Stephen Foster wrote more than two hundred songs
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: I'm Shirley Griffith. 
STEVE EMBER: And I'm Steve Ember with the VOA Special English program  People in America. Today, we tell about Stephen Foster, America's first  popular professional songwriter.
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SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: You may have heard the old traditional American songs  "Oh! Susanna," "Camptown Races" and "My Old Kentucky Home. " But, do you  know who wrote them? Stephen Foster. He wrote those and more than two  hundred other songs during the eighteen forties and eighteen fifties.
His best songs have become part of America's cultural history. They have  become American folk songs. Many people in America learned to sing  these songs when they were children. Most Americans can sing these songs  today.
STEVE EMBER: Stephen Collins Foster was born on July fourth, eighteen  twenty-six in what is now part of the city of Pittsburgh, in the  northeastern state of Pennsylvania. He was the ninth child of William  and Eliza Foster. He did not have much musical training. But he had a  great natural ability for music. He taught himself to play several  musical instruments. He could play any music just by listening to it.
Stephen Foster began writing songs when he was fourteen. In eighteen  forty-seven, he wrote his first successful song, "Oh! Susanna. "
Ken Emerson wrote a book about Stephen Foster. It is called “Doo-dah!  Stephen Foster and the Rise of American Popular Culture. ” Mister  Emerson says "Oh! Susanna" was the first internationally popular song  written by an American that everyone can still recognize and sing today.
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SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: Stephen Foster married Jane McDowell in eighteen  fifty. He wrote many new songs. Some of them were about love. One of the  best known is "Jeanie With the Light Brown Hair. " He wrote it for his  wife when they were separated.
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STEVE EMBER: Stephen Foster wrote almost thirty songs for minstrel  shows. Minstrel shows became popular in the United States in the  eighteen forties. White entertainers blackened their faces and performed  as if they were black entertainers. Minstrel shows included music,  dance and comedy. The shows were performed in almost every major  American city, especially in the Northeast. One of Foster's songs  written for minstrel shows is "Camptown Races." Today, it is a popular  song for children.
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SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: Minstrel songs described the culture of black American  slaves in the southern states. Yet Foster did not really know anything  about this subject. He lived in Pittsburgh for most of his life. He  visited the South only once.
However, some experts say Foster's minstrel songs showed he did  understand how black people in the South lived before the Civil War. The  people in Foster's songs love their families and work hard. Now,  however, some of his songs are judged insulting to African-Americans.  So, music publishers have changed some of the words. And a few of his  songs are no longer sung.
STEVE EMBER: In eighteen fifty, Foster made an agreement with the leader  of a successful minstrel group, E. P. Christy. The agreement meant that  Christy's Minstrels had the right to perform every new song Foster  wrote. Foster also permitted Christy to name himself as the writer of  the song "Old Folks at Home. " This became one of most successful songs  written by Stephen Foster. It became the official song of the state of  Florida in nineteen thirty-five. It also is known as "Way Down upon the  Swanee River."
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SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: Stephen Foster wrote other songs about home and  memories of times past. In his book, Ken Emerson says Foster wrote songs  about home in part because he almost never lived in one home for long.  His father lost all his money when Stephen was a boy. So Stephen was  forced to live with many different family members. Although Foster lived  in the North, some of his songs suggest a desire to be back home in the  American South.
STEVE EMBER: "My Old Kentucky Home" is an example. Mister Emerson says  Foster wrote the song in honor of Harriet Beecher Stowe's anti-slavery  book, "Uncle Tom's Cabin." "My Old Kentucky Home" expresses great  sympathy for enslaved African-Americans. The black anti-slavery activist  Frederick Douglass praised the song. It later became the official song  of the state of Kentucky.
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SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: Stephen Foster was America's first full-time  professional songwriter. He was a good songwriter. But he was a poor  businessman. He sold many of his most famous songs for very little  money. He was not able to support his wife and daughter.
In eighteen sixty, he moved to New York City. His songs were not as  popular as they had been. His marriage had ended. He had no money. For  most of his life, he drank large amounts of alcohol. He died on January  thirteenth, eighteen sixty-four. He was only thirty-seven years old.
STEVE EMBER: Stephen Foster was honored in several ways after his death.  He was the first musician to be nominated to the Hall of Fame for great  Americans. And he was the first American composer whose complete works  were published together. Each year, on the anniversary of his death,  people in Pittsburgh gather to remember Stephen Foster. They go to the  church he attended as a child. They attend a show that honors him. Then  they visit his burial place.
The end of Stephen Foster's life was sad. But his songs have brought  happiness to many people. One of his last songs was one of the most  beautiful. It is called "Beautiful Dreamer."
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SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: This Special English program was written by Shelley  Gollust. It was produced by Lawan Davis. I'm Shirley Griffith.
STEVE EMBER: And I'm Steve Ember. Join us again next week for another People in America program on the Voice of America.
