The distribution of the song appears to be confined to Southern England, though an early broadsheet version comes from Dublin. Robert Bell claimed The song dated back to at least the 1750s, and observed that it was especially popular in South West England. He suggested that it related to "the days of transition, when the waggon displaced the packhorse."
Ralph Vaughan Williams collected it from Edward Rose, landlord of the Bridge public house at Acle, Norfolk on Tuesday 14 April 1908. Alfred Williams collected it from David Sawyer of
Ogbourne, Wiltshire.
Sabine Baring-Gould and
Cecil Sharp also collected it.
Standard references • Roud 1088
Broadsides J. F. Nugent and Co (Dublin) (1860–1899)
Other printed versions •
Ancient Poems, Ballads and Songs of the Peasantry of England ed by Robert Bell (1857) •
Frank Kidson found it in Yorkshire • "A Garland of Country Songs" by S Baring Gould and H Fleetwood Shepherd (probably collected between 1888 and 1917) :(Sabing Baring-Gould noted it from James Oliver of Launceton) • Alfred Williams "Folk songs of the Upper Thames" song dated c 1914-16 • "Twice 44 Sociable Songs" by
Geoffrey Shaw (1928) • "The Oxford Song Book" vol 2 (1963) • ''Everyman's Book of English Country Songs'' ed by Roy Palmer. (1979)
Recordings There are some pubs called "Jolly Waggoner", for example • - Ardley, Hertfordshire • - Hounslow, Middlesex == References ==