“Sixteen Tons” is a song written by Merle Travis about a coal miner, based on life in the mines of Muhlenberg County, Kentucky. Travis first recorded the song at the Radio Recorders Studio B in Hollywood, California, on August 8, 1946. Cliffie Stone played bass on the recording. It was first released in July 1947 by Capitol on Travis’s album Folk Songs of the Hills. The song became a gold record.
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The sole authorship of “Sixteen Tons” is attributed to Merle Travis on all recordings[4] beginning with Travis’s own 1946 record and is registered with BMI as a Merle Travis composition. George S. Davis, a folk singer and songwriter who had been a Kentucky coal miner, claimed on a 1966 recording for Folkways Records to have written the song as “Nine-to-ten tons” in the 1930s;[5] he also at different times claimed to have written the song as “Twenty-One Tons”. There is no supporting evidence for Davis’s claim. Davis’s 1966 recording of his version of the song (with some slightly different lyrics and tune, but titled “Sixteen Tons”) appears on the albums George Davis: When Kentucky Had No Union Men[6] and Classic Mountain Songs from Smithsonian. The line “another day older and deeper in debt” from the chorus came from a letter written by Travis’s brother John. This and the line “I owe my soul to the company store” are a reference to the truck system and to debt bondage. Under this scrip system, workers were not paid cash; rather they were paid with non-transferable credit vouchers that could be exchanged only for goods sold at the company store. This made it impossible for workers to store up cash savings. Workers also usually lived in company-owned dormitories or houses, the rent for which was automatically deducted from their pay. In the United States the truck system and associated debt bondage persisted until the strikes of the newly formed United Mine Workers and affiliated unions forced an end to such practices. The eponymous “sixteen tons” refers to a practice of initiating new miners. In the mid-1920s, a miner tended to haul eight to ten tons per day, whereas for new miners, other miners would slack off so the new miner could “‘make sixteen’ on his very first day.”