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Hymnal, Number:rcmb1867
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Joseph Stammers

1801 - 1885 Person Name: J. Stammers Hymnal Number: d38 Author of "Onward and upward still be thine endeavor" in Revival and Camp Minstrel, containing the Best Hymns and Spiritual Songs, Original and Selected Joseph Stammers was born at Bury S. Edmunds, in 1801. He was educated for the legal profession, and practised for some years as a solicitor in London. In 1833, he was called to the bar, and continued to practice as a barrister. --Annotations of the Hymnal, Charles Hutchins, M.A., 1872. ============================= Stammers, Joseph, was born at Bury St. Edmunds in 1801, and educated for the legal profession. After practising in London as a solicitor for some time he was called to the Bar in 1833, and joined the Northern Circuit. (Lyra Britannica,1868.) He died in London, May 18, 1885. His popular hymn— Breast the wave, Christian (Perseverance) was contributed to the Cottage Magazine (a small serial edited by the Rev. John Buckworth, late Vicar of Dewsbury) in 1830. It has passed into several collections, including the Baptist Psalms & Hymns, 1858; the People's Hymnal, 1867 (altered), and others. Mr. Stammers also contributed 4 hymns to Dr. Rogers's Lyra Britannica1868, but these have not come into common use. -- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

John Stamp

Hymnal Number: d65 Author of "Come, poor guilty, anxious mourner" in Revival and Camp Minstrel, containing the Best Hymns and Spiritual Songs, Original and Selected Stamp, John, was for some time a minister with the Primitive Methodists; but, for various reasons, he was suspended in 1841. For sometime afterwards he preached in Hull, where a chapel was built for him in West Street. There also his weakness displayed itself, and he had to remove elsewhere. Thenceforth he lived, it is said, in great poverty until his death. He published The Christian's Spiritual Song Book, in 1845. It contains several of his hymns, two of which,—(1) "Leave Thee, no, my dearest [gracious] Saviour" (Perseverance), and (2), "Pity, Lord, a wretched creature" (Lent) — are in Spurgeon's Our Own Hymn Book, 1866. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, Appendix, Part II (1907)

Caroline Fry

1787 - 1846 Person Name: Caroline Fry Wilson Hymnal Number: d98 Author of "For what shall I praise thee" in Revival and Camp Minstrel, containing the Best Hymns and Spiritual Songs, Original and Selected Wilson, Mrs. Caroline (Fry),1787-1846, usage Caroline Fry Wilson, Caroline, née Fry, daughter of a farmer, was born at Tunbridge Wells, Dec. 31, 1787. In 1831 she was married to a Mr. Wilson, and died at Tunbridge Wells, Sept. 17, 1846. Her publications were somewhat numerous, and included a History of England in Verse, 1801; a Poetical Catechism, 1821; Serious Poetry, 1822; Death, and other Poems, 1823, &c. Her Autobiography, Letters, and Remains were published in 1843, and her Table of the Lord in 1859. Her best known hymns are:— 1. For what shall I praise Thee, My God and my King? Thanksgiving in Affliction. In common use in Great Britain and America. 2. Often the clouds of deepest woe. Affliction leading to Glory. From her Poetical Catechism, 1821, p. 25. In Kennedy, 1863, it begins "Full oft the clouds of deepest woe." -- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

George Clair Wells

1819 - 1873 Person Name: George C. Well Hymnal Number: d155 Author of "If I in thy likeness, O Lord, may awake" in Revival and Camp Minstrel, containing the Best Hymns and Spiritual Songs, Original and Selected

Sarah Jones

1753 - 1794 Hymnal Number: d43 Author of "Bright scenes of glory strike my sense" in Revival and Camp Minstrel, containing the Best Hymns and Spiritual Songs, Original and Selected Jones, Sarah. (1753--1794). A Methodist, she spent her entire life in Mecklenburg, Virginia. Her husband, Tygnal Jones, owned 70 or 80 slaves, and "was quite averse" to their emancipation. An extremely spiritual woman, she left correspondence with a number of Methodist ministers who worked in that area: Devout letters; or, Letters spiritual and friendly. Correct and published by Jeremiah Minter, minister of the Gospel . . . . (Alexandria, Va., printed by Samuel Snowden, 1804. viii, 154 p.). In his introduction, Minter mentions The Life and Death of Mrs. Jones which he had recently written, but no copies of this are known. --Leonard Ellinwood, DNAH Archives

R. P. Clark

Hymnal Number: d314 Author of "Marching along, we are marching along" in Revival and Camp Minstrel, containing the Best Hymns and Spiritual Songs, Original and Selected

Josiah Goddard

Hymnal Number: d174 Author of "Sing glory, glory, hallelujah" in Revival and Camp Minstrel, containing the Best Hymns and Spiritual Songs, Original and Selected

Maria B. W. Barnes

1836 - 1873 Hymnal Number: d283 Author of "Yes, O yes, in that land" in Revival and Camp Minstrel, containing the Best Hymns and Spiritual Songs, Original and Selected Christened Maria Burbank Williams, her family called her Kitty. Used the pseudonym Kate Cameron. See also Cameron, Kate, 1836-1873

C. Cooke

Hymnal Number: d240 Author of "O say, can you see by the truth's holy light" in Revival and Camp Minstrel, containing the Best Hymns and Spiritual Songs, Original and Selected

C. B. Davidson

Hymnal Number: d288 Author of "Sinner [sinners] go [come], will you go" in Revival and Camp Minstrel, containing the Best Hymns and Spiritual Songs, Original and Selected

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