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Text Identifier:"^lord_of_the_lands_beneath_thy_bending_sk$"

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Lord of the lands, beneath Thy bending skies

Author: Albert Durrant Watson, 1859 - 1926 Meter: 10.10.8.6.8.6.8.10 with repeat Appears in 18 hymnals Topics: National and International Life Used With Tune: O CANADA

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O CANADA

Meter: Irregular Appears in 46 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Calixa Lavallée, 1842-91; F. C. Silvester Tune Key: E Flat Major Incipit: 35512 34562 34456 Used With Text: Lord of the lands, beneath thy bending skies

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals

Lord of the Lands, beneath Thy Bending Skies

Author: Albert D. Watson Hymnal: Christian Youth Hymnal #166 (1948) Meter: 10.10.8.6.8.6.8.10 Topics: Special Days - National Languages: English Tune Title: O CANADA
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Lord of the lands, beneath Thy bending skies

Author: Dr. A. D. Watson, 1859- Hymnal: Methodist Hymn and Tune Book #422 (1917) Lyrics: 1 Lord of the lands, beneath Thy bending skies, On field and flood, where'er our banner flies, Thy people lift their hearts to Thee, Their grateful voices raise: May our Dominion ever be A temple to Thy praise. Thy will alone let all enthrone; Lord of the lands, make Canada Thine own! 2 Almighty Love, by Thy mysterious power, In wisdom guide, with guide and freedom dower; Be ours a nation evermore That no oppression blights, Where justice rules from shore to shore, From Lakes to Northern Lights. May Love alone for wrong atone; Lord of the lands, make Canada Thine own! 3 Lord of the worlds, with strong eternal hand, Hold us in honour, truth, and self-command; The loyal heart, the constant mind, The courage to be true, Our wide-extending Empire bind, And all the earth renew. Thy name be known through every zone; Lord of the worlds, make all the lands Thine own! Topics: Canada; Canada; The Church and the Kingdom of God National Life; Native Land Prayer for ; Native Land Love for ; National Prayer; Prayer For Our Country; Loyalty To Christ Languages: English Tune Title: O CANADA

Lord of the lands, beneath Thy bending skies

Author: Albert Durrant Watson, 1859 - 1926 Hymnal: The Hymnary of the United Church of Canada #511 (1930) Meter: 10.10.8.6.8.6.8.10 with repeat Topics: National and International Life Languages: English Tune Title: O CANADA

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Frederick Silvester

1901 - 1966 Person Name: F. C. Silvester Arranger of "O CANADA" in The Book of Common Praise Frederick Caton Silvester

W.S. Dingman

1858 - 1947 Person Name: W.S. Dingman, 1858- Harmony editor of "O CANADA" in The Hymnary of the United Church of Canada Born: May 9, 1858. Absalom Dingman, a newspaper publisher from Strathroy and a United Empire Loyalist who had migrated to Canada from an early Dutch settlement along the Hudson River in New York State, came to Stratford with his family and purchased the Herald, a weekly with a steadily increasing readership. Three of his sons joined him at the paper with the eldest, William Smith, who in addition to his newspaper experience in Strathroy, had spent a year as managing editor at the Port Arthur Daily Sentinel becoming Co-publisher, and hence began what is described by Adelaide Leitch in her history of Stratford, Floodtides of Fortune, as a newspaper dynasty. It would last for 113 years. William Smith Dingman and Margaret (Maggie) Elizabeth McDonough were married in Strathroy March 13, 1889 with her father, the Rev. William McDonough, a Methodist clergyman, performing the ceremony. They immediately moved into 59 Grant Street where their first child, a daughter, Wilhelmine Margaret was born. William and Maggie’s first son, George McDonough, served in World War 1 and afterwards continued in the family tradition as an advertising manager in St Thomas. In 1890 William moved the Herald into a new building, designed by architect Joseph Kilburn, on the south side of Market Square where it would remain until the merger with the Beacon in 1923. He became active in municipal life serving on the Board of the Collegiate Institute, as an alderman on the city council and finally as mayor 1909-10. It was during his term as mayor that he played a key role in bringing water-powered hydro service to Stratford. His advocacy and support for Sir Adam Beck’s Niagara Power project culminated in a 1910 Christmas Eve ceremony at which the first Niagara powered electric lights were switched on to illuminate Stratford’s streets. In 1899 he was elected President of the Canadian Press Association, a non profit organization created in 1859 to improve relations among newspaper publishers, proprietors and editors and strengthen the press against the divisive effect of political interference. After more than 30 years in the newspaper business the Ontario government called on him in 1915 to serve as Vice Chairman of the newly established Ontario Board of License (Liquor) Commissioners. This position would soon involve him in the administration of the Ontario Temperance Act which came into effect in 1917. He and Maggie moved to Toronto where they spent the rest of their lives. William Smith Dingman died in 1947 at age 89 and is buried with Maggie in Mount Pleasant Cemetery there. --www.stratford-perthcountybranchaco.ca/

Calixa Lavallée

1842 - 1891 Person Name: Calixa Lavallée, 1842-1891 Composer (melody) of "O CANADA" in The Hymnary of the United Church of Canada Born: December 28, 1842, Verchères, Canada. Died: January 21, 1891, Boston, Massachusetts. Buried: Boston, Massachusetts; reinterred in 1933 in Notre-Dame-des-Neiges Cemetery, Montréal, Canada. Lavallée’s father was originally a wood cutter and blacksmith, but eventually started repairing musical instruments and teaching music in his local community. After moving to St. Hyacinthe, Calixa’s father worked for organ builder Joseph Casavant. Calixa was playing the organ by age 11, and at age 13 gave a piano recital in the Théâtre Royal in Montréal. Calixa later moved to America, where he a won a competition in New Orleans, Louisiana. As accompanist to Spanish violinist Olivera, he toured Brazil and the West Indies, then returned to America and fought in the American civil war, rising to rank of lieutenant on the northern side. He returned to Montréal after the war, but continued to do concert tours and teach. The Congrès National des Canadiens-Français commissioned him to compose "O Canada" for St. Jean-Baptiste Day in 1880. In 1887, he became president of the Music Teachers’ National Association. Lavallée wrote operettas, a symphony, and various occasional pieces and songs. Sources: Jones, pp. 84-85 --www.hymntime.com/tch/ See also in: Wikipedia
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