Several US presidential campaign songs were set to the tune of "Old Rosin the Beau", including for
Abraham Lincoln ("
Lincoln and Liberty").
William Henry Harrison was the subject of three separate songs set to the tune: "The Hero of Tippecanoe", "Tyler and Tippecanoe", and another, similar, song by the same name.
Henry Clay, Whig candidate in 1824, 1832, and 1844, was the subject of many more, in keeping with the Whig tradition of the time to glorify their candidates in song. George Hood's Henry Clay Minstrel, compiled in 1843, lists six: Harry, The Honest And True; The Ladies' Whig Song; The Whig Rifle Tune; The Saint Louis Clay Club Song; How Many Clay Men Are There, and Come All Ye Good Men Of The Nation. A 19th-century American hymn by Seymour Boughton Sawyer, "How bright is the day when the Christian", was set to the tune and published as "Sawyer's Exit" in the
Sacred Harp edition of 1850, in a three-part arrangement attributed to John Massengale. The tune has been used in "
Acres of Clams" (aka "Old Settler's Song"). It is also the melody to "
Down in the Willow Garden" (aka "Rose Connolly").
Randy Sparks later used it for the song "Denver", performed by
The New Christy Minstrels on their 1963
live album,
The New Christy Minstrels – In Person. The melody was also used in several
Irish rebel songs including "
The Boys of Kilmichael" " and "The Soldiers of
Cumann na mBan". On his album ''The Irish-American's Song'',
David Kincaid used the tune as the setting for a Confederate version of "Kelly's Irish Brigade", a song from the
American Civil War, earlier set to "
Columbia, Gem of the Ocean". Other uses of this tune include two broadsides by
Pete Seeger: of Clams", which dealt with the
Seabrook Station Nuclear Power Plant, and Back Old 1899", which dealt with the dismantling of a federal water quality statute. ==Full lyrics==