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M. M. Wells

1815 - 1895 Hymnal Number: 118 Composer of "[Rays of light and holy love]" in Spiritualist Hymnal Converted to Christianity as a youth at a mission in Buffalo, New York, Marcus Morris Wells (b. Cooperstown, NY, 1815; d. Hartwick, NY, 1895) spent most of his life near Hartwick as a farmer and maker of farm implements. He is remembered in hymnody for writing both the text and tune of "Holy Spirit, Faithful Guide." "On a Saturday afternoon, October 1858, while at work in my cornfield, the sentiment of the hymn came to me," writes Wells. "The next day, Sunday, being a very stormy day, I finished the hymn and wrote the tune for it and sent it to Prof. I. B. Woodbury." Isaac Woodbury was the editor of the New York Musical Pioneer, and the original text and tune were first published in that periodical's November 1858 issue. Bert Polman ================= Wells, Marcus M. Concerning this author and his hymn we have no information beyond the following facts:— Holy Spirit, faithful Guide. [Whitsuntide.] Appeared in The Sacred Lute, by T. E. Perkins, N.Y., undated [1864], p. 373, with music. Both words and music are attributed therein to M. M. Wells. The hymn has since been repeated in several English and American collections, including I. D. Sankey's Sacred Songs and Solos, 1878. It is dated 1858. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, New Supplement (1907)

Elihu S. Rice

Person Name: Elisha S. Rice Hymnal Number: 23 Composer of "[Shall we meet beyond the river]" in Spiritualist Hymnal

Margaret Elizabeth Munson Sangster

1838 - 1912 Person Name: Mrs. M. E. M. Sangster Hymnal Number: 121 Author of "Coming Nearer" in Spiritualist Hymnal

E. Grace Updegraff

1871 - 1964 Person Name: Grace Undergraff Hymnal Number: 45 Composer of "[Angel, hide me close beside thee]" in Spiritualist Hymnal Eliza Grace Updegraff ((1871-1964) was born in Mount Pleasant, Ohio, the daughter of a Quaker minister, the Rev. David Brainard Updegraff and his wife Eliza Jane. According to the 1880 census, at age nine, Eliza Grace Updegraff lived in Mount Pleasant, in Jefferson County, Ohio with her parents and siblings, three brothers and two sisters, all born in Ohio. When she was composing hymn tunes she did not use her first initial, and is almost always listed as E. Grace Updegraff. She is known as the composer of two hymn tunes: CARTER ("In doubt and temptation I rest Lord, in Thee") and THE HOPE OF THE AGES ("Jesus comes, he comes in glory"). Two of her texts are "What meaneth this, this strange display?" (see Songs of Love and Praise, No.4 , 1897 and Praise Hymns, 1898) and "Are you faithful to the work?" (see Songs of Help, 1917). In 1906 she married the Rev. Dr. John Talmadge Bergen, a minister in the Reformed Church of America. She was his second wife. In her memory her family (Mohns and Hoagland) has established a scholarship at Lake Forest College, Illinois to assist a student heading toward the Christian ministry or majoring in music. Mary Louise VanDyke, from research done by VanDyke and John Dalles

R. S. Williams

Hymnal Number: 129 Author of "Accept Our Invitation" in Spiritualist Hymnal

Miss A. V. D.

Hymnal Number: 104 Composer of "[We are waiting for the morning]" in Spiritualist Hymnal

John S. Adams

1793 - 1893 Person Name: J. S. Adams Hymnal Number: 110 Author of "Angels Bright" in Spiritualist Hymnal

B. M. Lawrence

Hymnal Number: 46 Author of "That Land Beyond the River" in Spiritualist Hymnal

C. Payson Longley

Person Name: C. P. L. Hymnal Number: 55 Author of "Where the Roses Never Fade" in Spiritualist Hymnal

S. A.

Hymnal Number: 65 Composer of "[I have found a joy in living]" in Spiritualist Hymnal

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