Dorsey Dixon and his brother Howard Dixon were 2 amongst 7 total siblings, all poor mill workers by the time they reached their teen years in North & South Carolina. Dorsey Dixon did not start writing his own rural folk songs until age 32, but songs like "Weaver's Life", "Factory Girl", "Babies in the Mill", "The School House Fire" and "Spinning Room Blues" were infused with struggles of the poor workers in the southern textile mills, and were later rediscovered by labor & song historians.
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Down With The Old Canoe
The School House Fire
Weaver's Life
Intoxicated Rat
Weave Room Blues
Rambling Gambler
When Gabriel Blows His Trumpet For Me
Sales Tax On The Women
Beyond Black Smoke
School House Fire
The Old Home Brew
Easter Day
Beautiful Stars
Spinning Room Blues
Fisherman's Luck
Dark Eyes
How Can A Broke Man Be Happy
The Girl I Left In Danville
My Girl In Sunny Tennessee
A Wonderful Day
Little Bessie
Are You Sure?
I Didn't Hear Anybody Pray
Call Me Pal Of Mine
What Can I Give In Exchange
I Won't Accept Anything For My Soul
Darling Do You Miss Me
Didn't Hear Nobody Pray
Two Little Boys
Two Little Rosebuds
The Intoxicated Rat
Always Waiting For You
At Twilight Old Pal Of Yesterday
The Lonely Prisoner
Not Turning Back
Answer To Maple On The Hill
Greenback Dollar
She Tickles Me
White Flower For You
That Old Vacant Chair
Down With the Olde Canoe
After The Ball
Bonnie Blue Eyes
Bless His Promise
I Will Meet My Precious Mother
Never To Be Sweethearts Again
Answer To Maple On The Hill - Part 4
Darling Do You Miss Me?
Ocean Of Life
The Old Vacant Chair
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