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Text Identifier:"^o_let_your_heart_not_troubled_be$"

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Texts

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I'll Come Again

Author: R. E. W. Appears in 6 hymnals First Line: O let your heart not troubled be Refrain First Line: And if I go, I'll come again Used With Tune: [O let your heart not troubled be]

Tunes

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[O let your heart not troubled be]

Appears in 3 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: R. E. Winsett Incipit: 53211 51717 12212 Used With Text: I'll Come Again

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals

I'll Come Again

Author: R. E. W. Hymnal: Songs of Pentecostal Power, Complete #25 (1912) First Line: O let your heart not troubled be Refrain First Line: And if I go, I'll come again Languages: English Tune Title: [O let your heart not troubled be]

I'll Come Again

Author: R. E. W. Hymnal: Songs of the Kingdom #34 (1911) First Line: O let your heart not troubled be Refrain First Line: And if I go, I'll come again Languages: English Tune Title: [O let your heart not troubled be]

I'll Come Again

Author: R. E. W. Hymnal: Songs of Perennial Glory #34 (1915) First Line: O let your heart not troubled be Refrain First Line: And if I go, I'll come again Languages: English Tune Title: [O let your heart not troubled be]

People

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R. E. Winsett

1876 - 1952 Person Name: R. E. W. Author of "I'll Come Again" in Songs of Pentecostal Power, Complete Robert Emmett Winsett (January 15, 1876 — June 26, 1952 (aged 76) was an American composer and publisher of Gospel music. Winsett was born in Bledsoe County, Tennessee, and graduated from the Bowman Normal School of Music in 1899. He founded his own publishing company in 1903, and his first publication, Winsett's Favorite Songs, quickly became popular among the Baptist and Pentecostal churches of the American South. Pentecostal Power followed in 1907; that year Winsett completed postgraduate work at a conservatory. He married Birdie Harris in 1908, and had three sons and two daughters with her. He settled in Fort Smith, Arkansas, continuing to compose gospel songs, of which he would write over 1,000 in total. He became a minister in 1923, and was affiliated with the Church of God (Seventh Day). Birdie Harris died late in the 1920s, and shortly thereafter Winsett moved back to Tennessee. He founded a new company in Chattanooga, and published more shape note music books. He remarried, to Mary Ruth Edmonton, in 1930, and had three further children. Winsett's final publication, Best of All (1951), sold over 1 million copies, and in total his books sold over ten million copies. His song "Jesus Is Coming Soon" won a Dove Award for Gospel Song of the Year at the 1969 awards. He has been inducted into the Southern Gospel Museum and Hall of Fame. --www.wikipedia.org
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