A federal judge ruled (PDF) on Friday that the most famous verse of the civil rights anthem “We Shall Overcome” is not copyrighted.
The ruling is a decisive, but still incomplete, win for the two plaintiffs. One of those plaintiffs is a charity group called the “We Shall Overcome Foundation” that’s making a movie about the song, and the other is Butler Films LLC, a company that paid $15,000 to license just several seconds of the song for the movie “Lee Daniels’ The Butler.”
Plaintiff’s attorney Randall Newman hopes the two organizations will represent a class-action case composed of people who were charged royalties for using the song.
The foundation’s website says its film will demonstrate “extraordinary evidence that ‘We Shall Overcome’ was unlawfully misappropriated from the African-American Church and belongs in the public domain.”
Before he filed the lawsuit challenging the “We Shall Overcome” copyright, Newman successfully wiped out the copyright on “Happy Birthday,” putting that song in the public domain and collecting a $14 million settlement from its previous owner, Warner/Chappell.
In a 66-page opinion, US District Judge Denise Cote held that the versions of “We Shall Overcome” in copyright applications dated 1960 and 1963 were not “sufficiently original to qualify as a derivative work.” They differed by only two words from the “We Shall Overcome” that was published in a 1948 songbook by People’s Songs, Inc., which listed Pete Seeger as its chairman. The copyright for that song was never renewed, and it’s now in the public domain.
Copyright applications filed in 1960 and 1963 that resulted in the copyright by the current purported owners, Ludlow Music and The Richmond Organization, made only tiny changes to the lyrics of the first verse, which is also the fifth verse. The 1960 version reads as follows:
We shall overcome,
We shall overcome,
We shall overcome some day;
Oh, deep in my heart,
I do believe,
We shall overcome some day.
That’s nearly identical to the “People’s Song” version, which uses “will” rather than “shall” and “down in my heart” rather than “deep in my heart.”



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