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Person Results

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Hymnal, Number:issh1908
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Showing 111 - 120 of 144Results Per Page: 102050

Herbert J. Lacey

Person Name: H. J. L. Hymnal Number: 164 Author of "Lead us Saviour" in Ideal Sunday School Hymns 20th Century Lacey’s works include: The Tribute of Song, with William Kirkpatrick et al. (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Hall-Mack Company, 1904) http://www.hymntime.com/tch/bio/l/a/c/lacey_hj.htm

Thomas J. Potter

1828 - 1873 Person Name: T. J. Potter Hymnal Number: 5 Author of "Brightly Gleams Our Banner" in Ideal Sunday School Hymns Potter, Thomas Joseph, was born at Scarborough in 1827, and joined the Roman Catholic Church in 1847, and subsequently took Holy Orders. For many years he filled the Chair of Pulpit Eloquence and English Literature in the Foreign Missionary College of All Hallows, Dublin. He published The Spoken Word; or, The Art of Extemporary Preaching; Sacred Eloquence, or, The Theory and Practice of Preaching; and The Pastor and his People; together with several tales. He translated the Vesper hymns in the Catholic Psalmist; contributed to the Holy Family Hymns, 1860; and published Legends, Lyrics, and Hymns, 1862. His most widely-known hymn is "Brightly gleams our banner" (q.v.). Several of his hymns and translations are in use in Roman Catholic hymnbooks for Missions and Schools. He died at Dublin in 1873. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907) ================ Potter, T. J., p. 901, ii., was b. June 9, 1828 (not in 1827), ordained 1857, and died Aug. 31, 1873. The hymn:— O! yet, once more, in Britain's isle [For the Conversion of England], in the Arundel Hymns, 1902, is stanzas 30, 31, 34, 35, 36 of a piece inhis Legends, Lyrics and Hymns, 1862. It is entitled "The Definition of the Immaculate Conception: or England and Rome," and marked as “Written several years ago .. to be spoken at the Feast of Languages, which is annually celebrated in the Propaganda College at Rome, on the Festival of the Epiphany, . . . now published for the first time." [Rev. James Mearns, M.A.] --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, New Supplement (1907)

Alfred Judson

Hymnal Number: 5 Composer of "[Brightly gleams our banner]" in Ideal Sunday School Hymns Pseudonym. See also Joseph Lincoln Hall, 1866-1930

Powell G. Fithian

b. 1861 Hymnal Number: 19 Composer of "[There's no love to me like the love of Jesus]" in Ideal Sunday School Hymns Born: April 30, 1861, Greenwich Township (now Gibbstown), New Jersey. Fithian was music director for the public schools in Camden, New Jersey. He and his wife Julia were both listed in the 1910 and 1920 census, but his wife appears alone in the 1930 census. Powell’s works include: Songs of the Mercy Seat, with George Hugg (Methodist Episcopal Book Room, 1899) Songs for Work and Worship, with Howard Entwisle & Adam Geibel (Dayton, Ohio: Lorenz & Company, 1900) Exalted Praise, with Howard Entwisle (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: MacCalla & Company, 1901) Heavenly Sunlight, with Howard Entwisle & Adam Geibel (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: MacCalla & Company, 1902) The Fithian Music Primer (New York: American Book Company, 1915) --www.hymntime.com/tch/

Arthur Wilton

Hymnal Number: 197 Composer of "[How oft across life's narrow path]" in Ideal Sunday School Hymns Pseudonym. See also Hall, J. Lincoln, 1866-1930

A. A. Payn

1868 - 1946 Hymnal Number: 11 Author of "How He Loves" in Ideal Sunday School Hymns Pseudonym. See also Miles, C. Austin, 1868-1946

Russell Hancock Miles

1895 - 1983 Hymnal Number: 157 Composer of "[Jesus, my Saviour, calls in tones so clear]" in Ideal Sunday School Hymns

Franklin Earl Hathaway

Person Name: Franklin E. Hathaway Hymnal Number: 135 Composer of "[Jesus shall reign where'er the sun]" in Ideal Sunday School Hymns

Grace Gordon

Hymnal Number: 192 Author of "The Master's Garden" in Ideal Sunday School Hymns Pseudonym. See also Yale, Elsie Duncan, 1873-1956

Clarence Kohlmann

1891 - 1944 Hymnal Number: 41 Composer of "[Bear another's burdens, speak a word of cheer]" in Ideal Sunday School Hymns Born: September 24, 1891, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Died: December 13, 1944, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Buried: Greenwood Cemetery, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. An organist and composer, Kohlmann wrote for the organ, piano, and hand bells. In 1929, he recorded four organ works, including The Storm, for inventor Thomas Edison. He was also a fixture at the Great Auditorium in Ocean Grove, New Jersey, where he played the organ for the last two decades of his life. --www.hymntime.com/tch/

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