America By March 1855, the song was already highly popular in
New York.
Stephen Foster's version was used during the
1856 presidential election when three parties adopted the tune for their campaign songs, one being Foster's "The Great Baby Show." It was also used for "Ballad of John Dean", a comic ballad based on a real-life event in New York, when the youngest daughter of wealthy liquor merchant John G. Boker eloped with her father's Irish coachman, John Dean, and was disinherited. In 1860, "
Sweet Betsy from Pike," using the "Villikins" tune but with fresh lyrics, was written by John A. Stone, a California-based songwriter. It was revived in the 1940s by the singer
Burl Ives. A song extolling
American Civil War generals
Sherman and
Sheridan was also composed to the "Villikins" tune.
Helen Hartness Flanders collected a version of the song titled "Dinah's Lovers" in
Rutland, Vermont, in 1930. It was sung by a seventh-generation Vermonter who had learned it from her grandmother, suggesting that the song or its source ballad had a longstanding tradition in the region.
Australia George Selth Coppin, the 'father of Australian theatre', had an early hit with the song and the farce. "Dinky di," a ballad sung by Australian soldiers in
World War I, used the tune with new lyrics satirising non-combatant army staff.
Newfoundland In 1869, it was used in
Newfoundland's "The Anti-Confederation Song," a political protest song against the country joining Canada.
England The song's great popularity was further boosted after it was adopted by
Sam Cowell, an Anglo-American
music hall artist who performed it successfully and became his signature piece. At least two farces were written to exploit the popularity of the song, one by J. Stirling Coyne,
Willikind and hys Dinah (1854), and one by
Francis C. Burnand. An illustrated book,
The Pathetic Legend of Vilikins and Dinah, was published in April 1854. At a state ball given by
Queen Victoria at
Buckingham Palace in June 1854, the band played a waltz version of "Villikins and his Dinah." It was also played by the Guards band during the
Siege of Sebastopol. In ''
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland'' by
Lewis Carroll, Alice's fictional cat, Dinah is based on one of two real kittens, Willikins and Dinah, owned by Alice's namesake
Alice Liddell and her brother Henry.
Ireland In Ireland, the tune was used for two songs:
The Old Orange Flute and
Six Miles from Bangor to Donaghadee. The Corrigan Brothers used the tune in their song
There's No One as Irish as Barack O'Bama, which achieved international popularity.
Scotland In Scotland, the tune was used for the song
The Wee Magic Stane, parodied the
1950 removal of the Stone of Scone. == Recorded performances ==