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Angels in Pigtails: The Story of the Obernkirchen
Children's Choir
** One of the Most Popular and Loved
Choirs in History **

One of the most Popular and Loved
Choirs in the world for over 20+ Years.
8 tours of the USA, and tours of many other countries.
This is their history and story.
From post-war
beginnings to a sound that healed the world
By D. E. McElroy
Content:
- Introduction: A Child’s Memory
- Chapter 1: Edith Möller and Post-War
Germany
- Chapter 2: The Eisteddfod
Breakthrough
- Chapter 3: “The Happy Wanderer” Goes
Global
- Chapter 4: The Media Years — Disney
and Sullivan
- Chapter 5: Tours and Triumphs
- Chapter 6: The Legacy of Edith
Möller
- Closing Reflection
- Appendix: Key Moments
- About the Author
Media
Gallery (Clickable YouTube Videos)
Selected Clickable
archival YouTube videos and broadcasts curated by the
author. For a fuller set, visit the International Music
Page.
Their History and Story
Introduction: A Child’s
Memory
I was a boy of eight or
nine when I sat down to watch Walt Disney’s Mickey
Mouse Club in 1956. Like so many other
children, I expected to see skits, songs, and
playful entertainment. That day, however, something
different was announced: a choir would be
performing.
At first, I felt
disappointed — a choir seemed too serious, not what
I was waiting for. But within a minute, everything
changed. What I heard was unlike anything before: a
sound so pure, so new, so filled with life and
harmony that it went straight into my soul.
The Obernkirchen
Children’s Choir performed four songs that day. When
they finished, I found myself wishing they would
keep singing forever. Even at school the next day,
the choir was all anyone could talk about. The
performance had reached into the hearts of children
everywhere, and I never forgot it.
Editor’s
note: Archival videos of these broadcasts
(including the Mickey Mouse Club and later Ed
Sullivan appearances) are curated on the author’s International
Music Page.
Chapter 1: Edith Möller and
Post- World War 2 Germany
Edith Möller (1916–1975) was
musically gifted, but she also trained as a
social worker and devoted her life to children
in need. In the rubble and displacement of
post-war Germany, she witnessed how music could
restore dignity and joy to young lives shaken by
loss.
Together with Erna Pielsticker,
she began gathering children to sing in
Obernkirchen. What started as a healing circle
of voices became, in 1948, a formal choir known
locally as the Schaumburger Märchensänger
(“Fairy-Tale Singers”), later widely recognized
as the Obernkirchen Children’s Choir.
Chapter 2: The Eisteddfod
Breakthrough
In 1953, the choir traveled to
Wales to compete at the International Musical
Eisteddfod in Llangollen. Their singing
astonished audiences and judges alike. Newly
crowned Queen Elizabeth II and the Duke of
Edinburgh attended the festival that summer,
adding a sense of historic occasion to the
choir’s triumph.
The Obernkirchen singers not only
won first prize, they also captivated the BBC
with a joyful off-program performance of Der
fröhliche Wanderer (Mein Vater war ein
Wandersmann), composed by Edith’s
brother, Friedrich Wilhelm Möller. The moment
was recorded and rebroadcast — a spark that
would soon become a global flame.
Their sweet smiles, braided hair,
and crystalline harmony earned them an
affectionate nickname that would follow them for
decades: “Angels in Pigtails.”
Chapter 3: “The Happy Wanderer”
Goes Global
The song quickly crossed borders,
translated into English as The Happy
Wanderer. By 1954 it had climbed to the
top of the UK charts, peaking at number two and
remaining on the air across the Commonwealth and
beyond.
In today’s language, the BBC
broadcast “went viral.” For a world still
recovering from war, these children’s voices
embodied innocence, resilience, and the simple
joy of walking into the open air and singing.
Chapter 4: The Media Years —
Disney and Sullivan
In 1956, the Obernkirchen
Children’s Choir appeared on Walt Disney’s
Mickey Mouse Club, performing four songs
and captivating millions of American families.
For many children, this was their first
experience of choral music — and it was
unforgettable.
The choir also performed multiple
times on The Ed Sullivan Show,
America’s premier variety stage. Through these
broadcasts and subsequent tours, the
Obernkirchen sound became part of living rooms
and memories around the world.
Chapter 5: Tours and Triumphs
Throughout the 1950s and 60s, the
choir toured widely — from the Royal Festival
Hall in London to stages across the United
States and beyond. In 1956 they acquired a villa
in Bückeburg that became a permanent home and
music school, offering stability and structure
for new generations of young singers.
Everywhere they went, they
carried the spirit of Obernkirchen: innocence
reborn, joy after sorrow, and the conviction
that music can gather the human family.
Chapter 6: The Legacy of Edith
Möller
Edith Möller guided the choir
until her passing in 1975 at the age of 58. Her
legacy lived on in the school she built, in her
brother’s melodies, and in the thousands of
children who found confidence and community
through song.
Today, recordings and films
preserve their sound. For those who heard them
in childhood, the memory remains bright. For new
listeners, the “Angels in Pigtails” continue to
sing of freedom, laughter, and hope.
Closing Reflection
The Obernkirchen Children’s Choir
was more than a musical ensemble. They were a
voice of healing for a broken world. Their
harmonies reached across borders, languages, and
generations — and for many of us, straight into
the soul.
Appendix: Key Moments
- 1948 — Choir
founded by Edith Möller in Obernkirchen, Germany.
- 1953 — First
prize at the International Eisteddfod, Llangollen;
Queen Elizabeth II present at the festival.
- 1954 — BBC
broadcasts “The Happy Wanderer” worldwide; UK
chart success.
- 1956 — Appearance
on Walt Disney’s Mickey Mouse Club;
American breakthrough.
- 1950s–60s —
International tours and multiple Ed Sullivan
Show performances.
- 1975 — Passing of
Edith Möller; the legacy continues through
recordings and alumni.
Picture Gallery
  

About the Author
D. E. McElroy
is the founder of World Christianship Ministries
and a lifelong researcher and curator of Near-Death
Experience (NDE) testimonies and
spiritually uplifting stories. His works blend
compassionate history, lived memory, and bright,
hopeful themes drawn from decades of ministry and
study. McElroy’s online
collections and books aim to help readers
feel the beauty of the human spirit — in music, love,
and the moments when light breaks through the
ordinary.
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