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Person Results

Meter:9.7.9.7
In:people

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Showing 1 - 10 of 11Results Per Page: 102050

María Eugenia Cornou

b. 1969 Person Name: María Eugenia Cornou, b. 1969 Meter: 9.7.9.7 Translator of "I'm Gonna Live So God Can Use Me (Quiero vivir y serte útil)" in Santo, Santo, Santo

Elisabeth Crocker

Meter: 9.7.9.7 Composer of "UPLIFTED EYES" in The Worshiping Church

Michael Baughen

b. 1930 Meter: 9.7.9.7 Composer of "UPLIFTED EYES" in The Worshiping Church

Wendell Whalum

1931 - 1987 Person Name: Wendell P. Whalum, 1931-1987 Meter: 9.7.9.7 Composer of "I'M GONNA LIVE" in Santo, Santo, Santo

Richard DeLong

1951 - 1994 Person Name: Richard L. DeLong Meter: 9.7.9.7 Composer of "BIG CREEK" in The Sacred Harp

Carrie E. Rounsefell

1861 - 1930 Meter: 9.7.9.7 Composer of "MANCHESTER (Rounsefell)" in Christian Classics Ethereal Hymnary Carrie Esther Parker Rounsefell USA 1862-1930. Born at Merrimack, NH, she grew up in Manchester, NH. She married William Rounsefell, a bookkeeper. She was known as a singing evangelist throughout New England and New York, where she toured with a small autoharp (zither). She died at Durham, ME. John Perry

R. E. B.

Meter: 9.7.9.7 Harmonizer of "SPRING SONG" in The Beacon Song and Service book

F. E. Belden

1858 - 1945 Meter: 9.7.9.7 Author of "There Is Sweet Rest" in The Church Hymnal Belden was born in Battle Creek, Michigan in 1858. He began writing music in his late teenage years after moving to California with his family. For health reasons he later moved to Colorado. He returned to Battle Creek with his wife in the early 1880s, and there he became involved in Adventist Church publishing. F. E. Belden wrote many hymn tunes, gospel songs, and related texts in the early years of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. Belden was able to rapidly write both music and poetry together which enabled him to write a song to fit a sermon while it was still being delivered. He also wrote songs for evang­el­ist Bil­ly Sun­day. Though Belden’s later years were marred by misunderstandings with the church leadership over his royalties, he did donate his papers and manuscripts to the church’s seminary at his death. He died on December 2, 1945 in Battle Creek, Michigan. N.N., Hymnary. Source: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/bio/b/e/l/belden_fe.htm

Timothy Dudley-Smith

1926 - 2024 Meter: 9.7.9.7 Paraphraser of "I Lift My Eyes to the Quiet Hills" in The Worshiping Church Timothy Dudley-Smith (b. 1926) Educated at Pembroke College and Ridley Hall, Cambridge, Dudley-Smith has served the Church of England since his ordination in 1950. He has occupied a number of church posi­tions, including parish priest in the diocese of Southwark (1953-1962), archdeacon of Norwich (1973-1981), and bishop of Thetford, Norfolk, from 1981 until his retirement in 1992. He also edited a Christian magazine, Crusade, which was founded after Billy Graham's 1955 London crusade. Dudley-Smith began writing comic verse while a student at Cambridge; he did not begin to write hymns until the 1960s. Many of his several hundred hymn texts have been collected in Lift Every Heart: Collected Hymns 1961-1983 (1984), Songs of Deliverance: Thirty-six New Hymns (1988), and A Voice of Singing (1993). The writer of Christian Literature and the Church (1963), Someone Who Beckons (1978), and Praying with the English Hymn Writers (1989), Dudley-Smith has also served on various editorial committees, including the committee that published Psalm Praise (1973). Bert Polman

K. Forman

Person Name: Kate Forman Meter: 9.7.9.7 Author of "There's a sweet bird" in The Beacon Song and Service book

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