John Pond Ordway (August 1, 1824 – April 27, 1880)[1] was an American medical doctor, composer, music entrepreneur, and politician.
Biography
Ordway was born in Salem, Massachusetts. In the mid-1840s John Ordway and his father Aaron opened a music store in Boston. John was also a music publisher and composer; his song Twinkling Stars are Laughing, Love (1855) was recorded by the Hayden Quartet as late as 1904. Around 1845 he organized Ordway's Aeolians, a blackface minstrel troupe[2] which performed at Ordway Hall in Boston and also nationally to promote Ordway's publishing business.[3][4] Future bandleader/composer Patrick Gilmore worked in Ordway's store and also appeared with the Aeolians. James Lord Pierpont's first major composition "The Returned Californian" in 1852 was written expressly for Ordway and his troupe. A number of 19th century songs were written for the Aeolians and/or dedicated to Ordway, including Jingle Bells.[5][6][7]
Ordway's composition "Dreaming of Home and Mother" (1868) was a very popular sentimental song of the Civil War era, and continues to be played; it is popular in East Asia in adapted versions.[8] In 1907, a Japanese version with lyrics entitled 旅愁 (Loneliness in Travel) by Kyukei Indou was published in a middle school song book and became popular immediately. Having heard the song while studying at Tokyo Fine Arts and Music School, Li Shutong adapted it to Chinese with title of 送別 (Farewell) in 1915.[9] It was used during the closing ceremony of the 2022 Beijing Olympics.[10]
Ordway was also responsible for founding the Massachusetts Angler's Association, the forerunner to the Massachusetts Fish and Game Association. He died in Boston, Massachusetts.
His nephew Lucius Pond Ordway (the son of his older brother Aaron Ordway) was a major backer of 3M in its early days and served as its president. Another of Aaron's sons, Samuel Hanson Ordway, was a prominent New York City lawyer and civil service reformer; Samuel's wife was painter Frances Hunt Throop.