On the Jericho Road

"On The Jericho Road"
Song by Elvis Presley, James Blackwood from the album We Called Him Mr. Gospel Music: The James Blackwood Tribute Album
Published Greenhaw Records
Recorded 2002
Genre Southern-Country Gospel
Label Greenhaw Records
Writer(s) Don and Marguerete McCrossan
Producer(s) Art Greenhaw

'The Rev. Don McCrossan (1908-1989) was an evangelist who in 1943 became director of the Victory Service Club, an outreach ministry to military personnel established the previous year by the Union Rescue Mission in Los Angeles. As his obituary explains, “Through World War II and the Korean and Vietnam wars, [the VSC] was a place where young men and women in a strange city could gather for food and friendship. It also was a place of faith, McCrossan said in a 1961 interview, a place where tens of thousands formally accepted Christ and hundreds more were inspired to enter various ministries.” (LA Times, April 15, 1989). According to the URM website, the Victory Service Club was “a spiritual haven and gathering place for nearly two million servicemen during the war years.” McCrossan served as director until his retirement in 1975. McCrossan was also a singer and a composer of gospel songs and held down a side job as radio announcer on station KGER in Long Beach, California. He secured the copyright to “On the Jericho Road” in 1928 when he was only 20.[1]

"On the Jericho Road" was written in 1928 by Don and Marguerete McCrossan [2] and recorded by Elvis Presley. A notable version is found on the Grammy Award-Winning album, We Called Him Mr. Gospel Music: The James Blackwood Tribute Album on Greenhaw Records.[3] It was recorded by the Chuck Wagon Gang in 1941 later by the Old Fashioned Revival Hour Quartet accompanied by Rudy Atwood on piano. It has been extremely popular with Southern gospel groups and country music singers over the years.

References

  1. David Clyde Jones, "Donald S. McCrossan" in Hymnary.org, posted November 17, 2016.
  2. years., David Neale, Elvis Presley fan for over 50. "Elvis Presley: Original Version Recordings of Songs He Sang". davidneale.eu. Retrieved 2016-11-15.
  3. "We Called him Mr. Gospel Music: The James Blackwood Tribute Album". theconnextion.com. Retrieved 15 November 2016.


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