Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
1871. Songwriter (s) Will S. Hays. " The Little Old Log Cabin in the Lane " is a popular song written by Will S. Hays in 1871 for the minstrel trade. Written in dialect, the song tells of an elderly man, presumably a slave or former slave, passing his later years in a broken-down old log cabin. The title is from a refrain: "de little old log ...
I hear it in the deep heart's core. " The Lake Isle of Innisfree " is a twelve-line poem comprising three quatrains, written by William Butler Yeats in 1888 and first published in the National Observer in 1890. It was reprinted in The Countess Kathleen and Various Legends and Lyrics in 1892 and as an illustrated Cuala Press Broadside in 1932.
Built in 1640, C. A. Nothnagle Log House, located in Swedesboro, New Jersey, is likely the oldest log cabin in the United States. A conjectural replica of the log cabin in which U.S. president Abraham Lincoln was born, now at the Abraham Lincoln Birthplace Mortonson–Van Leer Log Cabin in New Sweden Park in Swedesboro, New Jersey A replica log cabin at Valley Forge in Pennsylvania A log house ...
Brewster M. Higley (also spelled Highley) [2][3] of Smith County, Kansas, wrote the lyrics as the poem "My Western Home" in 1872 or 1873, [4][5][6][7][8] with at least one source indicating it was written as early as 1871. [1] On June 30, 1947, "Home on the Range" became the Kansas state song. [9] In 2010, members of the Western Writers of ...
The Evil Dead (1981) In Sam Raimi' s directorial debut, five college friends take a vacation in the woods, where they find an audio tape that releases demonic spirits once played. When four out of ...
Release. November 1, 2013. (2013-11-01) –. present. Barnwood Builders is an American documentary television series following a team of builders that remove logs and beams from old cabins and historic barns to use them when constructing modern houses. [1][2][3][4] Originally produced for the DIY Network, by season 15, the series had been taken ...
A former slave cabin near Eufaula, Barbour County, Alabama, still in use as a residence and photographed c. 1936 for the Slave Narratives project of the Works Progress Administration. On average, slave quarters were log cabins with dirt floors, clay chimneys, wood-shingle roofs, and one unglazed window.
Lead Me to that Rock; Leave Me Alone with the Blues; Let the Spirit Descend [1] Let's Turn Back the Years; The Little House We Built (Just o'er the Hill) (co-written with Don Helms) Little Paper Boy; The Log Train; Long Gone Lonesome Blues; Lord, Build Me a Cabin in Glory; Lord, I'm Coming Home; Lost on the River (with Audrey Williams)