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Johannes Ewald

1743 - 1781 Author of "Rise, Hero Bold, From Calvary!" in Hymnal for Church and Home

A. Ewing

1830 - 1895 Person Name: Alexander Ewing Composer of "EWING" in Psalter Hymnal (Gray) Alexander C (Rex) Ewing United Kingdom 1830-1895. Born at Aberdeen,Scotland, he studied music and German at Heidelberg University and law in Aberdeen. However, he did not qualify as a lawyer. A member of the Aberdeen Harmonic Choir and the Hadyn Society of Aberdeen, he was regarded as the most talented young musician in the city. He became an author, musician, editor, composer, and translator. He married Juliana Horatia Gatty in 1867. She died in 1885, and he remarried Elizabeth Margaret Cumby in 1886. He was a career officer in the British Army's Commissariat Department and subsequently the Army Pay Corps. He served at Constantinople during the Crimean War, thereafter in China for six years, then in Ireland during the Fenian Uprising. He was then in New Brunswick just after England created the British North American Act, creating the Dominion of Canada. He then went to Fredericton, where he played the organ and sang at Christ Church Cathedral. He was transferred to Aldershot. In 1879 he went to Malta, then served in Ceylon before returning to England. He reached the rank of Lt. Col. He translated several works by other authors. He retired and spent the last six years of his life in Taunton, England, where he died. John Perry

George P. Ewens

1841 - 1926 Author of "Living beneath the shade of the cross" in Salvation Soldier's Song Book Ewens, George P. [or D.] (fl. 1880). An English major with the Salvation Army. Caroline L. Goodenough, High Lights on Hymnists (1931), quotes S.C. Gantlett of the British Salvation Army to the effect that Major Ewens was the author of "If you want pardon, if you want peace." In America, it first appears anonymously in an 1880 Salvation Army songbook, but in their 1953 songbook, Ewens is named as the author. Ewens' hymn has the refrain "Living beneath the shade of the cross." The hymn has been attributed to several other writers over the years, but each time with a different refrain so one can only conclude that Ewens wrote the basic hymn while others arranged it with different refrains. --Leonard Ellinwood, DNAH Archives

John Wesley Ewing

1845 - 1921 Composer of "GRIZZLY DOME" in The Cyber Hymnal

J. C. Ewing

1849 - 1937 Composer of "STURGIS" in The Cyber Hymnal John Cook Ewing (1849-1937), who usually referred to himself as J.C. Ewing, was the pioneer Brethren musician, music teacher and composer. Before providing a synopsis of Ewing’s life and work it is appropriate to identify the Brethren of whom we are speaking, for several denominations have the term Brethren in their names, and to relate the religious and hymnological culture within which J. C. Ewing served. In the nineteenth century this particular body called themselves The Fraternity of German Baptists and the German Baptist Brethren. Their beginnings in 1708 were in the little village of Schwarzenau, Germany under the leadership of Alexander Mack Sr. (1679-1735). Due to religious persecution of Anabaptists, most of these Brethren emigrated for America by the 1730’s. By the 1880’s the Brethren were divided over several issues: notably whether or not they should be engaged in higher education, have Sunday Schools, participate in evangelistic endeavors, call persons to serve in foreign missions, sing from hymnals with musical notation, and use musical instruments in worship. The controversies led to schism and the establishment of three distinct Brethren groups: the more cautious, conservative parent body which retained the name German Baptist Brethren, a more “progressive” wing known as The Brethren Church, and the ultra-conservatives who referred to themselves as the Old German Baptist Brethren. Today there are several groups which share this common heritage: the German Baptist Brethren (renamed the Church of the Brethren in 1908, with administrative offices in Elgin, Illinois), The Brethren Church headquartered in Ashland, Ohio, The Fellowship of Grace Brethren Churches, Winona, Lake, Indiana (also known for business purposes as Charis Fellowship), the Conservative Grace Brethren Churches International, the Old German Baptist Brethren New Conference, and the Dunkard Brethren Church. The first Brethren hymnal in America was Das Kleine Davidische Psalterspiel der Kinder Zions (the Small Davidic Psaltery of the Children of Zion), a hymnbook for which early Brethren leaders and the prominent colonial American printer, Christopher Sauer, collaborated for its production in Germantown, Pennsylvania. In 1791 came the fifth edition of the Psalterspiel, and also the first English language hymnal of the Brethren, The Christian’s Duty. With this English language hymnbook began the second of two entirely separate tracks of Brethren hymnals in the nineteenth century. Over the course of the century there was a gradual shift to the English language among the Brethren and the demise of their hymnic heritage and original piety. During the first half of the nineteenth century the Brethren patterned their worship services according to what they believed to be the primitive church’s inclusions of singing, praying, reading Scripture, and preaching. Congregational hymn singing was “lined” and often led by a deacon serving as song leader (Vorsänger). Hymns were sung slowly and thoughtfully, with every stanza of a hymn sung, and rendered unaccompanied and in unison. Although it was stated at the denomination’s Annual Meeting of 1844 that four-part harmony was not acceptable as well as the use of musical instruments, four-part singing was evidenced in some Brethren congregations. Brethren hymnbooks in mid-century continued to be printed without musical notation. According to Annual Meeting decisions in 1825 and 1838, Brethren were also prohibited from providing a meeting place for or teaching in “singing schools.” The prohibition was moderated in later meetings (1862, 1874), most likely due to the fact that there was an interest in learning how to sing, and the pioneer Brethren musician traveled as a singing school teacher. John Cook Ewing, born near Benton, Holmes County, Ohio May 8, 1849, studied music with some of the foremost teachers of that era, including composer George Frederick Root of Chicago. Ewing became a skilled organist, pianist and song leader, a prolific composer of hymn tunes, and a very competent music teacher. Before the divisions of the early 1880’s, he served as the first instructor of music at the Brethren-affiliated Huntingdon Normal School (later Juniata College) in Huntingdon, Pennsylvania. He was entrusted with the 1879 revision of The Brethren’s Tune and Hymn Book (1872), the first Brethren hymnal with musical notation, set with shape-notes. Included were seventeen hymn tunes composed by Ewing. After the schism J. C. Ewing affiliated with The Brethren Church and was invited to be the first professor of music at the denomination’s newly established institution of higher learning, Ashland College, Ashland, Ohio. He was also called upon to serve as compiler and editor of the first of only two hymnals produced by The Brethren Church, The Brethren Hymnody with Tunes (for Sanctuary, Sunday School, Prayer Meeting, and Home Circle), published by J. C. Ewing in 1884 at Wilmington, Ohio, and set in round-note musical notation. Ewing contributed fourteen tunes to this hymnal. John Cook Ewing spent most of his career as a public school music teacher. He was teacher and music supervisor for the Lebanon, Ohio schools, and later the first music teacher of the South Bend, Indiana public schools. He also served as music director and deacon at the South Bend Brethren Church. In his later years he was music director at the First Brethren Church of Dayton, Ohio. Ewing died in Dayton May 27, 1937 and was buried in the Bear Creek Cemetery on Union Road in Dayton. Peter E. Roussakis

George Wilmeth Ewing

1923 - 2010 Person Name: George W. Ewing Author of "Sin Sorrow of Six Thousand Years" in Great Songs of the Church (Revised) George Ewing earned an undergraduate degree at Abilene Christian University and M.A and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Texas at Austin. He preached in Churches of Christ and served as a professor of English at Abilene Christian University from 1955 to 1992. He edited The Well-Tempered Lyre: Songs and Poems of the Temperance Movement (SMU Press). He had an interest in music throughout his life and wrote the hymn, “Sin sorrow of six thousand years” which was published in Great Songs of the Church, Revised, by ACU Press in 1986. - Source: Monty Lynn

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