Chorus
Roll on, Columbia, roll on
Roll on, Columbia, roll on
Your power is turning our
darkness to dawn
So roll on, Columbia, roll
on.
Green Douglas firs where
the waters cut through
Down her wild mountains and
canyons she flew
Canadian Northwest to the
oceans so blue
Roll on Columbia, roll on
Other great rivers add power
to you
Yakima, Snake, and the Klickitat,
too
Sandy Willamette and Hood
River too
So roll on, Columbia, roll
on
Tom Jefferson's vision would
not let him rest
An empire he saw in the Pacific
Northwest
Sent Lewis and Clark and
they did the rest
So roll on, Columbia, roll
on
It's there on your banks that
we fought many a fight
Sheridan's boys in the blockhouse
that night
They saw us in death but
never in flight
So roll on Columbia, roll
on
At Bonneville now there are
ships in the locks
The waters have risen and
cleared all the rocks
Shiploads of plenty will
steam past the docks
So roll on, Columbia, roll
on
And on up the river is Grand
Coulee Dam
The mightiest thing ever
built by a man
To run the great factories
and water the land
So roll on, Columbia, roll
on
These mighty men labored by
day and by night
Matching their strength 'gainst
the river's wild flight
Through rapids and falls,
they won the hard fight
So roll on, Columbia, roll
on
Written
by Woody Guthrie
Music based
on Goodnight Irene
Huddie
Ledbetter & John Lomax
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In the early 1940s, the federal Bonneville Power Administration produced
a movie encouraging rural residents in the Pacific Northwest to electrify
their homes and farms with the power being generated by the newly-built
Bonneville and Grand Coulee Dams on the Columbia River.
As part of the project, BPA hired folksinger Woody Guthrie at $270 for
30 days to write songs for the movie. Guthrie wrote 26 songs, the most
popular of which was "Roll On, Columbia, Roll On", an ode to the harnessing
of the North West's mightiest river. It was approved as the official Washington
state folk song by the Legislature in 1987.
Grand Coulee Dam on the Columbia
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