Song of the Day 2/12: Johnny Horton, “Young Abe Lincoln”
If you’re old enough, you might remember Feb. 12 as a holiday, Lincoln’s Birthday. At least it was in Delaware – it never was a federal holiday, though most Northern states observed it, despite it falling just 10 days before what was a federal holiday, Washington’s Birthday.
All that was swept away when Nixon declared in 1970 that we would have Presidents Day instead. Most states bundle the two together into a floating holiday on the third Monday in February, though Delaware nowadays doesn’t celebrate any president at all. I guess Nixon thought he’d look better if we forgot about Washington and Lincoln, and I wouldn’t be surprised if that’s why Trump wants to ditch the penny.
In 1960 country singer Johnny Horton, fresh off his success with “The Battle of New Orleans,” released a whole LP of history story-songs, “Johnny Horton Makes History.” It included this tune about Honest Abe.
Horton’s wasn’t the first song called “Young Abe Lincoln.” Just five years earlier crooner Don Cornell released a song of the same name by Tin Pan Alley songwriters. It made Billboard’s Hot 100 at No. 25, but fell off the chart entirely a week later. It still holds the distinction of the highest debut for a single that spent only one week on the chart.
Looks like the first video isn’t available here.
Sorry ’bout that. There’s no way to tell on this end. See if this one works.