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Text Identifier:to_our_redeemers_glorious_name
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George Kingsley

1811 - 1884 Composer of "HEBER" in Hymns, Psalms and Gospel Songs Born: July 7, 1811, Northampton, Massachusetts. Died: March 14, 1884, Northampton, Massachusetts. Kingsley played the organ at the Old South Church and Hollis Street Church in Boston, Massachusetts. He also taught music at Girard College in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, served as music supervisor for public schools in Philadelphia, and compiled a number of music books, including: Sunday School Singing Book, 1832 The Harmonist, 1833 The Social Choir, 1836 The Sacred Choir, 1838 The Harp of David, 1844 The Young Ladies’ Harp, 1847 Templi Carmina (Northampton, Massachusetts: 1853) The Juvenile Choir, 1865 --www.hymntime.com/tch

Ralph Harrison

1748 - 1810 Person Name: R. Harrison Composer of "[To our Redeemer's glorious name]" in The Standard Hymnal

William Tans'ur

1699 - 1783 Person Name: W. Tansur Composer of "[To our Redeemer's glorious Name]" in The Hymnal, Revised and Enlarged, as adopted by the General Convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America in the year of our Lord 1892 William Tansur, b. about 1700, Dunchurch of Barnes; d. 1783, St. Neots Evangelical Lutheran Hymnal, 1908 Also known as Tansur; Tanzer; le Tansur

Stanley

1767 - 1822 Person Name: Samuel Stanley Composer of "WARWICK" in Praise for the Lord (Expanded Edition) Samuel J. Stanley

William Jones

1726 - 1800 Composer of "ST. STEPHEN" in The Cyber Hymnal Born: Ju­ly 30, 1726, Lo­wick, North­amp­ton­shire, Eng­land. Died: Jan­u­ary 6, 1800, Hol­ling­bourne, Kent, Eng­land. Pseudonym: Jones of Nay­land. Jones was ed­u­cat­ed at Char­ter­house and Un­i­ver­si­ty Coll­ege, Ox­ford. He be­came Vi­car of Beth­ers­den, Kent (1764); Pluck­ley, Kent; and Pas­ton, North­amp­ton­shire; per­pe­tu­al Cur­ate of Nay­land, Suf­folk (1777); and Rec­tor of Hol­ling­bourne, Kent (1798). He be­came a Fel­low of the Roy­al So­ci­e­ty in 1775. His works in­clude: The Ca­tho­lic Doc­trine of the Trin­i­ty, 1756 Fairchild Dis­cours­es, 1775 Physiological Dis­qui­si­tions, 1781 A Treatise on the Art of Mu­sic, 1784 Church Piec­es for the Or­gan with Four An­thems in Score, 1789 Jones was a de­scend­ant of the Col. J. Jones, who was one of the sig­na­tor­ies to the death war­rant of King Charles I of Eng­land. He used to reg­u­lar­ly ob­serve Jan­u­a­ry 30 as a day of fast­ing and hu­mil­i­a­tion for his an­ces­tor’s sin. Music: ST. STEPHEN --www.hymntime.com/tch/

Henry Lahee

1826 - 1912 Composer of "NATIVITY" in The Pilgrim Hymnal Born: April 11, 1826, Chelsea, London, England. Died: April 29, 1912, London, England. Lahee studied under John Goss and William Sterndale Bennett. He played the organ at several churches, including Holy Trinity Church, Brompton (1847-74). He won prizes for his compositions in Bristol, Manchester, Glasgow, and London, and set to music poems by Edgar Allen Poe ("The Bells"), Henry Wadsworth Longfellow ("Building of the Ship") and Alfred Tennyson ("Sleeping Beauty"). His works include: Metrical Psalter, with William Irons, 1855 Famous Singers of Today and Yesterday, 1898 One Hundred Hymn Tunes Sources: Frost, p. 680 CS Concordance, pp. 246-47 Nutter, p. 460 --www.hymntime.com/tch

John Randall

1717 - 1799 Composer of "CAMBRIDGE" in The Primitive Baptist Hymnal

W. Wheal

1690 - 1727 Person Name: William Wheall Composer of "BEDFORD" in The Lutheran Hymnal William Wheal (Weale) c. 1690-1727 was the organist at St. Paul's, Bedford. He graduated with a Bachelor's in Music from Cambridge in 1719. The tune BEDFORD appeared in the "Psalm Singer's Magazine" of 1729, but it was probably first published earlier. It appears in The Divine Musick Scholars Guide by Francis Timbrell, which has an unknown date of publication, but copies found in personal libraries have dates beginning in 1723. Dianne Shapiro, from "The Musical Times" Vol. 49, #781 (Mar. 1, 1908) pp. 165-169

James Lucas

b. 1726 Composer of "SWANWICK" in American Lutheran Hymnal The exact birth & death dates of this person are largely unknown. We know he composed at least two hymn tunes, LUCAS and STANWICK, the latter of which might be sometimes conflated with a tune titled STANICK.

Mrs. H. B. Steele

1826 - 1902 Person Name: Harriet B. Steele Author of "To Our Redeemer's Glorious Name" in Songs Of The Church Steele, Harriet, née Binney, daughter of Amos Binney, D.D., and wife of Daniel Steele, D.D., wrote "Children, loud hosannas singing" (Palm Sunday), at the request of the Editors of the Methodist Episcopal Hymnal in 1877. Published therein, 1878. (Nutter's Hymn Studies, 1884, p. 338.) --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, Appendix, Part II (1907)

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