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Text Identifier:"^death_bells_tolling_tolling_tolling$"
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Priscilla Jane Owens

1829 - 1907 Person Name: Priscilla J. Owens Author of "To the Rescue" in The New Praiseworthy Owens, Priscilla Jane, was born July 21, 1829, of Scotch and Welsh descent, and is now (1906) resident at Baltimore, where she is engaged in public-school work. For 50 years Miss Owen has interested herself in Sunday-school work, and most of her hymns were written for children's services. Her hymn in the Scotch Church Hymnary, 1898, "We have heard a joyful sound" (Missions), was written for a Sunday-school Mission Anniversary, and the words were adapted to the chorus "Vive le Roi" in the opera The Huguenots. [Rev. James Bonar, M.A.] --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, Appendix II (1907) ========================= Owens, Priscilla Jane. (July 21, 1829--December 5, 1907). Of Scottish and Welsh ancestry, she spent her entire life in Baltimore. She was a public school teacher there for 49 years. She was a member of the Union Square Methodist Church and took particular interest in its Sunday School. Her literary efforts, both in prose and poetry, appeared in such religious periodicals as the Methodist Protestant and the Christian Standard. --William J. Reynolds, DNAH Archives

Charles Edward Prior

1856 - 1927 Person Name: Chas. Edw. Prior Composer of "[Death-bells tolling, tolling, tolling]" in The New Praiseworthy Charles Edward Prior, 1856-1927 Prior played the pi­a­no at the Ital­i­an Bap­tist Miss­ion in Hart­ford, Con­nec­ti­cut, in the late 19th Cen­tu­ry. Music-- Go Stand and Speak Work for Us All --hymntime.com/tch

H. T. Crossley

1850 - 1934 Person Name: H. T. C. Alterer of "To the Rescue" in Songs of Salvation Hugh Thomas Crossley was part of Canadian revival team, along with John Edwin Hunter. They were both Methodist ministers. Dianne Shapiro, from Revivals and Roller Rinks: religion, leisure and identity in late-nineteenth-century small-town Ontario by Lynn Sorrel Marks, University of Toronto Press, 1996

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