by Charly Mann
Elizabeth (Nevills) Cotton was born at the railroad tracks between Chapel Hill and Carrboro in 1895. By the time she was eleven she was a sklilled guitarist and banjo player. She wrote one the best loved American songs, Freight Train, when she was about 15 and living on Llyod Street.

Like many black women at the time who lived in Chapel Hill or Carrboro, Elizabeth worked as a maid in the homes of white families. Well into the 1960s most Chapel Hill families had black maids working for them one or more days a week.

Elizabeth eventually left Chapel Hill, settling in Washington D.C., where she became a maid for Seeger family. This family inclued the great folksingers Pete, Mike, and Peggy Seeger. It was while playing guitar for them that her musical talents were finally reconized. She died at age 92, in 1987.


Included songs here are Elizabeth Cotton singing Freight Train and Going Down The Road Feeling Bad, as well as the best known version of Freight Train by Peter, Paul & Mary. By a wonderful coincidence on February 14, 1964, Peter, Paul, & Mary came to Raleigh to perform at Reynolds Coliseum. That night they performed Freight Train, as well as a flawless version of Going Down the Road Feeling Bad; a song that they sadly never recorded. Sitting one row in front of my sister and me at that concert was another Chapel Hill family, the Taylors, who had a number of children who would achieve a bit of notoriety in the music business.


This is our autographed program from the 1964 Peter, Paul, & Mary Reynolds Coliseum Concert

What is it that binds us to this place as to no other? It is not the well or the bell or the stone walls. or the crisp October nights. No, our love for this place is based upon the fact that it is as it was meant to be, The University of the People.



My father (class of '63) told a story of picking up PP&M from the Raleigh airport for this concert. He claims they ran the idea of "Puff the Magic Dragon" song by him on the ride to the venue. Unbelieveable.