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Showing 21 - 29 of 29Results Per Page: 102050

E. T. Cassel

1849 - 1930 Person Name: E. Taylor Cassel Hymnal Number: d9 Author of "I bring my all to Jesus" in The Beginners' Choir No.2

DeWitt Clinton Huntington

1830 - 1912 Person Name: D. W. Huntington Hymnal Number: d7 Author of "The home over there" in The Beginners' Choir No.2 Rv DeWitt Clinton Huntington USA 1830-1912. Born at Townsend, VT, one of nine siblings, he attended Syracuse University, NY, and was ordained a Methodist Episcopal minister in 1853. He married Frances Harriett Davis in 1853, and they had three children: Charles, Thomas, and Horace. After her death in 1866, he married Mary Elizabeth Moore in 1868, and they had a daughter, Mary Frances. He pastored in Rochester, NY, (1861-71 & 1876-79), Syracuse, NY, (1873-76), Olean, NY, (1885-89), Bradford, PA, (1882-85 & 1889-91), and Lincoln, NE, (1891-96), where he became a Methodist District Superintendent of relief work. At his pastorate he also personally designed and oversaw construction of a brick sanctuary seating over 1100 people. A depression in 1893 caused him to forego salary for a number of months while pastoring. As things improved, he designed an addition to the church that was finally built two decades later. He was prevailed upon to serve as Chancellor of Nebraska Wesleyan University (1898-1908), at first without pay, and asked more than once to stay after desiring to retire. In 1908 he became Chancellor emeritus and assumed the role of professor of English Bible & Ethics. He also wrote several books, one titled, “Is the Lord among us?”. Another: “Half century messages to pastors and people”. Another: “A documentary history of religion in America since 1877”. He also served on the boards of the local telephone company and Windom Bank. He contracted pleura-pneumonia and died in Lincoln, NE. A Lincoln, NE, street is named for him, as is an elementary school. He was opposed to football, thinking it had no place in a proper Christian institution, but football was re-instituted at the college after his death. John Perry

Thomas Norton

1532 - 1584 Hymnal Number: d20 Author of "Praise ye the Lord, for it is good" in The Beginners' Choir No.2

C. E. Cooper

Hymnal Number: d28 Author of "When war is no longer learned" in The Beginners' Choir No.2

C. C. Cox

1816 - 1882 Hymnal Number: d23 Author of "Evening shades" in The Beginners' Choir No.2 Cox, Christopher Christian, M.D., was a Maryland physician, and long prominent in the public service. Born at Baltimore, Aug. 28, 1816, and graduated at Yale College, 1835. He practised medicine in Baltimore, 1838, and in Talbot County, Maryland, 1843. In 1861 he became Brigade Surgeon U. S. A., and resided in Washington. He died Nov. 25, 1882. He was a member of the Protestant Episcopal Church. His hymns in common use are:— 1. Silently the shades of evening. Evening. Written in 1840 or 1846, and published in Woodworth's Cabinet, 1847, with music. It is much used in American hymn-books. 2. The burden of my sins, 0 Lord. Lent. Appeared in the Cantate Domino, Boston, 1859, together with two additional originals and two translations. These hymns are unknown to English collections. [Rev. F. M. Bird, M.A.] --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

James Callaway Midyett

Hymnal Number: d19 Author of "Praise waiteth for thee, O God" in The Beginners' Choir No.2

Thomas Bryan Weaver

Person Name: T. B. Weaver Hymnal Number: d30 Author of "For mother's sake" in The Beginners' Choir No.2

Lorenz Publishing Co.

Person Name: Lorenz Pub. Co. Publisher of "" in The Beginners' Choir No.2

George K. Thompson

Person Name: G. K. Thompson Hymnal Number: d5 Author of "Awake, with cheerful heart" in The Beginners' Choir No.2

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