Translate

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Some History Of Slave Patrols In The United States (Pre- Civil War And After The Civil War)

Edited by Azizi Powell

This is Part II of a two part pancocojams series about the pre-American Civil War banjo tune and folk song that is known as "The Pateroller Song".This tune/song is also known as "Pateroller", "Run Ni-ger* Run", "Run Jimmy Run" and similar titles.

This post presents some historical information about slave patrols in the United States south pre-Civil War and after the Civil War. In addition to two other online sources, this post includes an excerpt from Thom Hartmann about slave patrols and the concept in the United States about a "well regulated militia".   

The Addendum to that post presents two comments that I wrote in 2007 on a Mudcat folk music discussion thread about the "The Pateroller Song".

Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2026/02/the-pateroller-song-and-run-ni-ger-run.html for Part I of this two part pancocojams series. That post presents a YouTube sound file of "The Pateroller Song" along with brief information about the banjo player Hobet Smith who recoded that tune. This post also presents some comments about and lyric examples of  "The Pateroller Song". 

The content of this post is presented for historical and socio-cultural purposes.

All copyrights remain with their owners.

Thanks to all those who are quoted in this post. 

****
PANCOCOJAMS EDITOR'S NOTE
I'm an African American who despises the referent that is sometimes referred to now as "the n word". Because I despise that word, I don't use it and I always use an amended spelling for it  in any writing that I do, including when I'm quoting other people. 

I'm publishing this series for 
historical, folkloric, socio-cultural, and educational purposes and I definitely don't promote singing "The Pateroller Song" (also known as "Run Ni-ger" Run") for entertainment purposes.    

****
SOME HISTORICAL INFORMATION ABOUT THE SLAVE PATROLS IN THE UNITED STATES 
Online Source #1
This write-up is the result of my February 4, 2026 question on Google search regarding the history of slave patrols in the United States. 

"AI Overview 

Slave patrols in the Antebellum South were armed, organized groups of white citizens who monitored, captured, and disciplined enslaved people, often using brutal violence. Operating as a "transition" type of policing, they enforced slave codes, managed runaway attempts, and were considered a civic duty or hired for pay. Originating in South Carolina (1704), they became common across the South.

Key Details About Slave Patrols:

Purpose: They were designed to prevent slave uprisings, manage the movement of enslaved people via pass systems, and capture those attempting to escape.

Organization: Patrols were usually authorized by local governments and often consisted of 3–5 men, sometimes including slave owners or their agents.

Methods: Patrollers were frequently mounted and armed, utilizing whips and guns to enforce their authority, often acting as a form of racial control.

Legacy: Historians have linked the brutal practices of slave patrols to post-Civil War vigilantism and the, according to Harvard University Press, rise of the Ku Klux Klan.

Terminology: Also referred to as "patterrollers," "pattyrollers," or "paddy rollers," these groups were a staple of the social control mechanism in slave-holding states. 

****
Online Source #2
From 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slave_patrol [retrieved February 4, 2026
".Slave patrols—also known as patrollers, patterrollers, pattyrollers, or paddy rollers[1]—were organized groups of armed men who monitored and disciplined enslaved people in slave states in the U.S. during the Antebellum South. The slave patrols' function was to police slaves, especially those who escaped or were viewed as defiant. They also formed river patrols to prevent escape by boat.

Slave patrols were first established in South Carolina in 1704 and the idea spread throughout the thirteen colonies before the abolition of slavery following the Civil War.

Formation of Slave Patrols

Slave patrols first began in South Carolina in 1704 and spread throughout the thirteen colonies, lasting well beyond the American Revolution. As colonists enslaved more Africans and the population of enslaved people in South Carolina grew, especially with the invention of the cotton gin, so did the fear of slave uprisings. They developed slave patrols when other means of slave control failed to quell enslaved people's resistance. Their biggest concern was how to keep enslaved people on the plantations being held against their will, since that is where enslaved populations were highest. Initially, slave owners offered incentives to the non slave owning whites, such as tobacco and money, to urge them to be more vigilant in the capture of runaway slaves. When this approach failed, slave patrols were formally established.[2] Legislators introduced laws that enlisted white people in the regulation of enslaved people's activities and movement. Black people were subjected to questioning, searches, and other harassment. Slaves who were encountered without passes from their white "master" were expected to be returned to their owners, as stated in the slave code. If caught by patrols and returned to their masters, punishments included whippings and other physical violence, and the threat of being placed on the auction block and sold away from their families, an option for masters who no longer wanted to deal with "non-compliant" slaves.[3]

State militias as patrollers

Slave owners feared gatherings held by enslaved people would allow them to trade or steal goods, and had the potential for organizing a revolt or rebellion. South Carolina and Virginia selected patrols from state militias. State militia groups were also organized from among the cadets of the Southern military academies, of The Citadel and the Virginia Military Institute, which were founded to provide a military command structure and discipline within the slave patrols and to detect, encounter, and crush any organized slave meetings that might lead to revolt or rebellion.[4]

Slave codes and fugitive slave laws

[...]

The use and physical formation of slave patrols came to an end in 1865 when the Civil War ended. This end, however, is linked to post-Civil War groups such as the Ku Klux Klan, which continued to terrorize and threaten the black community.[6] In South Carolina, colonists began to write laws that constricted slaves long before slave patrols were alive and well. Laws implemented set in motion curfews for slaves, strengthening their militia, preventing slaves from bartering goods, and establishing the Charleston town watch....

[...]

Patrollers' duties

Patrols enforced what were called slave codes, laws which controlled almost every aspect of the lives of enslaved people. Slave patrols were explicit in their design to empower the entire white population, not just with police power but with the duty to police the comings and goings and movements of Black people.-—"American Police", NPR.[7]

Slave patrollers had their own characteristics, duties, and benefits, apart from slave owners and overseers. Patrollers were often equipped with guns and whips and would exert force in order to bring slaves back to their owners.

At times, black people developed many methods of challenging slave patrolling, occasionally fighting back violently. The American Civil War developed more opportunities for resistance against slave patrols and made it easier for enslaved people to escape. Slave patrol duties started as breaking up slave meetings.

Slave meetings included religious ones. Laws were passed, particularly around the 1820s and 1830s, that made religious gatherings of slaves and free blacks "unlawful assemblies." For example, Virginia passed a law in 1819 that banned any nighttime meetings of free blacks and slaves. South Carolina's law, by 1840, banned meetings at night for "mental instruction or religious worship," whether whites were present or not. In 1831, Mississippi made it unlawful for free blacks or slaves to "preach the gospel."[8]

These slave meetings occurred on holidays, in which they would plan revolts and uprisings. Eventually, slave patrols expanded to be year-round, not just on holidays. Slowly, new duties and rights of patrollers became permitted, including: "apprehending runaways, monitoring the rigid pass requirements for Blacks traversing the countryside, breaking up large gatherings and assemblies of blacks, visiting and searching slave quarters randomly, inflicting impromptu punishments, and as occasion arose, suppressing insurrections."[6]

Slave patrols consisted mostly of white citizens. Most people in slave patrols came from working and middle-class conditions[citation needed]. In some southern states, the militia and army served as slave patrols. In other southern states, slave patrols came about from colonial or state government legislation. Slave patrols typically rode on horseback in groups of four or five, sometimes even in family groups. They often worked sun-up to sun-down and varied their times and locations of patrol, to lower the chances of slaves escaping. They used no special equipment. Their chief tools, instead, were whips and intimidation.[citation needed].

Some states required every white man to arrest and chastise any slave found away from his home without proper authorization. In colonial South Carolina, failure to do so incurred a fine of forty shillings. Recaptured slaves were returned to their masters. In some instances, white men encouraged slaves to escape in order to collect rewards for catching them.[citation needed] In some areas, killing a slave was not considered a crime by the courts or community.[citation needed]

Slave patrollers were compensated in several ways, including exemption from public, county, and parish taxes and fees during their terms of service. In addition, some patrollers were paid additional sums with surplus money.

Also, regardless of the power patrollers held, they had limitations. For example, although whippings and beatings were permitted, a deterrent also existed. This was that, if whipped or beaten too severely, the slave was then of no use to their masters as laborers the next day. As a consequence, overly-brutal patrollers could expect retaliation from slave owners.[2]"

****
AN EXCERPT ABOUT SLAVE PATROLS AND "A WELL REGULATED MILITIA" FROM A THOM HARTMANN VLOG 
From https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ljB8im9TdHU "Trump BETRAYS MAGA In BRUTAL Reversal", "Really American And Thom Hartman Show, Feb. 3, 2026

[This excerpt is from that video's auto-generated transcript from 2:33- to 4:04] 

..."The Second Amendment does not say what modern gun culture claims it says. It does not describe an unlimited individual right to own weapons. It does not authorize citizens to arm themselves against their own government. And there's no evidence, none, that the founders intended that interpretation. I wrote a whole book about this, "The Hidden History Of Guns" and the second amendment. What the second amendment actually refers to is well- regulated militias.

And that phrase mattered a lot in the late 18th century. In the north, militias were about local defense in a young nation with no standing army. But in the south, militias served a very different and very dark purpose. They enforced slavery. They hunted escaped human beings. They intimidated abolitionists. They were quite literally slave patrols.

This is not speculation. This is documented history. And it's one of the primary reasons southern states insisted on the Second Amendment in the first place. to preserve state controlled armed forces capable of maintaining racial and economic order. The idea was
that the second amendment was written so individuals could overthrow a tyrannical government. That's a much later invention. It doesn't appear in the federalist papers. It doesn't appear in constitutional debates and it was not recognized by courts for most of American history. That narrative was constructed in the 20th century, promoted by the gun lobby and the huge gun manufacturers and embraced by politicians who benefit from fear, grievance and division.”…

****
ADDENDUM - MY COMMENTS FROM A 2007 MUDCAT FOLK MUSIC DISCUSSION THREAD ON "THE PATEROLLER SONG" (ALSO KNOWN AS "RUN NI-GER RUN") 

Pancocojams Editor's Note February 4, 2026
I wrote these two comments in 2007 early on in the period of seven years when I was a very active member of Mudcat, the online international folk music forum. These comments refers to the title of that discussion thread and refers to all of the posts [comments] in that discussion thread that use the fully spelled out "n word". 

In my comments I also referred to the original poster in that discussion thread, Sule Greg Wilson. Readers of that post- and this pancocojams post-may be interested in knowing that Sule Greg Wilson is an African American man who used to sometimes perform banjo and old time percussive instruments with the well known music group The Carolina Chocolate Drops. 

In my 2007 comment I mentioned that I had no other contact with Sule since we communicated with each other after "meeting" as a result of his posting that one time on that Mudcat discussion thread. To update that comment, Sule and I have been in sporadic online contact since 2007, but we've never met in person.

https://mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=29237

1. Origins: Run, Ni-ger, Run
Subject: Lyrics: Run, Ni-ger; Run
From: GUEST,Sule Greg Wilson
Date: 03 Jan 01 - 10:40 PM

"Hey; I picked out the melody on my 'jo from a book. When I asked John Jackson about the words...he just laughed; wouldn't repeat 'em. Can anybody help? Answer @ suleness@aol.com

Originally, After the Nat Turner War, the song was by blacks for blacks, signaling that "pattyroller'll get you" (an alternate name, I think). The song was taken up by Euro minstrels, and made derogatory. Thanks!"

 Click for related song
-snip-
This note were added by a Mudcat moderator as a hyperlink to this Mudcat post that was begun in 2001: https://mudcat.org/thread.CFM?threadID=16308 Lyr Add: Run, Jimmie, Run

Read the four comments from this Mudcat post in Part I of this pancocojams series.
-snip-
*This word is fully spelled out in that title and in most of the comments in that discussion thread.
-snip-
As of February 4, 2026 at 8:15 AM that "Run Ni-ger* Run" Mudcat thread has a total of 80 comments with the last comment dated 2012. This discussion thread is still open.

The first comment in that discussion thread that was published after Sule Greg Wilson's comment was written by Abby Sale, the same member of Mudcat who published the first comment on the other Mudcat thread about that song that is showcased in Part I of this pancocojams series. Here's that comment: :

Subject: RE: Lyrics: Run, Ni-ger; Run
From: Abby Sale

Date: 03 Jan 01 - 11:53 PM

"Good tune & interesting song. Many titles - "Run, Ni-ger Run," "Run, Jimmie, Run," "The Pateroller Song," "Fire on the Mountain" (esp for the tune), "Run, Slave, Run." Refers to escaping the patrols after Nat Turner's Revolt of 1832. See Lomax Amer. Ballads & F S, p228. Per Rinzler, also as "Pateroller Song." Randolph published references back to 1852. Per Lomax: from 1832 "Negroes were put under special restriction to home quarters and patrolmen appointed to keep them in."

"Run, Jimmie, Run" and also "Fire on the Mountain" are on the CD of Original Folkways Recordings of Doc Watson & Clarence Ashley, Smith/Folkways & also see minstrel show skit http://memory.loc.gov "America Singing: Nineteenth-Century Song Sheets."

****
Here are my two comments from that discussion thread:

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Run, Ni-ger, Run
From: Azizi
Date: 28 Apr 07 - 11:56 AM

"I admit to flinching when I saw this thread title. Upon opening this thread, the first thing that I noted was the thread starter's name.

Fwiw, Sule Greg Wilson and I grew up in the same city. Though I don't believe that I have ever met him, in 2006 Sule contacted me through my website and we exchanged emails. In one of those emails, I invited him to visit & join Mudcat. It may mean nothing at all, but after that email, I never heard from Sule again.

It's possible that Sule still reads and posts to this forum. As a result of a private message that I received, I know there is at least one other African American besides myself who post on Mudcat. That person wrote me that he or she chooses not to identify himself or herself by race. Maybe that person is Sule. Maybe not. I find it interesting that when he started this thread, Sule didn't mention his race. Also, I consider it regrettable that Sule didn't continue to respond to subsequent posts in this thread that addressed concern about the thread's title.

I believe in "different strokes for different folks", but I very much wish that other African Americans, and other Black people, and any other people of color would post on Mudcat and would consider it appropriate & worhwhile to identify themselves by race/ethnicity on threads about race as the perspectives and opinions of African Americans, Black people, people of color may be of particular interest when discussions of race & ethnicity are held.

Though there is no need for me to do so for those who know me here, for those who don't, I'll reiterate my deep seated dislike of the referent "n****r", regardless of who writes and says it. I personally refuse to say it or to spell it out.

That said, I would have been much more disconcerted if this thread just contained variant examples of that song & historical source material data about that song-as interesting reading as I found them-if there had been no discussion of whether & how historical songs with language that are considered offensive by contemporary and/or historical standards. Without that discussion, how would people reading this thread know that some people here consider that term to be-as Big Mick described it-ugly and hateful?

It's my hope that other people of color wouldn't be so turned off by that highly offensive "n word" that they would refuse to read this entire thread. I hope that other African Americans, other Black people, other people of color would not only read this thread-and other Mudcat threads on race and non-racial topics- but that they would join the discussion and start new threads on racial topics and on non-racial topics which would expand the definition of what some folks here consider to be folk music.

In my opinion, Mudcat could greatly benefit from that."

****
2. 
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Run, Ni-ger, Run
From: Azizi
Date: 28 Apr 07 - 12:06 PM

"I cut out a pertinent ending to a sentence in my previous comment. I'm posting it without attempting to make any changes to this admittedly convoluted sentence:

"That said, I would have been much more disconcerted if this thread just contained variant examples of that song & historical source material data about that song-as interesting reading as I found them-if there had been no discussion of whether & how historical songs with language that are considered offensive by contemporary and/or historical standards should be presented on Mudcat. "   

****
This concludes Part II of this pancocojams series.

Thanks for visiting pancocojams.

Visitor comments are welcome. 

"The Pateroller Song" (Also Known As "Run Ni-ger Run") Sound File, Comments & Lyrics For This Pre-American Civil War Banjo Tune & Song

Hobart Smith - Topic, Oct 26, 2018

Provided to YouTube by Universal Music Group

Pateroller · Hobart Smith

Portraits: Hobart Smith: Blue Ridge Legacy

℗ 2001 Rounder Records Manufactured and distributed by Concord Music Group

Released on: 2001-01-01

Auto-generated by YouTube.

****
Edited by Azizi Powell

This is Part I of a two part pancocojams series about the pre-American Civil War banjo tune and folk song that is known as "The Pateroller Song". This tune/song is also known as "Pateroller", "Run Ni-ger* Run", "Run Jimmy Run" and similar titles.

This post presents a YouTube sound file of "The Pateroller Song" along with brief information about the banjo player Hobart Smith who was one of the earliest people to record that tune. This post also presents some comments about and lyric examples of "The Pateroller Song". 

Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2026/02/some-history-of-slave-patrols-in-united.html  for Part II of this pancocojams series. That post presents some historical information about slave patrollers in the pre-Civil War United States south and after the Civil War, including an excerpt from a Feb. 2026 vlog hosted by Thom Hartmann. 

The Addendum to that post presents two comments that I wrote in 2007 on a Mudcat folk music discussion thread about the "The Pateroller Song".

The content of this post is presented for historical, folkloric, socio-cultural, and educational purposes.

All copyrights remain with their owners.

Thanks to the unknown composers of "The Pateroller Song". Thanks to Hobart Smith and other early musicians and singers who recorded this song. Thanks also to all the collectors of this song and all those who are quoted in this pancocojams post.  

****
PANCOCOJAMS EDITOR'S NOTE
I'm an African American who despises the referent that is sometimes referred to now as "the n word". Because I despise that word, I don't use it and I always use an amended spelling for it  in any writing that I do, including when I'm quoting other people.

I'm publishing this series for 
historical, folkloric, socio-cultural, and educational purposes and I definitely don't promote singing "The Pateroller Song" (also known as "Run Ni-ger" Run") for entertainment purposes.    

****
INFORMATION ABOUT HOBART SMITH, THE BANJO PLAYER WHO IS SHOWCASED IN THE VIDEO AT THE TOP OF THIS PANCOCOJAMS POST
From Ai Overview (This write-up is the result of my Feb. 3, 2026 question "What race was banjo player Hobart Smith?")

"Hobart Smith (1897–1965) was an American folk musician and virtuoso from Saltville, Virginia, identified as White and Anglo-American. While part of the white Appalachian tradition, he was heavily influenced by African-American musicians, learning techniques from them and incorporating their styles into his banjo, fiddle, and piano playing.

Key details about Hobart Smith:

Background: Born to Louvine and Alexander King Smith, he was part of a musical family with roots in England.

Musical Influence: Though white, he learned techniques from Black musicians, including Jim Spencer, and frequented segregated areas to hear Black music.

Legacy: He is considered a key figure in Southern folk music, recorded by Alan Lomax."
-snip-
Click https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hobart_Smith for more information about this old time American musician (born May 10, 1897—died January 11, 1965). 

****
INFORMATION ABOUT AND LYRICS FOR THE BANJO TUNE AND FOLK SONG "PATEROLLER" (ALSO KNOWN AS "RUN NI_GER RUN", "RUN JIMMY RUN" AND SIMILAR TITLES
Online Source #1
From https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Pateroller_Song_(The)
"PATEROLLER (SONG) [2], THE. AKA and see "Pateroller'll Catch You," "Run Boy Run," "Run Johnny Run," "Run Ni-ger* Run," "Run Smoke Run." American, Reel and Song Tune. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. The song is reported to be about pre-Civil War times when plantation owners hired men to patrol for runaway slaves or slaves out after curfew without a pass. The tune was in the repertiore of the John Lusk Band, an African-American string band from Cumberland Plateau region of Ky./Tenn under the title "Pateroller'll Catch You." Hobart Smith's version is similar to "Salt River (2)," "Salt Creek," and, a bit more distantly, to "Lonesome John." See also related tune "Rattlesnake Bit the Baby."
-snip-
*This word (that is now commonly referred to as "the n word") is fully spelled out in this song's title and lyrics.

****
Online Source #2
[Pancocojams Editor's Note: Iadded numbers for these comments for referencing purposes only. The "n word" is given in amended spelling in these quotes but is fully spelled out in these comments and lyrics.]
 
From https://mudcat.org/thread.CFM?threadID=16308 Lyr Add: Run, Jimmie, Run

1. Subject: Lyr Add: RUN, NI-GER, RUN
From: Abby Sale
Date: 18 Dec 99 - 08:38 PM

"So I believe I mentioned I got the CD of Original Folkways Recordings of Doc Watson & Clarence Ashley, from Smith/Folkways?  There's an exciting song on it called "Run, Jimmie, Run."  Like many of the well-known mountain tunes it's both familiar & hard to place.  The words are difficult to make out but seem to be one of those last remnants of a legit ballad.  So I had a lookaround.

It turns out to be a travesty of a travesty of "Run, Ni-ger, Run."  That one comes in many forms (See Jane Keefer's Index) mostly as a children's play song, "Run, Child, Run," etc.  Most innocuous.  Then we find a minstrel show travesty when we Search http://memory.loc.gov "America Singing: Nineteenth-Century Song Sheets" under "Run, Ni-ger, Run" with Mr Bones singing what was probably well-known to a comic monolog.  Rinzler, in the CD's notes doesn't help much but pushes reported versions back to Ozark 1852 reports as ""Patteroller's Song." (It comes with both single or double t's.)

Finally (for me) Lomax in Amer. Ballads & F S, p228 refers to escaping the patrols after Nat Turner's Revolt.  The song & persisting base tune "Fire on the Mountain" processed into many instrumental & comic versions.

Virginia: Nat Turner (b1800, executed 11/11/1831) began the only effective, sustained slave revolt in U.S. history on 8/21/1831.  The rebellion created panic throughout the white South but put an end to their myth that slaves were either contented with their lot or too servile to mount an armed revolt. [EB]  From 1832 "Negroes were put under special restriction to home quarters and patrolmen ("patter-rollers") appointed to keep them in." [Lomax]

Now the more political & story type (not quite balladic) & still likely somewhat corrupt, words are clear: (they're essetially the same as the L of C text as above.)

"'The day is done, night comes down

Ye are long ways from home--

Oh, run, ni-ger, run, patter-roller git you.

"'Yaller gal look and trine keep you overtime,

De bell done rung, overseer hallowing loud--

Oh, rull, ni-ger, run--'

 

"Like everything of merit it has been plagiarized and burdened with outside inventions until it is hardly recognizable, but the 'Fire in the Mountains' still sticks."

 

Do, please, marster, don't ketch me,

Ketch dat ni-ger behin' dat tree;

He stole money en I stole none,

Put him in the calaboose des for fun!

Chorus: Run, ni-ger, run, de patter-roller ketch you.

                 Run, ni-ger, run! it's almos' day.

                 De ni-ger run, de ni-ger flew,

                 De ni-ger  los'  his Sunday shoe.

                 Run, ni-ger, run, de patter-roller ketch you.

                 Run, ni-ger, run! it's almos' day.

 


and/or:

 

Chorus: Oh, run, ni-ger, run! de patter-roller ketch you.

                 Run, ni-ger, run! it's almos' day.

                 Oh, run, ni-ger, run! de patter-roller ketch you.

                 Run, ni-ger, run! it's almos' day.

 

 

Some folks say dat a ni-ger won't steal,

But I kotch one in my corn-fiel';

He run ter de eas', he run ter de wes',

He run he head in a hornet nes'!

 

De sun am set, dis ni-ger am free;

De yaller gals he goes to see;

I heard a man cry, "Run, doggone you,"

Run, ni-ger, run, patter-roller ketch you.

 

Wid eyes wide open and head hangin' down,

Like de rabbit before de houn',

Dis ni-ger streak it for de pasture;

Ni-ger run fast, white man run faster.

 

And ober de fence as slick as a eel

Dis ni-ger jumped all but his heel;

De white man ketch dat fast, you see,

And tied it tight aroun' de tree.

 

Dis ni-ger heard dat old whip crack,

But nebber stopped fur to look back;

I started home as straight as a bee

And left my heel tied aroun' de tree.

 

My ol' Miss, she prommus me

Dat when she die, she set me free;

But she done dead dis many year ago,

En yer I'm hoein' de same ol' row!

 

I'm a-hoein' across, I'm a-hoein' aroun'

I'm a-cleanin' up some mo' new groun'.

Whar I lif' so hard, I lif' so free,

Dat my sins rise up in front er me!

 

But some er dese days my time will come,

I'll year dat bugle, I'll year dat drum,

I'll see dem armies a-marchin' along,

I'll lif' my head en jine der song--

I'II dine no mo' behin' dat tree,

W'en de angels flock fer to wait on me!


Polk Miller, Richmond, Virginia, who interpreted Negro songs sucessfully on the platform, contributed these stanzas:

I run down to de ribber, but I couldn't get across,

I jumped 'pon a hog and thought he was a hoss!

As I was goin' through the fiel'

A black snake bit me 'pon my heel,

Dat serpent he did 'ceive a shock,

For de ni-ger's heel's as hard as a rock.

 

As I was passin' Wright's old mill,

My team got balked at de foot o' de hill.

I hollered to de driver, "Dat won't do;

I must shove an' so mus' you."

 

 

I don't know any way to post the sheet music here but as I said, "Fire on the Mountain" is pretty rousing & surely accounts for the persistance  of the song.

 

I just thought you'd like to know."

Click for related song 
-snip-
These words were added by a Mudcat moderator as a hyperlink to this Mudcat post that was begun in 2001: https://mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=29237 Origins: Run, N-gger*, Run"
-snip-
*This word is fully spelled out in that title and in most of the comments in that discussion thread. 

**
2. Subject: Lyr Add: RUN, NI-GER, RUN
From: Stewie
Date: 19 Dec 99 - 09:19 PM

"In his note to the song in the Watson/Ashley, Rinzler referred to the Tanner/ McMichen duo fiddling. The Skillet Lickers recorded 'Run Ni-ger Run' in 1927. This was reissued on an very early Rounder LP. In his note to the song, Mark Wilson also points out that it was sometimes called 'The Pateroller Song' and that it is widely known across the South as a fiddle tune, but is most often titled 'Run Boy Run'. Snuffy Jenkins and Pappy Sherrill, for example, recorded it under the latter title. As pointed out above, the song dates to the slave rebellions of the 1830s when the plantation owners forbade free association among slaves and organised patrols to catch slaves off their plantations after curfew. Wilson agrees that 'pateroller' presumably derives from 'patroller'. The song was quickly taken up by the earliest minstrel shows. The Rounder note quotes a skit from 'White's Serenaders Song-Book of 1857' which can be accessed through the link to 19th song sheets posted above by Abby: 'De sun am set – dis ni-ger is free' etc. Supposedly the skit was composed and sung by C.White of White's Band of Serenaders at the Melodeon Concert Saloon, 53 Bowery, NY.

There was an earlier commerial recording than that of the Skillet Lickers: Fiddlin' John Carson recorded it as solo piece, accompanying himself on the fiddle, in 1924. It has different lyrics, but is along the same lines. It has been reissued on Fiddlin' John Carson 'Complete Recorded Works Vol II' Document DOCD – 8015.

Here is the song as sung by the Skillet Lickers – it shares only 2 verses (the 'hornet' verse and the 'snake' verse) with the version sung by Clint Howard on the Watson/Ashley set. Wilson points out that, for Tanner, the song had lost its meaning because when asked what a 'pateroller' was, he could only reply: 'A bad man, I reckon'. As Tony Russell has commented elsewhere, like numerous post-Civil War numbers, the song is basically a pastiche:

RUN NI_GER RUN

Chorus:

Oh run ni-ger run the pateroller will catch you

Oh run ni-ger run you better get away (x2)

 

Ni-ger run, ni-ger flew

Ni-ger tore himself in two

 

Ni-ger run, he run so fast

He stove his head in a hornet's nest

 

Ni-ger run, he run through the field

Black snake caught him by the heel

 

Some folks say a ni-ger won't steal

I caught three in my cornfield

 

One had a bushel, one had a peck

One had a roasted ear tied round his neck

 

Oh ni-ger run, ni-ger flew

What in the devil can a white man do

 

Hey Mr pateroller, don't catch me

Catch that ni-ger behind that tree

 

Verse 2 repeated

 

Ni-ger run, was so fast

Ni-ger he got away at last

 

Source: Gid Tanner and His Skillet Lickers 'Run Nigger Run' Co 1518-D Recorded 28 March 1927. Reissued on Gid Tanner and His Skillet Lickers 'Hear These New Southern Fiddle and Guitar Records!' Rounder LP 1005 "

****
3. Subject: RE: Lyr Add: 'Run, Jimmie, Run'
From: GUEST,Bud Savoie
Date: 04 Feb 00 - 08:43 AM

"When I was a boy and reading Joel Chandler Harris's Uncle Remus tales, I recall Bre'r Rabbit strutting around in one of the tales as if he was "king ob de patterollers." A footnote gave some of the words to the song, although no music. I have since heard versions of it from many sources, all changing the operative word to Johnny, Jimmie, slave, chillen, Smoke, Boy, and others. Hedy West sings "Run, Slave Run" in Vanguard II, and the liner notes state that the existtence of this song in the lWest family suggests a long-held sylmpathy for the slaves."
-snip-
[Ironically, I just noticed that the date for comment #3 is the same month and day and almost the same time as my quote of that comment in this post. I didn't plan that.]

**
Here's the only other comment that is given in that Mudcat discussion thread that is still open for comments as of February 4, 2026 at 5:56 AM EST when this pancocojams post was published: 

"Subject: RE: Lyr Add: 'Run, Jimmie, Run'
From: Dale Rose
Date: 18 Dec 99 - 09:49 PM


"Yes, I enjoyed it. I am always pleased to learn more about the old songs. Thank You."

****
This concludes Part I of this two part pancocojams series.

Thanks for visiting pancocojams.

Visitor comments are welcom
e.

Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Six African American Innovators Who Changed The World (YouTube video and its summary statement)

 

Untold Black History , Jan 8, 2026  #UntoldBlackHistory #HiddenBlackHistory #BlackInventions

▶️ WATCH THE FULL SERIES HERE →    • The UNTOLD FORMULA: 6 Black Leaders Who  Secretly Built Generational Wealth

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D0rNfct-4aQ&list=PL0D4xzwp5OEG2CXCboqntB4Z3srt_JU8C&index=1

****
Edited by Azizi Powell

This pancocojams post showcases a 2026 YouTube video about six African American innovators whose inventions changed the world.

The content of this post is presented for historical and socio-cultural purposes.

All copyrights remain with their owners.

Thanks to all these innovators who are showcases in this video and thanks to the producer and publisher of this video.

****
THIS VIDEO'S SUMMARY
"
Ready to uncover the UNTOLD BLACK HISTORY of innovation? In this video, we spotlight the incredible stories of BLACK INVENTORS WHO CHANGED THE WORLD but whose contributions are often overlooked. We dive deep into 6 HIDDEN INVENTIONS created by Black innovators—from basic necessities to complex machinery—that you literally use EVERY DAY. Prepare to have your mind blown as we set the historical record straight!

These are Foundational Black Americans whose inventions became everyday essentials, while their names disappeared from American history.

In this video:

00:11 – Alexander Miles

Inventor of automatic elevator doors — a safety feature used in buildings worldwide.

01:42 – Jerry Lawson

Creator of the first cartridge-based video game system, shaping modern gaming.

03:25 – Dr. Marian Croak

Pioneer of Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP), the technology behind modern calling.

05:04 – Sarah Boone

Inventor of an improved ironing board still used in homes today.

06:30 – Mary Fields

Trailblazer in logistics and delivery whose work reshaped mail routes and access.

07:29 – Frederick McKinley Jones

Inventor of refrigeration technology that made modern food transport possible.

These stories aren’t trivia.

They explain how Black innovation built America, while systems worked to separate invention from credit.

This is hidden Black history, told clearly and passed down — because knowing who built the world we live in changes how we see ourselves in it.

Watch in order.

These stories are blueprints.

#UntoldBlackHistory #HiddenBlackHistory #BlackInventions #ForgottenBlackInventors

This channel tells real Black American history — untold, hidden, and suppressed stories that were left out, buried, or deliberately erased from American history.

We focus on Foundational Black Americans who built families, land ownership, businesses, and Black economic power in a country shaped by Jim Crow laws, segregation, and systemic suppression. These were regular people living their lives — and in doing so, became extraordinary.

Our goal is not shock value, trivia, or surface-level Black history facts.

It is to pass down full-context history — Black history they never taught, because these stories carry power. They reveal how systems actually worked, how Black success was protected or punished, and why so much of this history was rewritten or erased.

This channel is part of Goose Goose Duck (GGD) — a storytelling and learning movement created to preserve Black American history in full color, through historical storytelling, long-form documentaries, and visual history, passed down across generations.

We believe hidden Black history is being erased on purpose — and that understanding American history untold matters for how we shape our future. This channel exists to preserve it, tell it clearly, and pass it forward.

Watch closely. Share thoughtfully.

These stories are blueprints."

****
Thanks for visiting pancocojams.

Visitor comments are welcome.

Twenty African American Inventors Whose Race And Names Mainstream America Has Tried To Erase (YouTube video & its complete transcript)


American Erased, Dec 14, 2025  #historydocumentary #blackhistory #americanhistory

⚠️ CORRECTION: The image shown during the Granville Woods section at 8:52 is actually George Washington Carver, not Woods. The narration about Woods' inventions is accurate. Thank you to viewers for catching this error.

#historydocumentary  #blackhistory #americanhistory #inventions

#education

How many Black inventors can you name? If you said one or two, you're not alone, and that's the problem.

This video covers every major Black inventor America forgot: from Garrett Morgan (traffic light, gas mask) to Mark Dean (IBM PC) to Patricia Bath (cataract surgery device). Twenty inventors whose inventions you use every single day.

📚 SOURCES:

-U.S. Patent Office Records

-Smithsonian NMAAHC (National Museum of African American History and Culture)

-Black Inventors by Keith Holmes

**** 
Edited by Azizi Powell

This pancocojams post showcases a 2025 YouTube video about twenty African American inventors whos race and names mainstream America has tried to erase.

This post also presents the complete transcript of this video without time stamps and without the ending statement to watch other videos in this YouTube channel's series.

The content of this post is presented for historical and educational purposes.

All copyrights remain with their owners.

Thanks to all of the inventors who are showcased in this video and thanks to this video's  producer and publisher.

****
AUTO-TRANSCRIPTION FOR THIS VIDEO
(This transcript is quoted without time stamps.)

"Every major black inventor America forgot-traffic lights, computers, pacemakers, refrigerated trucks, home security systems, light bulbs, potato chips... You use inventions by black Americans every single day, multiple times a day. But if I asked you to name five black inventors, you probably couldn't do it. That's not your fault. That's erasure.

For over a century, American history books taught Edison, Bell, and the Wright brothers. They didn't teach Garrett Morgan, Lewis Latimer, or Granville Woods. They made innovation look white. It wasn't.

Today, we're covering every major black inventor America forgot - 20 people whose inventions changed the world. Some you might have heard of. Most you haven't. All of them deserve better. Let's go.

Number 20. George Crumb - potato chips. 1853.
George Crumb was a chef at Moons Lake House in Saratoga Springs, New York in 1853.
One night, a customer complained that his fried potatoes were too thick. Crumb, annoyed, sliced the potatoes paper thin, fried them until they were crispy, and sent them out as a joke. The customer loved them. Other diners wanted them, and the potato chip was born. Crumb never patented his invention. Potato chips became a massive industry worth billions today. And George Crumb's name [was] forgotten. Most people think potato chips just appeared. They didn't. A black chef in upstate New York invented them because a customer annoyed him.

Next. Number 19. Sarah Boon - improved ironing board. 1892.
Sarah Boon didn't invent the ironing board, but she invented the one you use. Before 1892, ironing boards were flat planks of wood. They didn't fit the shape of clothes. Ironing sleeves, curves, and fitted garments was nearly impossible. Sarah Boon, a formerly enslaved woman living in Connecticut, designed a narrow curved ironing board specifically for ironing women's clothing. She patented it in 1892. Her design became the standard. Today, every ironing board uses her design, but when you buy one at Target, there's no label that says based on Sarah Boon's 1892 patent. She's gone. The invention remains.

Next, number 18, Thomas Jennings - dry cleaning, 1821.
Thomas Jennings was the first black person to receive a US patent. In 1821, he patented a process called dry scouring, the precursor to modern dry cleaning. At the time, most clothing couldn't be washed with water. Jennings figured out how to clean delicate fabrics without damaging them. He used the money from his invention to buy his family out of slavery and fund abolitionist causes. Thomas Jennings was born free in New York, but his wife and children were enslaved. His invention freed them. Dry cleaning is a multi-billion dollar industry. Thomas Jennings started it and almost no one knows his name. Next.

Number 17. Valerie Thomas -3D imaging technology 1980.
Valerie Thomas worked for NASA. In 1980, she invented the illusion transmitter, a device that projects realistic three-dimensional images. It's the foundation of modern 3D imaging technology used in everything from medical imaging to television. Thomas was one of the only black women working at NASA during the space race. She managed projects for LANCSAT, the satellite program that captures images of Earth. Her 3D imaging invention was years ahead of its time. NASA still uses her technology, but if you ask most people who invented 3D imaging, they won't say Valerie Thomas.

Next, number 16. Bessie Blount Griffin - feeding devices for disabled veterans. 1951.
After World War II, thousands of veterans came home with missing limbs. Bessie Blunt Griffin, a physical therapist, saw soldiers struggling to feed themselves. So, she invented a device that allowed amputees to feed themselves using mouth and head movements. She tried to sell her invention to the US Veterans Administration. They rejected it. So, she gave the patent to the French government who actually used it to help their disabled veterans. America ignored her. France honored her. Bessie Blanc Griffin's feeding device helped thousands of disabled people regain independence. And the US government didn't care.

Next, number 15. Lonnie Johnson - Super Soaker, 1989.
Lonnie Johnson is a NASA engineer who worked on the Galileo mission to Jupiter and the stealth bomber program. He holds over hundreds patents and his most famous invention, the Super Soaker. In 1989, Johnson was working on a heat pump when he accidentally created a powerful water stream. He realized it would make an incredible water gun. The Super Soaker became one of the bestselling toys of all time, generating over $1 billion in sales. Lonnie Johnson is a legitimate rocket scientist, and most people only know him for a water gun, if they know him at all.

Next, number 14, Philip Emigui - Supercomputer Algorithms, 1989.
Philip Emigwali is a computer scientist who figured out how to make 65,000 computers work together simultaneously. In 1989, he used this method to perform 3.1 billion calculations per second, the fastest computation at the time. His work laid the groundwork for modern internet infrastructure and supercomputing. Oil companies use his algorithms to find petroleum reserves. Weather prediction systems use his work. The modern internet relies on parallel processing that Imagali pioneered. He's been called the father of the internet, but if you Google who invented the internet, his name doesn't come up.

Next, number 13. Alexander Miles- automatic elevator doors. 1887.
Before 1887, elevator doors had to be closed manually. If someone forgot, people fell down the elevator shaft. It was dangerous. Alexander Miles, a black inventor from Ohio, patented automatic elevator doors that closed when the elevator moved. His invention made elevators safe. It became the standard. Every elevator you've ever been in uses Alexander Miles design. Elisha Otis gets credit for inventing the elevator. Alexander Miles made it safe to use, but Otis is famous. Miles is forgotten.

Next. Number 12. George Washington Carver . Agricultural Innovations 1900s.
You've probably heard of George Washington Carver, but you probably don't know what he actually did. Most people know he did something with peanuts. That's it. Carver was a botanist and agricultural scientist who revolutionized southern farming. After the Civil War, southern soil was destroyed by cotton farming. Carver taught farmers to rotate crops with peanuts and sweet potatoes to restore soil nutrients. Then he invented over 300 uses for peanuts, including plastics, dyes, gasoline, and nitroglycerin. Carver didn't patent most of his inventions. He believed they should be free for farmers. He changed agriculture. And most people think he just made peanut butter. He didn't even invent peanut butter.


Next. Number 11. Charles Drew- blood plasma storage and blood banks. 1940.
Charles Drew was a surgeon who invented the process for separating and storing blood plasma during World War II. His technique saved thousands of lives. He organized the first large-scale blood banks and set up the system for collecting and distributing blood for the Red Cross. Here's the tragic irony: The Red Cross initially refused to accept blood donations from black people. Drew, the man who invented the blood bank system, protested the policy. He was forced to resign. Charles Drew saved thousands of lives with his invention. And the organization he worked for segregated blood by race. In 1950, Drew died in a car accident. There's a myth that he bled to death because a whites only hospital refused to treat him. That's not true. But the fact that it's believable shows how racist medicine was.


Next number 10. Patricia Bath- laser fico probe for cataract surgery 1986.
Patricia Bath was an ophthalmologist who invented the laser fico probe, a laser device that removes cataracts quickly and painlessly. Before her invention, cataract surgery was invasive and risky. Her device revolutionized the procedure. Bath was the first black female doctor to receive a medical patent. She dedicated her career to preventing blindness, especially in underserved communities. She founded the American Institute for the Prevention of Blindness. Millions of people can see today because of Patricia Bath's invention, but if you ask someone who invented laser cataract surgery, they won't know her name.

Next, number nine. Granville Woods electric railway and telegraph 1880 to 1900s.
Granville Woods held over 60 patents. He improved the telegraph, the telephone, and the electric railway system. His inventions allowed trains to communicate with each other to prevent collisions. He created the third rail system that powers subways. Thomas Edison and Alexander Graham Bell both tried to hire him. When they couldn't, they tried to steal his patents. Woods fought over 35 patent lawsuits and won almost all of them. Despite his brilliance, Woods died poor in 1910. His inventions are still used. His name is not.

Next. Number eight. Marie Van Brittan Brown - Home Security System, 1966.
Marie Van Brittan Brown was a nurse in Queens, New York. She worked odd hours and didn't feel safe at home. Police response times in her neighborhood were slow. So, in 1966, she invented the first home security system. Her system used cameras, monitors, two-way microphones, and a remote door lock. She could see who was at the door, talk to them, and unlock the door remotely or alert the police. She patented it in 1969. Every modern home security system is based on Marie Van Brttan Brown's design. Ring doorbells, ADT, Simply Safe. All of them use her concept and most people have never heard of her.

Next number seven, Jan Erns Matzeliger - show lasting machine 1883.
Before 1883, shoes were made by hand. A skilled worker could make 50 pairs of shoes a day. Jan Ernst Matzeliger,  a black immigrant from Surinam, invented a machine that could make 700 pairs a day. His shoe lasting machine revolutionized the shoe industry. Shoes became affordable. Companies made millions. Matzeliger sold his patent for almost nothing and died poor at age 37 from tuberculosis. The shoe companies got rich. Matzeliger got nothing. And for over a century, no one knew his name.

Next. Number six, Elijah McCoy - automatic lubricator, 1872.
Elijah McCoy was a mechanical engineer who invented an automatic lubricator for steam engines Before his invention, trains had to stop frequently so workers could manually oil the engines. McCoy's device lubricated engines while they ran. His invention was so effective that buyers would ask if a machine had the real McCoy lubrication system. That's where the phrase comes from. "The real McCoy" means the genuine article named after Elijah McCoy. We use his phrase every day. Most people don't know it's named after a black inventor.

Next, number five, Frederick McKinley Jones - refrigerated trucks, 1940.
Frederick McKinley Jones invented portable refrigeration units for trucks and trains. Before his invention, transporting perishable food long distances was nearly impossible. His refrigeration system changed everything. Jones held over 60 patents. His refrigeration technology was used by the US military during World War II to preserve food and medicine. After the war, his company became Thermo King, one of the largest refrigeration companies in the world. Every refrigerated truck on the highway uses technology Frederick McKinley Jones invented, but when you see a Thermo King logo, there's no mention of him.

Next, number four, Otis Boyin - pacemaker components. 1959.
Otis Boyin was an electrical engineer who invented an improved electrical resistor used in computers, radios, and televisions. But his most important invention was a control unit for pacemakers. Boyin's resistor made pacemakers more reliable and precise. His technology has saved millions of lives. People with heart conditions are alive today because of Otis Boyin's work. He held 26 patents. He changed medical technology and most people have never heard his name.

Next, number three, Mark Dean - IBM personal computer, 1980s.
Mark Dean is a computer scientist who holds three of the original nine patents for the IBM personal computer. He co-invented the ISA bus, which allows devices like printers and monitors to connect to computers. He also led the team that created the first gigahertz processor. Mark Dean helped invent the
modern computer. The device you're watching this video on exists because of his work. He holds over 40 patents. He was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 1997. But when people think about who invented the personal computer, they think of Steve Jobs or Bill Gates, not Mark Dean.

Next, number two, Lewis Latimer - light bulb carbon filament, 1881.
Everyone knows Thomas Edison invented the light bulb, except he didn't. Not the version we use. Edison's early bulbs burned out in hours. They were impractical. Lewis Latimer, a black inventor and draftsman, invented the carbon filament that made light bulbs last longer and burn brighter. His filament design made electric lighting practical and affordable. Latimer worked with both Edison and Alexander Graham Bell. He drafted the patent for Bell's telephone. Lewis Latimer made the modern world brighter. Edison got the credit. Latimer got forgotten.

Next. Number one. Garrett Morgan- traffic light and gas mask. 1914 to 1923.
Garrett Morgan invented two things you interact with constantly. The traffic signal and the gas mask. In 1914, Morgan invented a safety hood with a breathing tube that filtered smoke and gas. It was the precursor to the modern gas mask. In 1916, there was an explosion in a tunnel under Lake Erie. Workers were trapped in toxic fumes. Morgan and his brother used his safety hoods to rescue 32 men. He became a hero. Then, people found out he was black. Orders for his safety hood dropped. Fire departments refused to buy from him. During World War I, the US military used his design, but didn't credit him. In 1923, Morgan invented the three-position traffic signal, the red, yellow, green light system we use today. He sold the patent to General Electric for $40,000. They made millions Morgan's name disappeared. Garrett Morgan saved lives with a gas mask and organized traffic with the traffic light. Two inventions that define modern life, and most Americans don't know he existed.

20 inventors, billions of dollars in industries they created, millions of lives saved by their work, and most Americans can't name a single one. This isn't ancient history. Mark Dean's computer patents are from the 1980s. Patricia Bat's cataract devices are from 1986. Lonnie Johnson's Super Soaker is from 1989. These aren't historical figures. These are people who shaped the world you live in right now. So why don't you know their names? Because for over a century, American history made innovation look white. textbooks taught Edison, Bell, and Ford. They didn't teach Morgan, Latimer, and Woods. The invention stayed. The inventors were erased. But we're fixing that."... 

****
Thanks for visiting pancocojams.

Visitor comments are welcome.