Annotation:Oyster River Reel (The)
X:1 T:Oyster River M:2/4 L:1/8 R:Reel B:O'Flannagan - The Hibernia Collection (Boston, 1860, p. 7) Z:AK/Fiddler's Companion K:G D|GB B/A/G/A/|Be e/f/g/e/|dB AG/A/|B/c/B/A/ G/F/E/D/| GB B/A/G/A/|Be e/f/g/e/|dB AG/A/|BG G:| |:e/f/|g>a g/f/e/d/|gg ag/a/|bb ag/a/|bb/a/ g/f/e/d/| e/f/g/a/ g/f/e/d/|gg ag/a/|bb ag/a/|bgg:| |:BB B/c/B/A/|GE E2|AA A/B/A/G/|FDD| dc dA|B/A/B/c/ dA/G/|FD ED/E/|FDD:|]
OYSTER RIVER (REEL), THE. AKA - "Oyster River," "Oyster River Hornpipe." American, Irish; Reel or Hornpipe. G Major (Cole, Kerr, Phillips, Songer): G Major {'A' and 'B' parts} & D Major {'C' part} (Ford, Sweet). Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB (Cole, Kerr, Phillips, Songer, Sweet): AABCC (Ford). This polka-like reel is identified as an "Irish Reel" in Kerr's Merry Melodies vol. 1 (c. 1880's), perhaps on the strength of its previous printing in Patrick O'Flannagan's Hibernia Collection (Boston, 1860). However, the tune was a staple of Boston publisher Elias Howe's publications, including O'Flannagan's and William Bradbury Ryan's Ryan's Mammoth Collection (1883). The first strains of the Irish polkas "Church Street Polka (1)," "Gurteen Cross," and "St. Mary's" are cognate with "Oyster River," and, while the "Oyster River" seems to predate those tunes and may be of American origin, it does not preclude an earlier version (so far unsurfaced) with an Irish provenance.
The title perhaps refers to Oyster River, New Hampshire. The hamlet of Oyster River Plantation was the scene of a devastating massacre during King William's War in 1694. Abenaki Indians, incensed at abuses from the English population and encouraged by the French, killed and captured nearly 100 settlers, one third of the population.