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Students Create Historical Ballad of 91-year-old Town Resident
Click here to listen to song. (Note: Not sure why the video widget that used to be here no longer shows the audio player. Help would be appreciated. Just let me know what I did wrong in comments below.)
BENSON, VT -- Eighth graders at Benson Village School in Vermont have finished a collaborative project with village elders, each other, a musician and the Young Writers Project to create an original historical ballad.
The effort took place over a series of weekly workshops in school; students continued their writing between workshops on a special Web site created for the project where students wrote, commented on each other's ideas, listened to recordings of the elders' stories and listened to other ballads.
On Wednesday, May 27, before a packed gymnasium at the small Vermont school, musician Pete Sutherland and the students performed their ballad. A featured guest was the subject of the ballad -- 91-year-old Marion Munger who had no idea she was the subject of the final ballad. Her relatives had tricked her into coming to the school. "I was so surprised," she said, adding with her customary wry smile: "I'm glad I came."
This was the second ballad created by the collaboration between students, Sutherland and the Young Writers project, a Vermont-based nonprofit organization dedicated to engaging kids to write and finding them audience. Fourth grade students at Swanton School created the ballad "From a Bird's Eye View" which has been performed several times. To learn more about the project and hear other versions of the ballads and some of the storytelling by the elders, go to: ballad.ywpvt.net
More details
The project began with students meeting and talking to several elders in the community, who were asked to tell stories about their experiences on Lake Champlain. (The concept of the project was to create a historical ballad that focused on the Lake; YWP received a grant to work with the two schools from the Lake Champlain Basin Program.)YWP recorded the interviews and storytelling to post online. Sutherland led discussions with the students about what they found most intriguing and memorable.
The stories of Marion "Mimi" Munger seemed to be most appealing to the students. She told of her childhoold living on the edge of Lake Champlain in Benson Landing which is at the southern and most narrow portion of Lake Champlain. Her family ran a ferry to the other side -- New York State -- and back and her Mom did the daily mail run picking up mail at a nearby train station. Mimi and her sister Frieda went to school in New York, on the other side of the lake because it was easier than going into town. In the winter, they walked across the ice.
Students wrote about Mimi's stories. They were asked to create similies, or rhyming lines, or poems. They were asked to fill in gaps of information with imgained detail. Slowly, Sutherland got them to shape the concept of the stanzas; he would choose lines and put together a stanza and they'd then edit. He used the students' phrasing and sometimes Mimi's.
Sutherland, a remarkable musician specializing in traditional music, eventually introduced the musical themes and from there, the ballad came together.
The eighth graders were, at first, loathe to sing. But, eventually, they relented, in part because they saw the performance of the fourth graders of the other school that we worked with. Eighth graders were not going to be outdone by a bunch of fourth-graders!
The day of the performance the students practiced their song and went before the audience. They got a standing ovation and a few tears from Marion Munger.
The Rutland Herald wrote about the project on its Front Page and Vermont Public Radio had Sutherland sing some of the song on its Vermont Edition show and had a previous story on the project.
This comes from the Herald story:
"I think the real benefit was the collaboration, learning their work individually may have value, but they may have to take out some of their words to merge it with another student's work," teacher Mary Gunn said.
Students Amanda Doran, 14, and Shara James, 15, said they learned not only about songwriting but also about local history.
"I never knew about the ferries at the landing," she said. "I thought it was in the middle of nowhere and no one knew about it."
Both said they expected to try more ballad-writing on their own.
For more about the Young Writers Project, go to youngwritersproject.org
Below are the words:
MIMI'S SONG
Oh my name is Marion Munger
In Benson Landing I dwell
Been living right here for 91 years
And a story to you I can tell
We were crossing the lake to the school bus
We were pushing a boat on a sled
A boat past its prime full of books and supplies
How we wished we were back home in bed
For the shoreline just seemed to get further
Our noses ran hard from the cold
The ice was as thin as a page in a book
We wondered how long it would hold
"Hey Sis, we better get moving
Just hear that old ice boom and crack
It sounds like a shot from a cannon
Well, maybe the redcoats are back!"
It was going to high school the hard way
There was no other way we could go
But we always did manage to get there
On those winter days so long ago
Oh my name is Marion Munger
In Benson Landing I dwell
Been living right here for 91 years
And a story to you I can tell
My mother was rowing the ferry
The crossing was easy and fast
Just like my grandfather had taught her
And that's how our summer days passed
Til one afternoon on the fall pole
I jumped, and what do you think?
My sister went flying out over the rail
A splash, and down she did sink
"Freda fell into the water!"
"Where?" cried my mother, "oh, where?
"Under the boat!" - then we looked again
And there we could see it - her hair!
My mother dove in to retrieve her
A doctor onboard brought her 'round
She never was fond of the water
Since the day that she nearly was drowned
Oh my name is Marion Munger
In Benson Landing I dwell
Been living right here for 91 years
And a story to you I can tell
A man drove onto our ferry
When suddenly he realized
He didn't know which pedal was which
He was in for a big surprise
His Model T went for the water
When his foot thought the gas was the brake
And soon he'd provided a new mobile home
For the catfish down there in the lake
Somebody dove in to help him
While others stood helplessly by
In a moment he rose to the surface
"I forgot how to stop it," he cried
"Get a horse," an old-timer suggested
"Get two - or better yet four!"
They hitched up a team to the bumper
And that's how the car came ashore
Oh my name is Marion Munger
In Benson Landing I dwell
Been living right here for 91 years
And a story to you I can tell
With a basket of backyard apples
Our rowboat approached the big yacht
We were going to see the governor
Til voices called out, "No, you're not!"
Four handsome young sailors with orders
They stood looking down at our crew
My sister and I and two boys from nearby
It seemed our adventure was through
Then the governor's wife came a-running
Crying, "Don't chase the children away!"
The sailors they hauled up our basket
Not too glad, but they had to obey
Hard telling the fate of those apples
But we had a very nice chat
With a lady named Eleanor Roosevelt
In Benson - imagine that!
Oh my name is Marion Munger
In Benson Landing I dwell
Been living right here for 91 years
And a story to you I can tell
Crowd Power
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youngwritersproject.org
Winooski, Vermont, United States













Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (2)
at 21:25 on May 27th, 2009
It is an interesting project, and nice ballad.
Do you have more details to make this a post, should you need some help here to post at NP, please contact in PM any Staff member or Guest Editor.
Best of luck.
at 14:11 on May 28th, 2009
Thanks for the comment Paschen. I expanded the post to tell more about what we did and how we did it.
(HOWEVER, the audio in the video widget seems to have disappeared. We didn't have a video, just audio and that seemed to be working but all of a sudden no longer was in the video. So we reuploaded, but again, video widget appeared in text but no audio -- nothing. I've put a link in, but if anyone knows how to fix this, I'd appreciate it.)
geoff gevalt