A D A D A [Verse] D A My name is Patrick Russell, I've led a Christian life D E I speak of family history as it's transcribed by my wife D A D E I sit here in New Hampton, the year is nineteen ten A E D E A Looking back from Iowa towards mother Ireland [Verse] D A I was born in Templemore in eighteen twenty-five D E D Recalled a happy boyhood until my mother died A D E Starvation crept across the land, America's our dream A E D E A Six cruel weeks on stormy seas aboard the ship Tyrene [Chorus] E D E American primitive man A E D E In an American primitive land A E A D I washed my face in a frying pan A E A American primitive man [Verse] D A At last we docked in old Quebec, the English offered farming ground D E D But we'd lived too long under English rule, to United States we're bound A D E A By train and then by cattle boat, ah, the filth down in that hold E D E A E We landed in Milwaukee, trekked two hundred miles or more [Bridge] A E A E A sack of new potatoes was carried by each man A E A B7 Four spades for cultivation, we'd brought from Ireland E B7 E B7 We worked at splitting railroad ties, bought one old milking cow E B7 E A A quarter section uncleared land, two oxen and a plough [Verse] D A At night we heard the wolves howl on our newly purchased farm D E D And starving lads from the civil war took shelter in our barn A D E A The Larsens and the Cooneys, the Russells, the Molloys E D E A We tilled the soil of Iowa and grew a spate of girls and boys [Chorus] E D E American primitive man A E D E In an American primitive land A E A D A whiskey still in an oatmeal can A E A American primitive man E A I'm an American primitive man