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Uncle Frank Lyrics

They powered up the city with hydro-electric juice.
Now we got more electricity than we canever use.
They flooded out the hollow and all the folks down there moved out,
but they got paid so there ain’t nothin’ else to think about.

Some of them made their living cutting the timber down,
snaking it one log at a time up the hill and into town.
T.V.A. had a way to clear it off real fast.
Lots of men and machinary, build a dam and drown the rest.

Uncle Frank lived in a cabin down on Cedar Creek,
bought fifteen acres when he got back home from overseas.
Fifteen rocky acres, figured noone else would want,
'till all that backed up water had to have some place to go.

Uncle Frank couldn’t read or write
Never held down a job, or needed one in his life.
They assured him there’d be work for him in town building cars.
It’s already going down.

The cars never came to town and the roads never got built
and the price of all that power kept on going straight uphill
The banks around the hollow sold for lake-front property
where Doctors, Lawyers, and Musicians teach their kids to waterski.

Uncle Frank couldn’t read or write
so there was no note or letter found when he died.
Just a rope around his neck and the kitchen table turned on it’s side
Song Info
Submitted by
carolinaborn On Oct 29, 2009
3 Meanings

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Cover art for Uncle Frank lyrics by Drive-By Truckers

Another amazing DBT song. I can't believe this band isn't the biggest in the world with songs like this. It's pretty self explanatory; TVA and broken promises and the effects it had on Uncle tom

Cover art for Uncle Frank lyrics by Drive-By Truckers

I love this song so much. It's so gorgeous, but depressing.

Those last few lines get me every time.

Cover art for Uncle Frank lyrics by Drive-By Truckers

"Got back home from overseas." The only reason a illiterate Alabama farm boy like Uncle Frank would be overseas is to fight in a war - probably WW1.

The dam in question is likely Wheeler Dam (completed 1936) or perhaps Guntersville Dam (completed 1939) both of which were constructed by the TVA during the Depression and flooded a significant amount of Alabama farmland.

 
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