Born to a farming family in
Appomattox County, Virginia, he learned to play the
banjo from local
enslaved Africans.
Career Sweeney began performing with the banjo in the early 1830s. He first performed throughout central Virginia for county court sessions. A few years later he joined a circus and traveled throughout Virginia and North Carolina. By 1839, Sweeney was performing in various blackface venues in New York. His earliest documented use of the banjo on stage was in April 1839. He is the earliest known person to have played the banjo on stage. That same month, he performed alongside James Sanford at the
Broadway Circus in New York with a blackface burlesque of ''The Dying Moor's Defence of His Flag'' called "Novel Duetts, Songs, &c". This was accompanied by a "Comic
Morris Dance by the whole company". According to
Billy Whitlock of the
Virginia Minstrels, Sweeney gave Whitlock a few banjo lessons around this time. In colonial America the banjo was known as an instrument of "the lower classes," but by 1841, Sweeney was remaking the banjo into an instrument for the middle class. His advertisements boasted that he played with "scientific touches of perfection". Another raved, "Only those who have heard Sweeny know what music there is in a banjo." For the next few years, he was the benchmark against whom other banjo players were compared. After a performance by
Dan Emmett at the
Bowery Amphitheatre Circus, the
New York Herald wrote, "Emmit's banjo playing is fully equal to Jo Sweeney's, and far ahead of any other now in the United States." "
Jenny Get Your Hoe Cake Done" and "
Knock a Nigger Down" became two of Sweeney's signature tunes.Sweeney saw success, and by early 1843, he embarked on a European tour that included stops in London and
Edinburgh. In July 1843, Sweeney played during
entr'actes at the
Adelphi Theatre in Edinburgh,
Scotland.
Frank Brower of the
Virginia Minstrels met him there and joined Sweeney's act as a
bones player. The two toured, performing in early October at the
Theatre Royal in
Birmingham and later that month in a circus at
Leicester. At some point, Brower parted company to tour with
Dan Emmett, though he rejoined Sweeney by spring of 1844. At this time,
Dick Pelham met up with Sweeney and Brower, and the trio decided to reform the Virginia Minstrels with Sweeney as banjoist. They found Emmett in
Bolton and talked him into joining, although Sweeney would be the troupe leader. The new Virginia Minstrels performed in
Dublin at the Theatre Royal from 24 April to 7 May during entr'actes, then continued for a series of entr'actes and complete minstrel shows in
Cork,
Belfast, then
Glasgow by the end of May. They did several shows at the Theatre Royal, Adelphi, and later in the
Waterloo Rooms in Edinburgh, followed by a return engagement in Glasgow, this time at
City Hall. Joel died in Appomattox on 29 October 1860 of
dropsy. == Personal ==