The Journey of “Hang Me, Oh Hang Me” From the Scaffold to the Screen

Hang Me Inside Llewyn Davis opens with one of the film’s best musical moments.  The camera simply focuses on the title character, played by Oscar Isaac, singing “Hang Me, Oh Hang Me” at the Gaslight Cafe. Isaac’s performance of the song is mesmerizing.  He immediately draws the viewer into the time and setting of the movie.

Hang me, Oh hang me, and I’ll be dead and gone;
Hang me, Oh hang me, I’ll be dead and gone;
Wouldn’t mind the hangin’, but the layin’ in the grave so long;
Poor boy, I been all around this world.

The song stayed with me long after the movie ended.  One might argue that no other performance in the film matches it. Check out Isaac’s opening performance from Inside Llewyn Davis.

Versions and Sources of “Hang Me”

The movie performance made me curious to find out more about the song. The Coen Brothers movie is loosely based on the life of Dave Van Ronk. So the obvious first step for anyone interested in the film is to check out Van Ronk’s version of “Hang Me, Oh Hang Me.”

Van Ronk’s version is a wonderful recording and worth tracking down. Van Ronk’s ex-wife Terri Thai wrote in The Village Voice that one of the best things about the movie is that it will lead people to check out Van Ronk’s music.

You may find Van Ronk’s version of “Hang Me, Oh Hang Me” on the CD Inside Dave Van Ronk. Check it out below.

Van Ronk did not write the song.  If you look for further information, many places just list it as “traditional.” The song “Hang Me, Oh Hang Me,” however, has a long history that takes a number of twists and turns.

There are different variations on the song with different titles.  These title variations include “I’ve Been All Around This World,” “The Gambler,” “My Father Was a Gambler,” and “The New Railroad.”  Sometimes, the song is called “Cape Girardeau,” from the song’s line “I been all around Cape Girardeau.” Another version specifies the location of the singer’s last stand in  “Up On The Blue Ridge Mountains.”

The Grateful Dead used the variation “I’ve Been All Around This World.”  The band sang the song in a 1980 New Year’s Eve performance at the Oakland Auditorium.

A Grateful Dead fansite notes that the origin of the song is somewhat unclear. The first commercial recorded version of the song appears to be a 1946 single by Grandpa Jones, who later starred on Hee-Haw. But the song goes back further to a 1937 Library of Congress field recording.

A trip to the Library of Congress website leads to information about this first known recordings of the song. One early version of “I’ve Been All Around This World” (AFS 1531) is by Justis Begley. Alan and Elizabeth Lomax recorded Begley singing the song at Hazard, Kentucky in October 1937.

The Library of Congress lists another version of the song supposedly “sung” by a person named Dr. David McIntosh with a recording date of May from the same year, although I have yet to find more information about that version.  McIntosh seems to have been a collector of folk songs, authoring books called Folk Songs and Singing Games of the Illinois Ozarks and Singing Games and Dances (1957). (Thanks to Elijah Wald in the comments for pointing me to the McIntosh listing.)

Interestingly, Begley, the man who made the other 1937 recording of this song about a man about to be hanged, served as the sheriff of Hazard. You may hear another Sheriff Begley recording on YouTube, “Run Banjo.

Begley’s version of “I’ve Been All Around This World” is below courtesy of archive.org and thanks to Stephen Winick at the American Folklife Center for the link. At the end of the song, you can hear the legendary folklorist Alan Lomax referring to Begley as the “composer” of the song.


The line “hang me” probably derived from the American ballad “My Father Was a Gambler.” That song is about an unnamed murderer who was hanged in the 1870s. Like many other versions, the narrator in “My Father Was a Gambler” claims he has been all around the world as he states, “hang me, oh hang me, I’ll be dead and gone.”

Below is a YouTube video of someone playing “My Father Was a Gambler.” The song title reflects a paternal gambler theme also found in “House of the Rising Sun” (“My father was a gamblin’ man / Down in New Orleans.”).  A gambling father also appears in the Allman Brothers’ song “Ramblin’ Man” (“My father was a gambler down in Georgia”).

What Hanged Man Inspired the Song?

Unfortunately, sources do not disclose the name of the condemned man or men who inspired the various versions of “Hang Me, Oh Hang Me.” The book Outlaw Ballads, Legends & Lore (1996) by Wayne Erbsen claims that the song was inspired by a man hanged in Fort Smith, Arkansas.  Some versions of the song mention that location.

Apparently the hanged man’s name has been lost to history.  But the book claims that the execution occurred sometime during the decade of the 1870s.  The author notes that the famous hanging judge Judge Isaac Charles Parker might have pronounced the sentence because he served as judge at that location during 1875-1896.

One may speculate further about the person who inspired “My Father Was a Gambler” and the “hang me” lyric. Examining a list of people executed in the Arkansas, one finds a large number of men hanged for murder in Arkansas in the 1870s. Most were black men or Native Americans (also illustrating the discriminatory way the death penalty is used).

If we try to narrow down the time period, the famous execution may have occurred sometime during 1873-1876.  During that period, executions at Fort Smith were open to the general public. For these public executions, thousands of people could hear the condemned person’s last words.

But even if we narrow down the song’s inspiration to the years of public executions, it is still challenging to determine the name of the condemned man who inspired the “hang me” lyrics. For example, one may guess that the song could be about Sidney Wallace. As something of a folk hero, Wallace and his execution may have captured people’s imagination.

Or maybe the song is about Daniel Evans.  He had connections in Missouri, which might have inspired the song’s reference to Cape Girardeau.  Evans also joked about his execution, which might have made it memorable to a potential songwriter.

Or maybe the song is about either William Leach or William Whittington.  Both of those men gave final speeches to a crowd blaming their vices and discussing their reform. Further, Leach’s lingering 10-minute hanging may have prompted extra attention. (See Roger Harold Tuller, Let No Guilty Man Escape”: A Judicial Biography of “Hanging Judge” Isaac C. Parker.)

Deep Dark Woods

A good guess is that John Childers may be the inspiration for the song because of his final request to be hanged.  Childers spoke for sixteen minutes on the scaffold in 1873.  Then his request came after the marshal made him an offer.

The marshal explained that he would spare Childers if the condemned man would reveal the names of his accomplices. Following his own code of honor not to rat on others, Childers swept his hand and asked, “Didn’t you say you were going to hang me?” After the marshal answered in the affirmative, Childers replied, “Then, why in hell don’t you!”

The Childers execution continued to attract attention after Childer’s death.  Some claimed that Childers escaped.  Others claimed that after Childer’s body fell through the trap, a bolt of lightening from a storm cloud struck the scaffold.

But we may only guess how much of the song we know today is based in fact. For example, singers may have added the gambling reference in some versions as a morality lesson for listeners.

The Song and Hangings Today

Other versions may contain clues about the origins or may just feature additional details added long after the execution.  One of the versions called “Working on the New Railroad” refers to railroad work. Below, Crooked Still performs their version of “Working on the New Railroad,” which also has some of the “hang me” lyrics.

There are a number of other good versions of “Hang Me” and the various variations, including ones by Amos Lee and Yonder Mountain String Band. Also, reportedly, Bob Dylan performed the song during the 1990 leg of his “Never Ending Tour.”

The Deep Dark Woods made a lively version of the song the title track of their 2008 album, Hang Me Oh Hang Me. I like what they do with the song. Check it out.

While hangings may seem a relic of the past, hanging is still an option for executions in Delaware, New Hampshire, and Washington. In many ways, other current methods of killing prisoners also seem barbaric vestiges of the past.

States now have lethal injection as their primary method of execution.  But such executions still are not civilized, as shown by a recent 26-minute execution in Ohio.

Whether or not we will ever see a song about lethal injection that rivals “Hang Me, Oh Hang Me” may depend on how much longer some states continue to kill prisoners.

What is your favorite version of “Oh Hang Me”? Leave your two cents in the comments.

  • “Nebraska” and the Death Penalty
  • Dylan’s “Julius & Ethel”
  • Red Band Trailer for Upcoming Coen Brothers’ Film: “Inside Llewyn Davis”
  • The End of Maryland’s Death Penalty and “Green, Green Grass of Home”
  • The Killing of “Two Good Men”
  • Bono and Glen Hansard: The Auld Triangle
  • (Some related Chimesfreedom posts.)

    Author: chimesfreedom

    Editor-in-chief, New York.

    20 thoughts on “The Journey of “Hang Me, Oh Hang Me” From the Scaffold to the Screen”

    1. Impressive journey for a blog post — you should do a radio show, but then, who listens to radio these days… I don’t have any favorite in particular to add, but this cover by Madeline Smith on YouTube has a refreshing/updated sound:

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lRVzsq10rdg

      And no, I don’t think there will ever be a song about lethal injection. “Junk science” never sounds good in a song.

      1. Madeline Smith does a nice job on that version. Thanks, I’ll have to check out some of her other music. You’re probably right that it is hard to rhyme anything about “junk science” or “pentobarbital” in a song about lethal injection. Thanks for the comment!

    2. Fascinating. I found your blog searching for the story behind the tune. I heard Van Ronk’s original and heard Oscar Isaac’s from the movie. You put some hard work into this article and it is very well written. Thanks for the info, I am off to check out more of your blog!

      1. Yes, and thanks for the comment. I haven’t seen “Another Day, Another Time” but will check it out. Take care.

      1. Great, thank you. It is also cool to hear Alan Lomax’s voice at the end of the song. I’ve added the recording back into the post, giving you credit for the link. Thanks again.

    3. I’ve always thought there were similarities between this song and “Tom Dooley.” I’m only really familiar with the Kingston Trio version of that song, but it always seemed to be steeped with a longer history. What are your thoughts on this connection?

      1. Good point about the similarities between “Hang Me, Oh Hang Me” and “Tom Dooley.” A number of murder ballads contain some similar themes, and certainly these two songs both have a similar subject and center on a hanging. Also, “Hang Me, Oh Hang Me” is from the perspective of the condemned, and the verses of “Tom Dooley” are also in the voice of the condemned, even though the chorus is not. Another similarity is the repeated use of the word “hang” too.

        The hangings referenced in the two songs seem to have occurred around the same time. “Tom Dooley” is reportedly about a North Carolina hanging in 1868, and “Hang Me, Oh Hang Me” is most likely about a hanging in Arkansas in the 1870s. Because of the different locations, of course, there is no indication they are about the same case. But the similarities you noted do point to the fact that they are both in the tradition of murder ballads focusing on the condemned.

        For more on the crime and hanging that inspired “Tom Dooley,” check out the Murder by Gaslight website.

        Thanks for the thoughts and the comment!

      1. Thanks for the comment. The Library of Congress says it is Alan and Elizabeth (who had married Alan earlier that year) who did the recording of Begley. Alan would have been 22 at the time, and was, I believe, making such recordings for his father at the time.

    4. Bill Morrisey was a guest on the Gene Shay Folk Show on Phila Public Radio on 11/22/92. He stated that Dave Van Ronk told him that the song Hang Me O Hang Me was obtained by him from Paul Clayton who traced it back to the 1880’s in Missouri. Paul Clayton was a folklorist, folk singer, and friend of Dave Van Ronk as well as Bob Dylan. Paul Clayton influenced many of his younger counterparts in Greenwich Village in the mid 1960’s.

      1. Thanks for the comment. That is interesting, and similar to some of the research in the article about the time and location. It is especially interesting to hear about the Paul Clayton connection, who as you noted was influential in the folk movement (unfortunately dying at a young age). We wrote a little about him in our post on another song where he had an important connection, “Gotta Travel On”: Billy Grammer and Buddy Holly’s Opening Song, “Gotta Travel On”

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