Cover of IN THE QUARTERMASTER'S STORES in 1942 - with Tom Glazer, Bess Lomax and her husband Baldwin Hawes on Asch album Songs Of The Lincoln Brigade as Quartermaster Song; the booklet with Smithsonian Folkways cd Songs Of The Spanish Civil War ('14) tells the whole story of this hymn ending up in a trivial attack on the quality of soldier's food in wartime; see There Is Power In The Blood
Cover of ALCOHOLIC BLUES, THE in 1948 - as The Winnsboro Cotton Mill Blues, crediting Lead Belly/traditional/Jim Garland (see: I Don't Want Your Millions, Mister); Jim was a songwriter and union man from east Kentucky, halfbrother of Aunt Molly Jackson (see: I Am A Union Woman) who became a Greenwich Village folk scene regular; B-side of The Death Of Harry Simms, a Jim Garland original
Cover of WRECK OF THE SIX WHEELER in 1957 - as Jay Gould's Daughter; Jay Gould (1836-1892) possessed a couple of railroad lines, the Union Pacific being one of them
Cover of WATER IS WIDE, THE in 1957 - learned it from his sister Peggy, then already living in England (where she also cut a Waly Waly)
Cover of OLD DOG BLUE in 1957 - as Old Blue (Go On Blue)
Cover of MY HORSES AIN'T HUNGRY in 1961 - both as My Horses Ain't Hungry and The Wagoner's Lad
Cover of WENN DER TOPF ABER NUN A LOCH HAT' in 1961 - as Hole In The Bucket; knew it first as Lieber Heinrich; his Where Have All The Flowers Gone is also a circular song
Cover of TSHOTSHOLOZA in 1963 - as Tshotsholoza (Road Song) at Carnegy Hall
Cover of THIS LAND IS YOUR LAND in 1963 - version including the critical verses; again in 2009, the year of his 90th birthday, at the inauguration of President Obama, along with his grandson Tao Rodriguez-Seeger and Bruce Springsteen
Cover of BEANS IN MY EARS in 1966 - on Dangerous Songs, whereby the beans were stuck in President Johnson's ears, dimming the protests against the Vietnam war