pocatello Yardmasters”, and commuters’ lanterns.
Main Line and Sidetrack is all about working on the railroad and has sections about railroad work from the ordinary – the evolution of the track torpedo and the caboose - to the extraordinary - whistle artists ( engineers who could make their engines talk and sing via skillful use of the whistle cord).
The last part, Blues, Ballads, and Work Songs, is just that- a collection of these forms of artistic expression with a focus on the railroad.
The book also has an Appendix which is really just a collection of articles about things railroad that didn’t seem to fit into the first five categories – the battle of the track gauges, the coming of standard time, passenger train naming, etc. The book is well written. See "Common Knowledge" for an example of the writing style. (Text Length - 524 pages, Total Length - 530 pages, includes index.) show less
Iron Horses and Iron Men contains stories about railroad work and railroad heroes. Two of the more interesting stories concern Jesus Garcia, the hero of Nacozari, and the adventures of Harry Easton, the engineer of the Bostonian during the New England Hurricane of September 1938.
Apprentice Years is a collection of stories about people and happenings from the beginnings of railroads in the U.S. up through the 1940’s. There are the usual articles about the Andrews raid and Lincoln’s work as a lawyer for the Rock Island Railroad as well as articles about the first train dispatching/control by telegraph and how the Nickel Plate railroad got its name.
Vanishing Types is about people and “the other” railroads – boomers, bandits, hoboes, and cracker-barrel railroads. In addition to vanishing types the section describes vanishing practices as well such as pie-cards, train butchers, nailing a drag, “Pocatello Yardmasters”, and commuters’ lanterns.
Main Line and Sidetrack is all about working on the railroad and has sections about railroad work from the ordinary – the evolution of the track torpedo and the caboose - to the extraordinary - whistle artists ( engineers who could make their engines talk and sing via skillful use of the whistle cord).
The last part, Blues, Ballads, and Work Songs, is just that- a collection of these forms of artistic expression with a focus on the railroad.
The book also has an Appendix which is really just a collection of articles about things railroad that didn’t seem to fit into the first five categories – the battle of the track gauges, the coming of standard time, passenger train naming, etc. The book is well written. See "Common Knowledge" for an example of the writing style. (Text Length - 524 pages, Total Length - 530 pages, includes index.) show less
A classic collection well worth browsing through or reading cover to cover; Of historical as well as literary interest; Music, games, sidewalk chants incuded
A Treasury of Railroad Folklore: The Stories, Tall Tales, Traditions, Ballads and Songs of the American Railroad by B. A. Botkin
A unique book which lives up to its sub-title ("The Stories, Tall Tales, Traditions, Ballads and Songs of the American Railroad"). Great fun.
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Statistics
- Works
- 35
- Also by
- 4
- Members
- 2,333
- Popularity
- #10,993
- Rating
- 3.8
- Reviews
- 14
- ISBNs
- 44
- Languages
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