The tale of John Henry has been used as a symbol in many cultural movements, including
labor movements and the
Civil Rights Movement.
Animation • In 1946, animator
George Pal adapted the tale of John Henry into a short film titled
John Henry and the Inky-Poo as part of his theatrical stop-motion
Puppetoons series. The short is considered a milestone in American cinema as one of the first films to have a positive view of African-American folklore. • In 1974, Nick Bosustow and David Adams co-produced an 11-minute animated short,
The Legend of John Henry, for
Paramount Pictures. • The character appears in a
Walt Disney Feature Animation short film,
John Henry (2000). Directed by
Mark Henn, plans for theatrical releases in 2000 and 2001 fell through after the short had a limited
Academy Award qualifying run in Los Angeles; a shorter version was released as the only new entry in the direct-to-video release ''
Disney's American Legends (2002). It was eventually released in its original format as an interstitial on the Disney Channel, and later as part of the home video compilation Walt Disney Animation Studios Short Films Collection'' in 2015. • In 2001,
Russian animator Andrey Zolotukhin directed a 13-minute animated short,
John Henry, Steel Driving Man, for
HBO. The short became a part of animated series
Animated Tales of the World, which received a
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Individual Achievement in Animation.
Television •
The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy Season 6 episode "Short Tall Tales" shows a parody of John Henry's tale with Irwin in the role. Grim decides to sabotage the story by powering up the drilling machine to go faster, and Irwin forces himself to hammer through the mountain faster to surpass it, but by doing so he ends up breaking into the 8th dimension, where aliens feed him to one of their
giant monstrous females. • A plot similar to the story of John Henry is featured in season 5 episode 88b of
SpongeBob SquarePants, in which Squidward debuts a "patty gadget" in the hopes of replacing SpongeBob's role in the restaurant, leading to a duel of skill between the two. Like many traditional tellings of the story, the episode is presented as a narrated, rhyming ballad. • John Henry is featured in the 22nd episode of Season 5 of
Teen Titans Go!, "
Tall Titan Tales". • John Henry appears in the
Pinky and the Brain episode "A Legendary Tail". • Henry was the center of an episode of the
Nickelodeon game show
Legends of the Hidden Temple. The objective on the show saw contestants learn of the legend of John Henry, compete in challenges based on his story, and the winning team attempt to retrieve his hammer from the show's Temple. • The AI character of
John Henry (
Garret Dillahunt), from season 2 of
Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles, is named after the folk hero for managing to beat a machine that replaces the work of man - paralleling the central conflict of the show and
the franchise of fighting against
an artificial superintelligence that nearly causes the extinction of the human race in the future through nuclear attacks and
Terminators. • John Henry appears in a segment of the short-lived ''
Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventures'' TV series. In an episode titled "Pocket Watch Full of Miracles", which aired in November 1990, John Henry is portrayed as having the mannerisms of
Muhammad Ali. He challenges and beats a steam-powered hammer driven by his boss. His prize is an antique pocket watch owned by
Queen Victoria. The watch is given to the titular Bill and Ted, only to be immediately destroyed by a runaway train. •
Danny Glover played the character in the series, ''
Shelley Duvall's Tall Tales & Legends'' from 1985 to 1987.
Shelley Duvall served as the series' creator, presenter, narrator, and executive producer. • On the
Adult Swim series,
Saul of the Mole Men, John Henry (voiced by
Tommy "Tiny" Lister) has been living at the
centre of the Earth since his victory over the steam drill, having become a
cyborg at sometime in the intervening centuries. He befriends and later sacrifices himself to save protagonist Saul Malone.
Radio Destination Freedom, a 1950s American
old time radio series written by
Richard Durham, featured John Henry in a July 1949 episode.
Music The story of John Henry is traditionally told through two types of songs:
ballads, commonly called "The Ballad of John Henry", and "
hammer songs" (a type of
work song), each with wide-ranging and varying lyrics. •
Henry Thomas •
Charley Crockett •
Mississippi Fred McDowell (on
Ann Arbor Blues Festival 1969: Vols 1&2) •
Doc Watson •
Burl Ives •
John Hartford (on ''
Goin' Back to Dixie'') •
Jesse Fuller •
Cannonball Adderley –
Big Man: The Legend of John Henry •
Bill Monroe •
The New Christy Minstrels :"John Henry and the Steam Drill" and "Natural Man", both on
Land of Giants (1964) •
Dave Van Ronk Dave Van Ronk Sings Ballads, Blues, and a Spiritual •
Kabir Suman •
Hemanga Biswas •
Johnny Cash •
Drive-By Truckers (on their
The Dirty South album) •
Joe Bonamassa •
Fiddlin' John Carson •
Pete Seeger •
Harry Belafonte •
Mississippi John Hurt (as "Spike Driver Blues") •
Lonnie Donegan •
Jack Warshaw •
John Fahey •
Steve Earle •
Justin Townes Earle •
The Limeliters •
Emily Saliers •
Willie Watson •
Bill Wood •
Smothers Brothers on their 1963 album
Think Ethnic •
Songs: Ohia •
Charlie Parr •
Those Poor Bastards The story also inspired the
Aaron Copland's orchestral composition "John Henry" (1940, revised 1952), the 1994 chamber music piece
Come Down Heavy by
Evan Chambers and the 2009
chamber music piece
Steel Hammer by the composer
Julia Wolfe.
They Might Be Giants named their
fifth studio album after John Henry as an allusion to their usage of a full band on this album rather than the drum machine that they had employed previously. The American cowpunk band
Nine Pound Hammer is named after the traditional description of the hammer John Henry wielded. Bengali musician
Hemanga Biswas translated the song in Bengali. Bangladeshi mass singer
Fakir Alamgir later covered this version of the song.
Literature • Henry is the subject of the
1931 Roark Bradford novel
John Henry, illustrated by noted woodcut artist
J. J. Lankes. The novel was adapted into a
stage musical in 1940, starring
Paul Robeson in the title role. According to Steven Carl Tracy, Bradford's works were influential in broadly popularizing the John Henry legend beyond railroad and mining communities and outside of African American oral histories. • In a 1933 article published in
The Journal of Negro Education, Bradford's John Henry was criticized for "making over a folk-hero into a clown." A 1948 obituary for Bradford described
John Henry as "a better piece of native folklore than Paul Bunyan." •
Ezra Jack Keats's
John Henry: An American Legend, published in 1965, is a notable
picture book chronicling the history of John Henry and portraying him as the "personification of the
medieval Everyman who struggles against insurmountable odds and wins." •
Colson Whitehead's 2001 novel
John Henry Days uses the John Henry myth as story background. Whitehead fictionalized the John Henry Days festival in Talcott, West Virginia and the release of the John Henry postage stamp in 1996. • In his nonfiction account ''Steel Drivin' Man: John Henry, the Untold Story of an American Legend'' (Oxford University Press 2008), historian Scott Reynolds Nelson attempts to find the real man behind the legend, with a particular focus on Reconstruction-era Virginia and the use of prison labor for building railroads. • Elements of John Henry's legend were featured in
DC Comics. • In the comic series
DC: The New Frontier, an African-American man named John Wilson becomes a vigilante named
John Henry in order to battle the
Ku Klux Klan after his family is lynched. • The superhero
Steel's civilian name "John Henry Irons" is inspired by John Henry. The story of John Henry further inspired Steel's weapon of choice, a sledgehammer. • In DC's
Super Friends #21 (January 2010),
Superman encountered the actual John Henry after being placed in the folk tale by the
Queen of Fables. • Issue #6 of "
Flashpoint Beyond" and issue #1 of
The New Golden Age revealed that there was a
Golden Age superhero named
John Henry Jr. •
John Henry the Revelator by Constantine von Hoffman is a magical realist novel, in which a teenage boy in 1930s Alabama, Moses Crawford, acquires superpowers and helps challenge the nation's white power structure. The black community calls Crawford John Henry, after the folk hero, because no one is aware of his true identity. • He makes an appearance in the
IDW Publishing miniseries
The Transformers: Hearts of Steel, with the steel-driving machine being the alternate mode of the Autobot
Bumblebee, who ends up befriending Henry.
United States postage stamp In 1996, the
US Postal Service issued a John Henry
postage stamp. It was part of a set honoring
American folk heroes that included
Paul Bunyan,
Pecos Bill and
Casey at the Bat.
Video games • John Henry was featured as a fictional character in the 2014 video game
Wasteland 2. The story is referenced by various
NPCs throughout the game and is also available in full as a series of in game books which tell the story of the competition between John Henry and a contingent of robotic workers. • Big Bend Tunnel, is a location in
Fallout 76 • He also appeared as a playable character in the Nintendo 3DS game
Code Name: S.T.E.A.M. voiced by
Michael Dorn. • John Henry was a member of the original BLU team in
Team Fortress 2. ==See also==