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Tune Identifier:"^palm_sunday_harrington$"

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PALM SUNDAY

Appears in 2 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Karl P. Harrington Incipit: 33213 21213 33323 Used With Text: There was a time when children sang

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There was a time when children sang

Author: Thomas R. Taylor Appears in 15 hymnals Used With Tune: PALM SUNDAY

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There was a time when children sang

Author: Thomas R. Taylor Hymnal: The Methodist Hymnal #684 (1905) Languages: English Tune Title: PALM SUNDAY
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There Was a Time When Children Sang

Author: Thomas R. Taylor, 1807-1835 Hymnal: The Cyber Hymnal #6620 Meter: 8.8.8.8 Lyrics: 1. There was a time when children sang The Savior’s praise with sacred glee, And all the hills of Judah rang With their exulting jubilee. 2. O to have joined their rapturous songs, And swelled their sweet hosannas high, And blessed Him with our feeble tongues As He, the Man of grief, went by! 3. But Christ is now a glorious king, And angels in His presence bow; The humble songs that we can sing, O will He, can He, hear them now? 4. He can, He will, He loves to hear The notes which loving children raise; Jesus, we come with trembling fear: O teach our hearts and tongues to praise! 5. We join the hosts around Thy throne, Who once, like us, the desert trod; And thus we make their song our own, Hosanna to the Son of God! Languages: English Tune Title: PALM SUNDAY

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Thomas Rawson Taylor

1807 - 1835 Person Name: Thomas R. Taylor, 1807-1835 Author of "There Was a Time When Children Sang" in The Cyber Hymnal Taylor, Thomas Rawson, son of the Rev. Thomas Taylor, some time Congregational Minister at Bradford, Yorkshire, was born at Ossett, near Wakefield, May 9, 1807, and educated at the Free School, Bradford, and the Leaf Square Academy, Manchester. From the age of 15 to 18 he was engaged, first in a merchant's, and then in a printer's office. Influenced by strong religious desires, he entered the Airedale Independent College at 18, to prepare for the Congregational ministry. His first and only charge was Howard Street Chapel, Sheffield. This he retained about six months, entering upon the charge in July 1830, and leaving it in the January following. For a short time he acted as classical tutor at Airedale College, but the failure of health which compelled him to leave Sheffield also necessitated his resigning his tutorship. He died March 7, 1835. A volume of his Memoirs and Select Remains, by W. S. Matthews, in which were several poems and a few hymns, was published in 1836. His best known hymn is "I'm but a stranger here". The rest in common use all from his Memoirs, 1836, are:— 1. Earth, with her ten thousand flowers. The love of God. 2. Saviour and Lord of all. Hymn to the Saviour. Altered as "Jesu, Immanuel" in the LeedsHymn Book, 1853. 3. There was a tims when children sang. Sunday School Anniversary. 4. Yes, it is good to worship Thee. Divine Worship. From this "'Tis sweet, 0 God, to sing Thy praise," beginning with st. ii. 5. Yes, there are little ones in heaven. Sunday School Anniversary. -- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

Karl P. Harrington

1861 - 1953 Person Name: Karl Pomeroy Harrington Composer of "PALM SUNDAY (Harrington)" Born: June 13, 1861, Somersworth, New Hampshire. Died: November 14, 1953, Berkeley, California. Buried: Middletown, Connecticut. Son of Calvin S. and Eliza Chase Harrington, Karl earned his AB degree in 1882, and his AM in 1885, from Wesleyan University in Middletown, Connecticut. He studied at the University of Berlin (1887-89) and Yale University (1890-91). He taught high school in Westfield, Massachusetts (1882-85); Latin at Wesleyan Academy in Wilbraham, Massachusetts (1885-87); was a Latin tutor at Wesleyan University (1889-91); Latin professor at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill (1891-99); University of Maine (1899-1905); and Wesleyan University (1905). While at the University of North Carolina, he directed the Glee Club. His works include: The Roman Elegiac Poets, circa 1914 Richard Alsop, "a Hartford Wit" Walks and Climbs in the White Mountains, 1926 --www.hymntime.com/tch/