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Hymnal, Number:hv1917
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H. C. Bunner

Hymnal Number: d290 Author of "The heart of the tree" in Heart and Voice

H. C. Andersen

1805 - 1875 Person Name: Hans Christian Andersen Hymnal Number: d33 Author of "Child Jesus came from heaven to earth" in Heart and Voice Andersen, Hans Christian, son of poor parents, was born at Odense, Denmark, April 2, 1805, and died Aug. 4, 1875. He is well known as a poet, and a writer for children. His Christmas Carol, "Child Jesus comes from heavenly height," translated from the Danish, is in The Evangelical Hymnal, N. Y., 1880. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, Appendix, Part II (1907)

B. B. Whittemore

b. 1829 Hymnal Number: d216 Author of "Praise ye the Lord, who is King of all power" in Heart and Voice Whittemore, Benjamin Ballou. (Troy, New York, September 14, 1829--?). A Universalist layman engaged in business in Boston, Massachusetts. He wrote a hymn beginning "Praise ye the Lord God, O worship our Father in heaven," which is included in Church Harmonies: New and Old, 1895. --Henry Wilder Foote, DNAH Archives

Alice Williams Brotherton

1838 - 1930 Hymnal Number: d47 Author of "The lesson of the lilies" in Heart and Voice Brotherton, Alice, née Williams, born at Cambridge, Ind., and married in 1876 to William E. Brotherton of Cincinnati. Has published Beyond the Veil, Chicago, 1886, and Sailing of King Olaf, 1887. Author of "Consider the lilies, How stately they grow" (Providence), in Horder's Worship Song, 1905, and others. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, New Supplement (1907)

L. M. Mills

Hymnal Number: d59 Author of "Father, hear the prayer we offer" in Heart and Voice

Kate L. Brown

Hymnal Number: d279 Author of "'Twas a bluebird told the story" in Heart and Voice

Lewis G. Pray

1793 - 1882 Hymnal Number: d289 Author of "Hands of cheer and hearts sincere" in Heart and Voice Pray, Lewis Glover, was born at Quincy, Massachusetts, Aug. 15, 1793. Removing to Boston in 1808, he entered into business there in 1815, and retired therefrom in 1838. He was for some time a member of the City Government of Boston, of the Board of Education, and of the State Legislature. From an early date lie was associated with Sunday schools, and was for 34 years superintendent of the Sunday School of the Twelfth Congregational Society, Boston. In 1833 he published a Sunday School Hymn Book, the first with music ever compiled for American Unitarian Sunday schools. This was enlarged in 1844 as the Sunday School Hymn and Service Book. He also published a History of Sunday Schools, 1847; a Christian Catechism, 1849; and other works. His hymns and poems were collected and published in 1862, as The Sylphides' School, and a second volume of a like kind appeared in 1873, as Autumn Leaves. Most of his hymns appeared in his collections of 1833 and 1844. Putnam (to whom we are indebted for these details) gives in his Singers and Song, &c, 1874, p. 81, four pieces from his volume of 1862, and two from that of 1873. One of these, "When God upheaved the pillared earth" (Silent Work) was repeated in the American Hymns of the Ages, 3rd series, 1864. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

Edward Augustus Horton

1843 - 1931 Hymnal Number: d6 Author of "Easter morning" in Heart and Voice Horton, Rev. Edward Augustus. (Springfield, Massachusetts, September 28, 1843--April 15, 1931, Toronto, Canada). He studied at the University of Chicago and at Meadville Theological School, from which he graduated in 1868. He served Unitarian churches in Leominster, Mass., 1868-1875; Hingham, Mass., 1877-1880; and the Second Church in Boston, 1880-1892. Thereafter he was active in the work of the Unitarian Sunday School Society. In 1912, he wrote an "Anniversary Hymn" beginning "We honor those whose work began" which was included in The New Hymn and Tune Book, 1914. --Henry Wilder Foote, DNAH Archives

Harriet Ware Hall

1841 - 1889 Person Name: Harriet Hall Hymnal Number: d287 Author of "Weary am I, go to rest" in Heart and Voice Hall, Harriet Ware. (Boston, Massachusetts, September 15, 1841--March 18, 1889, Boston). She was a lifelong resident of Boston, a member of King's Chapel. Two small books by her were privately printed, one a collection of poems entitled A Book for Friends, 1888, the other entitled Essays, printed posthumously in 1890. The first book contains a hymn beginning "Lord, beneath thine equal hand" in three stanzas, 7.7.7.7.D., dated February 10, 1869, and written for the installation of Rev. E.H. Hall at Worcester, Mass., in 1869. It is included in the Isles of Shoals Hymn Book, 1908, the first line altered to read "Lord, beneath whose equal hand." --Henry Wilder Foote, DNAH Archives

Maria B. W. Barnes

1836 - 1873 Hymnal Number: d282 Author of "Onward, onward, singing as we go" in Heart and Voice Christened Maria Burbank Williams, her family called her Kitty. Used the pseudonym Kate Cameron. See also Cameron, Kate, 1836-1873

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