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Hymnal, Number:cor1913

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Hymnals

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Crowns of Rejoicing

Publication Date: 1913 Publisher: Charles Reign Scoville Publication Place: Chicago Editors: Charles Reign Scoville; E. O. Excell; Charles Reign Scoville

Texts

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The Precious Name

Author: Mrs. Lydia Baxter Appears in 655 hymnals First Line: Take the Name of Jesus with you Refrain First Line: Precious name, O how sweet! Used With Tune: [Take the Name of Jesus with you]
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Shall We Gather at the River?

Author: R. L. Appears in 764 hymnals First Line: Shall we gather at the river Refrain First Line: Yes, we'll gather at the river Used With Tune: [Shall we gather at the river]
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Faith of Our Fathers

Appears in 848 hymnals First Line: Faith of our fathers! living still Used With Tune: [Faith of our fathers! living still]

Tunes

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[Were you there when they crucified my Lord]

Appears in 184 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: T. M. T. Incipit: 51333 21321 13555 Used With Text: Were You There?
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[One sweetly solemn thought]

Appears in 84 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Philip Phillips Incipit: 53121 65566 56535 Used With Text: One Sweetly Solemn Thought
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[Hark, ten thousand harps and voices]

Appears in 386 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Lowell Mason Incipit: 55151 32255 51321 Used With Text: Hark! Ten Thousand

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals
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Joy to the World

Author: Rev. Isaac Watts Hymnal: CoR1913 #1 (1913) First Line: Joy to the world, the Lord is come! Languages: English Tune Title: [Joy to the world, the Lord is come!]
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The Way of the Cross Leads Home

Author: Jessie Brown Pounds Hymnal: CoR1913 #2 (1913) First Line: I must needs go home by the way of the cross Languages: English Tune Title: [I must needs go home by the way of the cross]
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No Compromise

Author: H. L. Hymnal: CoR1913 #3 (1913) First Line: No compromise with evil shall be our battle cry Refrain First Line: No compromise, no compromise Languages: English Tune Title: [No compromise with evil shall be our battle cry]

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Lydia Baxter

1809 - 1874 Person Name: Mrs. Lydia Baxter Hymnal Number: 108a Author of "The Precious Name" in Crowns of Rejoicing Baxter, Lydia, an American Baptist, was b. at Petersburg, N. York, Sep. 2, 1800, married to Mr. Baxter, and d. in N. Y. June 22, 1874. In addition to her Gems by the Wayside, 1855, Mrs. Baxter contributed many hymns to collections for Sunday Schools, and Evangelistic Services. Of these, the following are the best known:— 1. Cast thy net again, my brother. Patient toil. Given in the Royal Diadem, N. Y., 1873. 2. Go, work in my vineyard. Duty. Also given in the Royal Diadem, 1873, and Mr. Sankey's S. & Solos, No. 4. 3. I'm kneeling, Lord, at mercy's gate. Lent. In Coronation Hymns, &c, N. Y., 1879. 4. I'm weary, I'm fainting, my day's work is done. Longing for rest. Royal Diadem. 1873. 5. In the fadeless spring-time. Heavenly Reunion. In the Royal Diadem, 1873, I. D. Sankey's S. S. & Solos, No. 256, and others. It was written for Mr. H. P. Main in 1872. 6. One by one we cross the river. Death. In Songs of Salvation, N. Y., 1870, I. D. Sankey's S. S. & Solos, No. 357, &c. It dates cir. 1866. 7. Take the name of Jesus with you. Name of Jesus. Written late in 1870, or early in 1871, for W. H. Doane, and pub. in Pure Gold, 1871. It is No. 148 of I. D. Sankey's S. S. & Solos. 8. The Master is coming. Invitation. In Songs of Salvation, 1870, No. 38. 9. There is a gate that stands ajar. Mercy. In New Hallowed Songs, and also the Gospel Songs of P. Bliss, 1874. It was written for S. J. Vail about 1872. It has attained to some popularity. It is given in Mr. Sankey's S. & Solos, No. 2. -John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

Mary Ann Baker

1832 - 1925 Person Name: Mary A. Baker Hymnal Number: 146 Author of "Master, the Tempest is Raging" in Crowns of Rejoicing Baker, Mary A.. Miss Baker, who is a member of the Baptist denomination, and a resident in Chicago, Illinois, is an active worker in the temperance cause, and the author of various hymns and temperance songs.    Her most popular hymn:-— 1. Master, the tempest is raging, Peace, was written in 1874 at the request of Dr. H. R. Palmer, who desired of her several songs on the subjects of a series of Sunday School Lessons for that year. Its theme is "Christ stilling the tempest."   During the same year it was set to music by Dr. Palmer, and pub. in his Songs of Love for the Bible School, 1874. It is found in other collections, including I. D. Sankey's Sacred Songs and Solos, London, 1881. Its home popularity was increased by its republication and frequent use during the illness of Pres. Garfield. It was sung at several of the funeral services held in his honour throughout the States. 2. Why perish with cold and with hunger? Invitation. This is another of her hymns set to music by I. D. Sankey, and included in his Sacred Songs and Solos, Lond., 1881. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907) _______ Mary Ann Baker (sometimes known as Mary Eddy Baker), daughter of Joshua Baker and Catherine Eddy, was born 16 Sept. 1832 in Orwell, Oswego, NY. As a young child, her family moved to Branch County, Michigan. Her father died there in 1839 at age 39. A few years later, in 1843, her mother married David Ripley and had two more children, but by 1850, her mother was a single parent again with five children, living in Kinderhook, Branch, Michigan. By 1855, her mother had remarried to Ephraim Potter, and they were living in Boonville, Oneida, New York. In 1860, she and her sister Rhoda Ripley were living in Kalamazoo, Michigan, where she found work as a compositor. Some time between 1867 and 1868 (her sister Rhoda married George Ely in 1868 in Kalamazoo), she moved to Chicago, where she similarly worked as a compositor for Horton & Leonard. While in Chicago, she met composer Horatio R. Palmer and was associated with the Second Baptist Church. In 1900, she was still living in Chicago. Mary never married. In her final years, she was living in the Baptist Old People's Home in nearby Maywood, Cook County, Illinois, where she died at age 93 on 29 Sept. 1925. by Chris Fenner, 14 Feb. 2022

Rudyard Kipling

1865 - 1936 Hymnal Number: 282 Author of "Lest We Forget" in Crowns of Rejoicing Born: December 30, 1865, Bombay (now Mumbai), India. Died: January 18, 1936, London, England. Buried: Westminster Abbey, London, England. Kipling, Rudyard, the well-known poet and story-teller, was born at Bombay, India, Dec. 30, 1865, and now (1906) lives at Burwash in Sussex. His noble poem, "The Recessional," was written in 1897 at the time of the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria, contributed to the Times for July 17, 1897, and first published by the author in his The Five Nations, 1903, p. 214, beginning "God of our fathers, known of old" (National). It has passed into Sursum Corda, Phil., 1898, The English Hymnal, 1906. [Rev. James Mearns, M.A.] --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, New Supplement (1907)
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