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Person Results

Text Identifier:"^my_faith_looks_up_to_thee$"
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Showing 21 - 28 of 28Results Per Page: 102050

Albert J. Holden

1841 - 1916 Person Name: A. J. H. Composer of "[My faith looks up to Thee]" in Songs of Faith, Hope, and Love A Founder of the American Guild of Organists and composer and editor of numerous pieces and collections of sacred music (of which perhaps Songs of Faith, Hope and Love, 1883, is best known), Albert Junos Holden was born in Boston on August 17, 1841. He studied in New York City, and served there as organist of the Church of the Divine Paternity (Universalist) and of the Church of the Puritans (Presbyterian). His sacred solo "In Heavenly Love Abiding" was recorded by the "Metropolitan Quartet" on an Edison Blue Amberol cylinder, No. 3813, in 1919. He died in Longmeadow, Massachusetts, on July 16, 1916. (source: AGO Founders Hymnal, p. 98)

Ebenezer Prout

1835 - 1909 Composer of "GREENWOOD" in Redemption Songs

Edward Bunnett

1834 - 1923 Person Name: E. Bunnett (1834- ) Composer of "KIRBY BEDON" in Plymouth Sunday-School Hymnal Edward Bunnet Canada 1834-1923. Born at Shipdham and educated at Norwich Cathedral Choir School, he was a talented chorister, composer, a brilliant organist, and had a sharp sense of humour. He married Emma Elizabeth McGowan in 1890, and they had three children. He became assistant organist at Norwich Cathedral for 22 years and later at St. Peter Mancroft, Norwich, for another 31 years. He was organist for the Norwich triennial Musical Festival for 33 years. Over his life he taught thousands of young people how to play the organ. He composed 16 choral works. John Perry

Charles Edward Pollock

1853 - 1928 Person Name: Chas. Edw. Pollock Composer of "HENDY" in The Songs of Zion Charles Edward Pollock USA 1853-1928. Born at Newcastle, PA, he moved to Jefferson City, MO, when age 17. He was a cane maker for C W Allen. He also worked 20 years for the MO Pacific Railroad, as a depot clerk and later as Assistant Roadmaster. He was a musician and prolific songwriter, composing 5000+ songs, mostly used in Sunday school settings and church settings. He took little remuneration for his compositions, preferring they be freely used. He produced three songbooks: “Praises”, “Beauty of praise”, and “Waves of melody”. In 1886 he married Martha (Mattie) Jane Harris, and they had three children: Robert, Edward, and a daughter. He died in Merriam, KS. John Perry ================= Pollock, Charles Edward. (Jefferson City, Missouri, 1853-1924). Records of Jefferson City indicate the following: 1897 clerk at depot; residence at 106 Broadway (with Mildred Pollock) 1904-1905 cane maker for C. W. Allen 1908-1909 musician; residence at 106 Broadway (with wife Matty) 1912-1913 residence at St. Louis Road, east city limits --Wilmer Swope, DNAH Archives Note: not to be confused with Charles Edward Pollock (c.1871-1924).

S. M. Bixby

1833 - 1912 Composer of "[My faith looks up to Thee]" in The Church and Home Hymnal Samuel M. Bixby was born on May 27, 1833 in Ha­ver­hill, New Hamp­shire. His com­pa­ny, S. M. Bixby & Company, man­u­factured shoe black­ings and shoe dress­ings, but mu­sic was his pas­sion. He was al­so a Sun­day school su­per­in­ten­dent and choir lead­er. He died on March 11, 1912 in Ford­ham, New York. His works in­clude: Church and Home Hym­nal, cir­ca 1893 Evangel Songs, cir­ca 1894 Gloria Deo: A Col­lec­tion of Hymns and Tunes for Pub­lic Wor­ship in All De­part­ments of the Church (New York: Funk & Wag­nalls Com­pa­ny, 1901) NN, Hymnary. Source: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/bio/b/i/x/bixby_sm.htm

Waldo S. Pratt

1857 - 1939 Person Name: W. S. P. Composer of "[My faith looks up to Thee]" in Songs of Worship Pratt, Waldo Selden. (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, November 10, 1857--July 29, 1939, Hartford, Connecticut). Williams College, A.B. 1878, graduate study at Johns Hopkins University in classical archaeology and esthetics. He was largely self-taught in music. He was assistant director of the New York Metropolitan Museum, 1880-1882, and then joined the faculty of the Hartford Theological Seminary where he spent the rest of his life, teaching hymnology, music, public worship and allied subjects. Over the years he lectured at Trinity College, Smith College, Mount Holyoke College, and the Institute of Musical Art, New York. He was president of the Music Teachers National Association, 1906-1908, editor of its Proceedings, 1906-1915. He was awarded the honorary Mus.Doc. degree by Syracuse University in 1898, and the L.H.D. degree by Williams College in 1929. A distinguished lexicographer, he contributed to several encyclopedias, edited the American Supplement to Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 1935, and compiled his own New Encyclopedia of Music and Musicians, 1924. Among other books, he wrote an outstanding History of Music, 1907, 1927 & 1935. As music historian he wrote many article in music and church journals. In the field of hymnology, he published The Music of the Pilgrims, 1921 (a study of Ainsworth's Psalter), "The importance of the French Psalter of 1562" in The Musical Quarterly, January 1935, and an edition of the French Psalter in 1939. Pratt was responsible for gathering the large Warrington-Pratt-Soule Collection of hymnals at Hartford Seminary--since 1976 in the Pitts Library, Candler Theological Seminary, Emory University, Atlanta. There is a fine tribute to him by Otto Kinkeldey in The Musical Quarterly, April, 1940. --Leonard Ellinwood, DNAH Archives

Clement McWilliam

1934 - 2007 Person Name: Clement Charles McWilliam, 1934- Composer of "DULWICH" in The Hymn Book of the Anglican Church of Canada and the United Church of Canada b. Clement Charles McWilliam, Jan. 19, 1934, Sydenham, South London; d. July 13, 2007; organist who championed English church music, to which he also made a contribution through his own compositions

H. T. Crossley

1850 - 1934 Person Name: H. T. C. Alterer of "My Faith Looks Up to Thee" in Songs of Salvation Hugh Thomas Crossley was part of Canadian revival team, along with John Edwin Hunter. They were both Methodist ministers. Dianne Shapiro, from Revivals and Roller Rinks: religion, leisure and identity in late-nineteenth-century small-town Ontario by Lynn Sorrel Marks, University of Toronto Press, 1996

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