Annotation:Proudlock's Hornpipe
X:1 T:Proudlock’s Hornpipe M:4/4 L:1/8 K:G |:D2|GDGB AGAB|G2 gf gedc|(3Bcd BG (3ABc AF|GFGA BFED| GDGB AGAB|G2 gf gedc|(3Bcd BG (3ABc AF|G2B2G2:| |:Bc|dedc B2 (3GAB|cdcB A2Bc|dedc B2g2|agfe dcBA| GDGB AGAB|G2 gf gedc|(3Bcd BG (3ABc AF|G2B2G2:|]
PROUDLOCK'S HORNPIPE. AKA – “Lewis Proudlock's.” AKA and see “Belle Isle's March," "General Monk's Goosestep," "General Monk's March," "Monck's March.” English, Hornpipe. England, Northumberland. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. This version is apparently derived from smallpipe playing. The tune is a variant of “Monk's March.” According to Peter Kennedy who recorded Northumbrian smallpiper Jack Armstong (1904–1978) in 1954, Lewis "Lewie" Proudlock was a peripatetic fiddler and fisherman from Northumberland, whose granddaughter played with Armstrong. More recently a fuller picture of a Lewis Proudlock (1838-1914) has taken shape, who is probably our man, though he was neither peripatetic nor a fisherman. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lewis_Proudlock . The name is not uncommon in the family and there remains the possibility that another, older, person is involved, but as the other, "Proudlock's Fancy", tune can be no earlier than mid-nineteenth century that seems unlikely.
The hornpipe is sometimes erroneously attributed to James Hill (1811-1853), the renowned Tyneside composer of hornpipes, among them "Proudlock's Fancy." The similarity in titles is the cause of the confusion.