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Hymnal, Number:boh1898
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Showing 201 - 210 of 253Results Per Page: 102050

W. C. Morris

Hymnal Number: d317 Author of "Come into the fold" in Bells of Heaven

Margarette W. Snodgrass

Hymnal Number: d386 Author of "This is the sweetest story, wonderful, strange" in Bells of Heaven

A. Bunyan Little

1873 - 1955 Hymnal Number: d73 Author of "Come to Jesus, I believe him" in Bells of Heaven Born: 1873, Cleveland, Arkansas. Died: 1955, Waco, Texas. Little was the son of Thomas Bunyon Little and Nancy Adeline Tolson, and husband to Willie Maud Little. His works include: Sacred Chimes: A Book of New and Old Hymns and Tunes, with John C. F. Kyger (Waco, Texas: Kyger Music, 1900) http://www.hymntime.com/tch/bio/l/i/t/little_ab.htm

Dwight M. Pratt

1852 - 1922 Hymnal Number: d270 Author of "O youth with hearts aspiring" in Bells of Heaven

Annie Cummings

Hymnal Number: d99 Author of "Ever will I pray" in Bells of Heaven 19th Century

Sidney S. Brewer

1804 - 1889 Person Name: Sydney Smith Brewer Hymnal Number: d405 Author of "Watchman, tell me, does the morning" in Bells of Heaven Rv Sidney Smith Brewer USA 1804-1889. Born in New Jersey, he became an Advent Christian Church minister. He was also a writer. He wrote a book about the second coming of Christ in the 1840s. He married Sarah Ann Conger, and they had two children, a daughter, Maria Elizabeth, and a son, Charles F. He died in New Bedford, MA. John Perry

Arthur W. French

Hymnal Number: d417 Author of "Some sweet day" in Bells of Heaven 19th Century

Francis L. Keeler

Hymnal Number: d26 Author of "Some mother's child" in Bells of Heaven

J. D. Gold

Hymnal Number: d68 Author of "Come sing of the Savior, no sadness have we since Jesus" in Bells of Heaven

J. Berg Esenwein

1867 - 1947 Hymnal Number: d301 Author of "A Child's Prayer" in Bells of Heaven Born: May 16, 1867, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Buried: Mount Lebanon Cemetery, Lebanon, Pennsylvania. Son of Augustus and Catherine Esenwein, Berg was a minister. He married Caroline Miller in 1889 in Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania. His works include: Writing the Short-Story; A Practical Handbook on the Rise, Structure, Writing, and Sale of the Modern Short-Story (New York: Hinds, Noble & Eldredge, 1909) Writing the Photoplay: A Complete Manual of Instruction in the Nature, Writing, and Marketing of the Moving-Picture Play, with Arthur Leeds, 1913 The Art of Public Speaking, with Dale Carnegie, 1915 Children’s Stories and How to Tell Them, 1917 Short-Story Masterpieces The Art of Story Writing How to Attract and Hold an Audience The Book of the Epic: The World’s Great Epics Told in Story, with Hélène Adeline Guerber The Art of Versification Writing for the Magazines --www.hymntime.com/tch/ ============== Joseph Berg Esenwein (1867-1946) was an American editor, lecturer and writer. He was noted for contributions to the Library of the World's Best Literature. Esenwein was born in Philadelphia, and educated at Albright College, Millersville Normal School, Lafayette College, Richmond College and the University of Omaha. He was president of Albright Collegiate Institute in 1895-96, and in the following year held the position of educational director of the Y. M. C. A. at Washington Heights, New York City. After a year of foreign travel, he became professor of English in the Pennsylvania Military College at Chester, subsequently giving up teaching (1903) to become manager of the Booklovers' Magazine. Two years later he was made editor and manager of Lippincott's Magazine, a position which he held until 1914 while teaching a private course on short-story writing. In 1915 he became editor of The Writer's Monthly, Springfield, Mass. He is known both as a lecturer and writer. --en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J

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