Person Results

Text Identifier:"^there_was_never_a_prince_so_royal$"
In:people

Planning worship? Check out our sister site, ZeteoSearch.org, for 20+ additional resources related to your search.
Showing 1 - 2 of 2Results Per Page: 102050

D. B. Towner

1850 - 1919 Composer of "[There was never a prince so royal]" in The Voice of Thanksgiving Used pseudonyms Robert Beverly, T. R. Bowden ============================== Towner, Daniel B. (Rome, Pennsylvania, 1850--1919). Attended grade school in Rome, Penn. when P.P. Bliss was teacher. Later majored in music, joined D.L. Moody, and in 1893 became head of the music department at Moody Bible Institute. Author of more than 2,000 songs. --Paul Milburn, DNAH Archives

T. T. Shields

1873 - 1955 Author of "O Grace of God So Boundless" in The Voice of Thanksgiving Shields, Thomas Todhunter. (Bristol, England, November 1, 1873--April 4, 1955, Toronto, Ontario). Baptist. Educated mostly by his father, a Baptist pastor who came to Canada in 1888. Pastorates (in Ontario) at Florence (1894-1895), Dutton (1895-1897), Delhi (1897-1900), Hamilton (1900-1903), London (1904-1910), Toronto (1910-1955). As outstanding preacher, he felt bound as pastor of Canada's largest Baptist church (Jarvis Street, Toronto) to denounce Modernist theology, especially as taught at the denominational university (McMaster), until in 1926 the Canadian Baptist Convention voted to back McMaster and expel him and his congregation. In January 1927 he opened Toronto Baptist Seminary to train pastors committed to fundamentalism, while The Gospel Witness, the paper he had edited and largely written since 1922, helped to united Baptists who shared his conservative views. When his church burned in March 1938, he hastily compiled a hymnbook, including one hymn of his own, for use during and just after the rebuilding. See: Tarr, Leslie K. (1967). Shields of Canada. Grand Rapids: Baker. --Hugh D. McKellar, DNAH Archives

Export as CSV
It looks like you are using an ad-blocker. Ad revenue helps keep us running. Please consider white-listing Hymnary.org or getting Hymnary Pro to eliminate ads entirely and help support Hymnary.org.