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Lucius Manlius Sargent

1786 - 1867 Person Name: Lucius M. Sargent Hymnal Number: 399 Author of "Bondage and death the cup contains" in Sacred Hymns and Tunes Sargent, Lucius Manlius. (Boston, Massachusetts, June 25, 1786--June 2, 1867, Boston). A layman of independent mans, author of many articles advocating temperance. His temperance hymn beginning "Slavery and death the cup contains" was written during the Washingtonian Temperance Revival and appeared in Adams' and Chapin's Unitarian Hymns for Christian Devotion (Boston, 1846). In the American Methodist Episcopal Hymnal (1878), the first line is altered to read "Bondage and death the cup contains." The hymn is included, with the original wording, in the Universalist Church Harmonies (1895). --Henry Wilder Foote, DNAH Archives

M. A. S. Barber

1801 - 1864 Person Name: Mary A. S. Barber Hymnal Number: 197 Author of "Prince of Peace, control my will" in Sacred Hymns and Tunes

George Barrell Cheever

1807 - 1890 Person Name: George B. Cheever Hymnal Number: 40 Author of "Thy loving-kindness, Lord, I sing" in Sacred Hymns and Tunes Cheever, George Barrell, D.D., eminent in reform, philanthropy, and literature, born at Hallowell, Maine, April 17, 1807, and graduated at Bowdoin College, 1825. Dr. Cheever was a Congregational Pastor at Salem, Mass., 1833; New York, 1839; and the Church of the Puritans, N. Y., 1846-67. He has published several works, and one, Deacon Giles Distillery, procured him a month's imprisonment, in 1835. In 1831 he edited the American Common Place Book of Poetry, and in 1851 Christian Melodies. The latter contains 19 hymns by him. One of these, "Thy loving-kindness, Lord, I sing," is still in common use. It is adopted in an abbreviated form of 4 stanzas by Dr. Hitchcock, in Hymns & Songs of Praise, N. Y., 1874, where it is dated 1845. [Rev. F. M. Bird, M. A.] --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

James L. Elginburg

Person Name: J. L. E. Hymnal Number: 412 Author of "I will follow thee, my Savior" in Sacred Hymns and Tunes Late 19th Century

Henry Tucker

1826 - 1882 Hymnal Number: 413 Arranger of "LION OF JUDAH" in Sacred Hymns and Tunes

Virgil Corydon Taylor

1817 - 1891 Hymnal Number: 229 Composer of "WARREN" in Sacred Hymns and Tunes

Thomas Clark

1775 - 1859 Hymnal Number: 200 Composer of "WARSAW" in Sacred Hymns and Tunes Baptized: Feb­ru­a­ry 5, 1775, Can­ter­bu­ry, Kent, Eng­land. Died: May 30, 1859, at his home in St. George’s Street, Can­ter­bu­ry, Kent, Eng­land. A cob­bler and choir train­er, Clark led the sing­ing of the Psalms at the Wes­ley­an Cha­pel, Can­ter­bu­ry, and lat­er at the Uni­tar­i­an Church in Can­ter­bu­ry. It has been claimed he nev­er ac­tu­al­ly joined the Un­i­tar­i­ans, though he sym­pa­thized with them, and he re­signed from the Meth­od­ists. Clark wrote a num­ber of an­thems, in­clud­ing "Awake Up, My Glo­ry", "Daugh­ter of Zi­on" and "Since I Have Placed My Trust." His other works in­clude: First Sett of Psalm and Hymn Tunes, 1805 Second Sett of Psalm and Hymn Tunes, cir­ca 1810 Congregational Har­mon­ist, 4 vol­umes (1828 to cir­ca 1835) The Sac­red Glean­er, 1830 The Un­ion Tune-Book, 1837 (co-ed­it­or) Union Har­mo­nist, 1841 Harmonized the se­cond edi­tion of the Un­ion Tune Book for the Sun­day School Un­ion, 1842 The Ju­ve­nile Har­mo­nist, 1842 David’s Harp—A Ser­ies of Orig­in­al Tunes Com­posed Exp­ress­ly to the Psalt­er, 1843 The Ser­a­phim or Sac­red Har­mo­nist, 1843 British Psalm­o­dy, with Al­ex­an­der Hume (Ed­in­burgh, Scot­land: 1844) --www.hymntime.com/tch/

David E. Ford

1797 - 1875 Hymnal Number: 360 Author of "How vain is all beneath the skies!" in Sacred Hymns and Tunes Ford, David Everard, son of a Congregational Minister at Long Melford, was born there on Sept. 13, 1797. He became pastor of the Congregational Church at Lymington, in Oct. 1821; Travelling Secretary to the Congregational Union in 1841; and pastor of Greengate Chapel, Salford, Manchester, in 1843. He died at Bedford, Oct. 23, 1875. Mr. Ford published several works including, Hymns chiefly on the Parables of Christ, 1828. From this is taken, (1) "Earthly joys no longer please us" (Heaven Anticipated). (2) "How vain is all beneath the skies" (Heaven Anticipated). These are in American common use. See Hymns of the Church, 1869, and Laudes Domini, 1884. Another of his hymns in common use from the same work, p. 107, is:—"Almighty Father, heavenly Friend" (Old and New Year). This is in Dale's English Hymn Book, 1874. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, Appendix, Part II (1907)

Edward L. White

1809 - 1851 Hymnal Number: 280 Composer of "ROSCOE" in Sacred Hymns and Tunes

Ami Bost

1790 - 1874 Person Name: Rev. Ami Bost Hymnal Number: 399 Composer of "GRATITUDE" in Sacred Hymns and Tunes Rev. Paul Ami Isaac David Bost, was born on June 10, 1790 in Geneva, Switzerland. He studied theology at the Moravian Institute at Neuwied and at the University of Geneva. He was an itinerant preacher in Switzerland, Germany and France. In 1825, he co-founded the Reformed Free Church of Geneva. From 1828-37 he worked as an evangelist in Carouge, After a brief pastorate at Asnires and Bourges in France, he was appointed chaplain of the prison of the Maison Centrale at Melun, where he remained until 1848, then lived in Geneva. He died on December 24, 1874 in Prigonrieux, Aquitaine, France. © The Cyber Hymnal™ (hymntime.com/tch)

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