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Text Identifier:"^light_of_those_whose_dreary_dwelling$"
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W. K. Bassford

1839 - 1902 Composer of "[Light of those whose dreary dwelling]" in Laudes Domini Bassford, William Kipp was born on April 23, 1839, in New York City. He first studied harmony and composition under Samuel Jackson, who was for some time organist at St. Bartholomew’s Church in New York. While still young, he traveled extensively with a concert troupe as a pianist. He eventually settled in New York as a teacher, where he was living as of 1885. He wrote a number of secular songs, a mass in E♭, and some other church pieces. He also wrote a two-act opera, Cassilda. He died on December 22, 1902 in New York City. © The Cyber Hymnal™ (www.hymntime.org/tch)

Jean-Jacques Rousseau

1712 - 1778 Person Name: J. J. Rousseau Composer of "GREENVILLE" in Primitive Baptist Hymn and Tune Book Jean Jacques Rousseau; b. 1712, Geneva; d. 1778, Paris. Born in the city-state of Geneva in the Swiss Confederacy, his mother died whenhe was 9 days old. Rousseau's father was a watchmaker, but got into trouble with local officials and left the town, leaving his son with an uncle who had Rousseau and his own son board with a Calvinist minister for 2 years. He was later apprenticed to a notary and then to an engraver, who beat him. He ran away from Geneva at 16. In nearby Savoy, he sheltered with a Roman Catholic priest. He was sent to Italy to convert to Catholicism. He supported himself as a servant, secretary, and tutor. His life was filled with personal and political upheaval, and his writings infuriated many, to the point he had to leave several habitations. He had many friends and enemies due to his philosophies on life, religion, and God. He was concerned with decay of society (having experienced the French Revolution) and became a philosopher, writer, botanist, and composer, he influenced the Enlightenment period through his political philosophy, both in France and across Europe, including aspects of the French Revolution and overall development of modern political and educational thought. A member of the Jacobin Club, he was the most popular of philosophers. He believed that self-preservation was the highest virtue and that we should study to understand how society operates and where pitfalls lie. His personal family life was very chaotic as a result of his outspoken opinions and writings. He returned to his Calvinistic beliefs in later life, but digressed from them on several issues important to that church. John Perry

Ferdinand H. Himmel

Composer of "LIGHT OF THE WORLD" in The Methodist Hymnal

H. A. R. Horton

Composer of "[Light of those whose dreary dwelling]" in The Harp of Glory

Frederick Arthur William Docker

1852 - 1952 Composer of "TUNE 430" in The Evangelical Hymnal with Tunes

Darius E. Jones

1815 - 1881 Person Name: D. E. Jones (1815-1881) Composer of "STOCKWELL" in Hymns of the Ages

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