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Chas. H. Scott

Person Name: C. H. S. Hymnal Number: 125 Author of "Open My Eyes, That I May See" in Songs for the Master Some hymnals show the author of the hymn "Open My Eyes and I Shall See" incorrectly as "Charles" Scott or "Chas. H." Scott The hymn was written by Clara H. Scott.

S. Hibbard

Hymnal Number: 193 Composer of "EXHORTATION" in Songs for the Master

Virgil P. Cassaday

1893 - 1967 Hymnal Number: 156 Arranger of "[My Lord calls me, He calls me by the thunder]" in Songs for the Master Born: No­vem­ber 22, 1893. Died: Cir­ca Feb­ru­a­ry 1967, prob­ab­ly in Louis­ville, Ken­tucky. Some hym­nals mis­spell Cas­sa­day’s name as "Cas­sa­dy." He was liv­ing in All­en Coun­ty, Ken­tucky, in 1900, and in War­ren Coun­ty in 1920 & 1930. --www.hymntime.com/tch/

Herbert G. Tovey

1888 - 1972 Hymnal Number: 174 Harmonizer of "[I've got a home in glory land]" in Songs for the Master

Charlotte G. Homer

1856 - 1932 Hymnal Number: 145 Author of "I Believe in Jesus" in Songs for the Master Pseudonym. See also Gabriel, Chas. Hutchinson, 1856-1932

David Norman Henderson

1925 - 1986 Person Name: D. N. H. Hymnal Number: 36 Arranger of "Just A Closer Walk With Thee" in Songs for the Master

W. E. Penn

1832 - 1895 Person Name: W. E. P. Hymnal Number: 131 Author of "The Sheltering Rock" in Songs for the Master Penn, William Evander. (Near village of Old Jefferson, Rutherford County, Tennessee, August 11, 1832--April 29, 1895, Eureka Springs, Arkansas). Southern Baptist. Evangelist in Texas and other states, 1875-1895. Compiled three hymnals titled Harvest Bells (1881, 1884, 1887) for use in his meetings. His hymns were primarily revivalistic in emphasis. His finest hymn, "There is a rock in a weary land, Its shadow falls on the burning sand" was paid the compliment of being reworked and issued under the name of Edward Husband in D.B. Towner's Revival Hymns (Chicago, 1905). He and his wife Corilla Frances Sayle adopted three children. Ordained December 4, 1880. --David W. Music, and additional information from the DNAH Archives See: Linder, Michael. (1985). William Evander Penn : his contribution to church music (Unpublished doctoral dissertation). Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, Fort Worth, Texas. The Life and Labors of Major W. E. Penn. (1896). St. Louis: C. B. Woodward Printing).

James W. Gaines

1880 - 1937 Person Name: J. W. Gaines Hymnal Number: 135 Composer of "[When in the better land before the bar we stand]" in Songs for the Master Born: January 23, 1881, Hiram, Kaufman County, Texas. Died: June 3, 1937, Oakville, Tennessee. Buried: Edmondson Cemetery, Southaven, Mississippi. In 1900, Gaines was living in Kauffman, Texas. He worked with the Trio and/or Quartet Music Companies in Waco, Texas, and married Laurel Life around 1904. Their daughter Mia was born in Texas around 1906, and their son Charles Life Gaines in Missouri around 1907. The family moved to Tennessee by World War I, when Gaines was drafted for military service. After the war, he ran a music publishing company in Memphis, Tennessee. His works include: The Gospel Messenger (Memphis, Tennessee: J. W. Gaines Music Company, 1931) Revival Tidings (Memphis, Tennessee: Gaines Music Company, 1932) --www.hymntime.com/tch/

F. A. Clark

1868 - 1948 Hymnal Number: 99 Composer of "[When the storms of life are raging]" in Songs for the Master F. A. Clark (Francis A.) was a respected Black musician and composer from Philadelphia. Dianne Shapiro, from "Charles Albert Tindley: Progenitor of Black-American Gospel Music," by Horace Clarence Boyer, in The Black Perspective in Music Vol. 11, No. 2 (Autumn, 1983), pp. 103-132 (retrieved online from JSTOR, 8/27/2020)

Will M. Ramsey

1872 - 1939 Person Name: W. M. Ramsey Hymnal Number: 123 Composer of "[Lean on the mighty arm of Jesus]" in Songs for the Master William Morgan Ramsey Born: Au­gust 24, 1872, Bel­ton, Tex­as. Died: March 12, 1939, Lit­tle Rock, Ar­kan­sas. Buried: Rose­lawn Ce­me­te­ry, Lit­tle Rock, Ar­kan­sas. Will was the son of Charles Crump Ram­sey and Mar­tha Ann Fran­ces Burns. He mar­ried twice, to Vir­gie Ce­lem­ma Stat­ton and Will­ie Man­na­sas Law­ing. Ramsey moved with his fa­mi­ly to north­west Ar­kan­sas as a child. He stu­died mu­sic in Nor­mal schools un­der Eph­ra­im Hil­de­brand, Ste­phen Os­lin, and Ben­ja­min Un­seld. He be­gan teach­ing shape notes and sing­ing while still a teen­ag­er, and be­came well known in sing­ing schools through­out the Am­er­i­can South. He went on to be­come pre­si­dent and own­er of the Cen­tral Mu­sic Com­pa­ny in Lit­tle Rock. © The Cyber Hymnal™ (www.hymntime.com/tch)

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