Go Down Moses
"Go Down, Moses," also rendered as "Let My People Go," is an anonymous African American spiritual that emerged among enslaved laborers in Virginia around the mid-19th century, adapting the biblical account from the Book of Exodus to symbolize aspirations for emancipation from chattel slavery.[1] The song's lyrics command Moses to confront Pharaoh with the demand to release the Israelites, paralleling the plight of American slaves under their masters, and it served as both a religious expression and a subtle signal of resistance.[2] First documented in print in 1861 as "O! Let My People Go: The Song of the Contrabands," it functioned as a rallying cry for freedmen at Fort Monroe during the Civil War, reflecting the spiritual's role in fostering hope amid oppression.[1] Abolitionist Harriet Tubman reportedly employed variants of the tune to alert potential escapees on the Underground Railroad, underscoring its practical utility in covert operations against the slave system.[3] Popularized post-war by the Fisk Jubilee Singers through concerts and publications starting in the 1870s, the spiritual gained widespread recognition and influenced subsequent arrangements in classical, jazz, and civil rights contexts, enduring as a testament to the resilience of those in bondage.[4]