"Were You There (When They Crucified My Lord)" is an African-American spiritual that was first printed in 1899. It was likely composed by enslaved African Americans in the 19th century.[1]
There are some of the more recent plantation hymns which have added an element of culture without diminishing religious fervor. One of the best of these is "Were You There When They Crucified My Lord?" It dwells on the details of the crucifixion, and the separate stanzas add only a single line each to the song. It is a tender and beautiful hymn, the climax of its effect depending largely on the hold and slur on the exclamation "Oh!" with which the third line begins, and the repetition and expression of the word "tremble! tremble! tremble!"
—William Eleazar Barton, Old Plantation Hymns (1899)
^The Jubilee Singers the song at the 1898 Annual Meeting of the American Missionary Association according to The American Missionary - Volume 52 (1898) p. 160 (accessible on Google Books)
^Report of the First General Convention of the National Florence Crittenton Mission and School for Methods (Mountain Lake Park MD). July 1897, p. 100 accessible at https://babel.hathitrust.org
^"CRITTENTON'S FAREWELL,"Los Angeles Herald, Volume 25, Number 336, 1 September 1896, p. 3