Shove Her Up! is a short fragment of a shanty published in Eckstorm and Smyth's Minstrelsy of Maine (1927). The caption supporting the lone verse reads:
This little song, apparently of negro origin, has been sung in Orland, ME for several generations, says Mrs. [Susie C. Young of Brewer, Maine, 1926]. Her mother, grandmother, and grandfather, Hugh Hill Carr, all used to sing it, and she thinks her grand-father may have learned it at sea. The children of the Carr family sang it when getting in wood. It seems to be a West India stevedore’s song, admirably adapted to rolling hogsheads of molasses up a gangplank and stowing them; but even a West India negro knew too much to prefer a guinea to a ten-pound note, though he might have sung this of a one-pound note.
Indeed, one finds reference to this "popular" rhyme (with one-pound note) in the English magazine Country Life (Vol. 13, 1903). "Probably this is a remnant of some topical song current at the time when there was a strong prejudice against paper money." Here there is little context but no speculation about a West Indian origin.
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Shove 'er up! Shove 'er up! Keep shoving of 'er up! Shove 'er up! Shove 'er up! Keep shoving of 'er up! Shove 'er in the gangway! Shove 'er in the boat! I'd rather have a guinea than a ten-pound note. Though a guinea it will sink And a note it will float, I'd rather have a guinea than a ten-pound note.