Whiskey on a Sunday (song)

"Whiskey on a Sunday" is a song written by Glyn Hughes (1932–1972), which became popular during the second British folk revival. It is sometimes called "The Ballad of Seth Davy".

The song laments the death in 1902 of a performer, Seth Davy, who sang and performed with a set of "dancing dolls" outside a public house in Liverpool. The dolls were attached to the end of a plank, and when the plank was struck and vibrated, this caused the dolls to "dance". Seth Davy was believed to be a Jamaican who performed outside the Coach & Horses pub, on the corner of Bevington Bush and Scotland Road, around the turn of the century. Ray Costello in his Black History, a history of Liverpool's black population, says that he was West African. Merseyside Biography Pages also say that he was a West African man, identify Sierra Leone as his birthplace and that his name was George Smart not Seth Davy. Bevington Bush is located just north of Liverpool City Centre but looks very different today.

The original song contains lyrics and idiom specific to Liverpool. In an Irish version, the first-line mention of Bevington Bush appears as Beggars Bush, referring to a location in Dublin. Other versions refer erroneously to Bebington, which is a township in Wirral, on the other side of the River Mersey.