This song appears in Frank Moore's Anecdotes, Poetry, and Incidents of the War (published 1866). It is attributed to a foretop-man aboard the C.S.S. Florida, the first foreign-built confederate commerce raider. In September 1862, the ship entered the Mobile harbor, sustaining moderate damage. This song begins on the morning of January 16, 1863, as the Florida returns through the Union blockade, avoiding her pursuers. She would roam the Carribean for two years until being seized in Brazil in October 1864 in the Bahia incident.

Moore's book gives the air as "Red, White, and Blue (Southern version)". The lyrics survived through the oral tradition, making their way into the unpublished papers of Joanna Colcord. Bob Webb unearthed these manuscripts and brought an abridged version of the song to life for his 2008 album, From Salthouse Dock.

The song also appears on the album Civil War Naval Songs (Smithsonian Folkway Records CD 40189, 2011) where it is set to the hymn "Solicitude" from the 1854 edition of William Walker’s The Southern Harmony and Musical Companion.