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Text Identifier:"^we_are_little_soldiers_training$"

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Little Soldiers

Author: James Rowe Appears in 2 hymnals First Line: We are little soldiers Refrain First Line: We are little soldiers Used With Tune: [We are little soldiers]

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[We are little soldiers]

Appears in 1 hymnal Composer and/or Arranger: Thoro Harris Incipit: 51123 16116 55112 Used With Text: Little Soldiers

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Little soldiers

Author: James Rowe Hymnal: With Banner and Song #d11 (1906) First Line: We are little soldiers training Refrain First Line: We are little soldiers of the King
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Little Soldiers

Author: James Rowe Hymnal: Sunny Songs for Little Folks Number One #38 (1908) First Line: We are little soldiers Refrain First Line: We are little soldiers Languages: English Tune Title: [We are little soldiers]

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

James Rowe

1865 - 1933 Author of "Little Soldiers" Pseudonym: James S. Apple. James Rowe was born in England in 1865. He served four years in the Government Survey Office, Dublin Ireland as a young man. He came to America in 1890 where he worked for ten years for the New York Central & Hudson R.R. Co., then served for twelve years as superintendent of the Mohawk and Hudson River Humane Society. He began writing songs and hymns about 1896 and was a prolific writer of gospel verse with more than 9,000 published hymns, poems, recitations, and other works. Dianne Shapiro, from "The Singers and Their Songs: sketches of living gospel hymn writers" by Charles Hutchinson Gabriel (Chicago: The Rodeheaver Company, 1916)

Thoro Harris

1874 - 1955 Composer of "[We are little soldiers]" in Sunny Songs for Little Folks Number One Born: March 31, 1874, Washington, DC. Died: March 27, 1955, Eureka Springs, Arkansas. Buried: International Order of Odd Fellows Cemetery, Eureka Springs, Arkansas. After attending college in Battle Creek, Michigan, Harris produced his first hymnal in Boston, Massachusetts, in 1902. He then moved to Chicago, Illinois at the invitation of Peter Bilhorn, and in 1932, to Eureka Springs, Arkansas. He composed and compiled a number of works, and was well known locally as he walked around with a canvas bag full of handbooks for sale. His works include: Light and Life Songs, with William Olmstead & William Kirkpatrick (Chicago, Illinois: S. K. J. Chesbro, 1904) Little Branches, with George J. Meyer & Howard E. Smith (Chicago, Illinois: Meyer & Brother, 1906) Best Temperance Songs (Chicago, Illinois: The Glad Tidings Publishing Company, 1913) (music editor) Hymns of Hope (Chicago, Illinois: Thoro Harris, undated, circa 1922) --www.hymntime.com/tch
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