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Person Results

Text Identifier:when_morning_gilds_the_skies
In:people

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Showing 11 - 20 of 24Results Per Page: 102050

Reginald Sparshatt Thatcher

1888 - 1957 Composer (desc.) of "LAUDES DOMINI" in Rejoice in the Lord

E. W. Caswell

Person Name: E. Caswell Translator of "May Jesus Christ Be Praised" in Christ in Song

Dan Stokes

Arranger of "LAUDES DOMINI" in The United Methodist Hymnal Music Supplement

Jacques Beaudon

Person Name: Jacques Beaudon, 1913-1985 Translator (French) of "When morning gilds the skies" in The Book of Praise

Donald Bussaro

Composer (descant) of "LAUDES DOMINI" in The United Methodist Hymnal Music Supplement II

David W. McCormick

Arranger of "LAUDES DOMINI" in The United Methodist Hymnal Music Supplement

Francis H. Champneys

1848 - 1930 Person Name: Dr. Champneys Composer of "ST. VERONICA" in The Church Porch Born: March 25, 1848, in the rec­to­ry of St. Ma­ry’s, White­cha­pel, Lon­don, Eng­land. Died: Ju­ly 30, 1930, Nutley, Sus­sex, Eng­land. Francis’ fa­ther was Will­iam Champ­neys, Ca­non of St. Paul’s, and lat­er Dean of Lich­field. Fran­cis was ed­u­cat­ed at Win­chest­er Coll­ege and Brase­nose Coll­ege, Ox­ford (MA & MB 1875, MD lat­er). An am­a­teur mu­si­cian, he stu­died un­der John Goss, held var­i­ous mu­sic­al po­si­tions from 1880 to 1913, and chaired the Cen­tral Mid­wives’ Board (1903-30). He was made a Bar­o­net in 1910. --www.hymntime.com/tch/

George M. Garrett

1834 - 1897 Composer of "INGLESIDE" in Songs of the Christian Life Born: June 8, 1834, Winchester, Hampshire, England. Died: April 9, 1897, Cambridge, England. Buried: Cambridge Mill Road Cemetery, Cambridge, England

Richard R. Chope

1830 - 1928 Person Name: R. R. Chope Composer of "ST. ODE" in The Home and School Hymnal Chope, Richard Robert, M.A., born Sept. 21, 1830, educated at Exeter College, Oxford, B.A., 1855, and took Holy Orders as Curate of Stapleton, 1856. During his residence at Stapleton the necessities of the Choir led him to plan his Congregational Hymn and Tune Book, published in 1857. In 1858 he took the Curacy of Sherborne, Dorset; in the following year that of Upton Scudamore, where he undertook the training of the Chorus of the Warminster district for the first Choral Festival in Salisbury Cathedral; and in 1861 that of Brompton. The enlarged edition of The Congregational Hymn Book was published 1862, and The Canticles, Psalter, &c, of the Prayer Book, Noted and Pointed, during the same year. In 1865 he was preferred to the parish of St. Augustine's, Queen's Gate, South Kensington, and subsequently published Carols for Use in Church during Christmas and Epiphany, 1875; Carols for Easier and Other Tides, 1887; and other works. Mr. Chope has been one of the leaders in the revival and reform of Church Music as adapted to the Public Services. He was one of the originators of The Choir and Musical Record, and was for some time the proprietor and assistant editor of the Literary Churchman. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

Walter Bond Gilbert

1829 - 1910 Person Name: W. B. Gilbert Arranger of "MORNING" in The Church Hymnal Walter Bond Gilbert DMus United Kingdom 1829-1910. Born at Exeter, Devon, England, he studied music under Alfred Angel, Samuel Wesley and Henry Bishop. He attended New College, Oxford and the University of Toronto, Canada. He was organist in Devon at Topsham in 1847, Bideford in 1849, Kent at Tonbridge in 1854, Old Colliegiate Church, Maidstone in 1859, Lee in 1866, Boston, Lincolnshirein 1868, and Trinity Chapel in New York City in 1869-1897. He taught music at Tonbridge School, helped found the College of Organists, edited the America Episcopal Hymnal, and wrote a number of monographs, including “Antiquities of Maidstone”. He continued to write church music, producing services, oratorios (including “The Restoration of Israel and St. John, 1857), organ works, and anthems. He died at Headington, Oxford, England. John Perry

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