According to Professor
T. M. Devine in his book
The Scottish Nation 1700–2000 (Penguin, 2001), it was written as a
temperance song. It is found in the book,
The American Songster, printed in the US by W. A. Leary in 1845, and spread from Scotland to America from the temperance movement. There is another US printed version in the "Forget-Me-Not Songster" (
c. 1850), published by Locke. An alternative history is suggested by a collection of ballads, dated between 1813 and 1838, held in the
Bodleian Library. The printer, Catnach, was based in the Seven Dials area of London. The Bodleian bundle contains "The Wild Rover". The Greig-Duncan collection (compiled by
Gavin Greig, 1848–1917) contains six versions of the song. The song is number 1173 in the
Roud Folk Song Index, which lists 200 versions, many of which are broadsides, in chapbooks or song collections. About 50 have been collected from traditional singers. Of these, 26 were collected in England, 12 in Scotland, 3 in Ireland, 5 in Australia, 4 in Canada and 2 in the US. ==Influence==