Do They Miss Me At Home?

Do They Miss Me At Home? is an 1852 song composed by Sidney Martin Grannis with lyrics by Caroline Atherton Mason. It enjoyed great popularity upon its publication, and was popular among soldiers during the Civil War.

Background
The lyrics to the song were originally written as a poem by Caroline Atherton (Briggs) Mason (1823-1890). It was published in the Salem Register in 1844, where young Caroline published a number of poems under the name "Caro". Her first volume of verse appeared in January 1852, Utterance, or Private Voices to the Public Heart, and Do They Miss Me At Home? appeared as the first poem. Utterance received a fairly warm reception from literary reviewers.

The poem was set to music by S.M. Grannis, and the song published by Oliver Ditson's music publishing house by mid-1852. The original sheet music was credited to Grannis with no mention of the author of the lyrics. The sheet music touted that it was being "sung by the Ampheons", a singing group which included Grannis, "at their principal concerts throughout the country."

Reception
The song was "universally popular in its time", and its popularity carried into the Civil War, where Mason's lyrics, written as a homesick girl away from home at school, readily translated to the plight of the soldiers on both sides, and was among the songs soldiers would sing.

The song generated a number of responses, as well as a parody titled Do They Miss Me In The Trenches? Poet James Whitcomb Riley wrote of its lasting popularity in an 1885 poem titled, "A Old-Played Out Song".