You help make Hymnary.org possible. More than 10 million people from 200+ countries found hymns, liturgical resources and encouragement on Hymnary.org in 2025, including you. Every visit affirms the global impact of this ministry.

If Hymnary has been meaningful to you this year, would you take a moment today to help sustain it? A gift of any size—paired with a note of encouragement if you wish—directly supports the server costs, research work and curation that keep this resource freely available to the world.

Give securely online today, or mail a check to:
Hymnary.org
Calvin University
3201 Burton Street SE
Grand Rapids, MI 49546

Thank you for your partnership, and may the hope of Advent fill your heart.

Person Results

Text Identifier:"^glory_be_to_the_father_and_to_the_son$"
In:people

Planning worship? Check out our sister site, ZeteoSearch.org, for 20+ additional resources related to your search.
Showing 61 - 70 of 77Results Per Page: 102050

Homer N. Bartlett

1845 - 1920 Composer of "[Glory be to the Father, and to the Son]" in Songs for the Lord's House Homer Newton Bartlett, a pianist, organist and prolific composer, was considered during his lifetime to be in the front rank of American musicians. He was born on December 1845 in Olive, New York, the descendant of a long line of illustrious New Englanders. A musical prodigy from childhood, he studied piano and composition with a number of well-known teachers, including Emil Guyon and S.B. Mills, and took up his first position as a church organist at the age of fourteen. In August 1864, the summer after he turned eighteen, Bartlett enlisted as an infantryman in the 64th New York Regiment. He was mustered out the following year at the end of the war. Bartlett spent his adult life in New York City, where he was organist and musical director at two prestigious Protestant churches. For twelve years he served at the Marble Collegiate Church, the Dutch Reformed church founded by Peter Minuit, which is the oldest Protestant congregation in North America; he then moved to the Madison Avenue Baptist Church, where he remained for the next thirty-one years. At the same time, he was composing and publishing musical works in a variety of genres, from voice-and-piano pieces intended for middle-class drawing rooms to grand symphonic works such as Apollo, a “symphonic poem” based on the Iliad. He was a founding member of the American Guild of Organists, served as president of the National Association of Organists, and won a number of musical competitions, including a 1905 composition contest sponsored by the piano manufacturers Kranich & Bach. He died in April 1920. Nancy Naber, from the New York State Library/Manuscripts and Special Collections http://www.nysl.nysed.gov/msscfa/pr/sc23062.pdf

William B. Evans

Person Name: Wm. B. Evans Composer of "[Glory be to the Father, and to the Son]" in The New Living Hymns (Living Hymns No. 2)

Thor Johnson

b. 1913 Person Name: Thor Johnson, 1913- Editor of "[Glory be to the Father]" in Hymnal and Liturgies of the Moravian Church

Edward Dwight Eaton

Person Name: Edward D. Eaton Composer of "GLORIA PATRI" in The Hymnal of Praise

Edwin McNeill Poteat

1892 - 1955 Person Name: Edwin McNeill Poteat, 1892- Composer of "GLORIA PATRI" in Christian Worship

O. B. Brown

Composer of "[Glory be to the Father, and to the Son]" in The Morning Hour

Henry Schwing

b. 1825 Composer of "GLORIA PATRI" in The Woman's Hymnal

August Neithardt

1793 - 1861 Person Name: August Neithardt, 1793-1861 Composer of "[Glory be to the Father]" in Hymnal and Liturgies of the Moravian Church

Walter R. Johnston

Person Name: W. R. Johnston Arranger of "[Glory, glory, glory be to the Father]" in The Epworth Hymnal No. 2

Albert J. Holden

1841 - 1916 Composer of "[Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost]" in Gloria Deo A Founder of the American Guild of Organists and composer and editor of numerous pieces and collections of sacred music (of which perhaps Songs of Faith, Hope and Love, 1883, is best known), Albert Junos Holden was born in Boston on August 17, 1841. He studied in New York City, and served there as organist of the Church of the Divine Paternity (Universalist) and of the Church of the Puritans (Presbyterian). His sacred solo "In Heavenly Love Abiding" was recorded by the "Metropolitan Quartet" on an Edison Blue Amberol cylinder, No. 3813, in 1919. He died in Longmeadow, Massachusetts, on July 16, 1916. (source: AGO Founders Hymnal, p. 98)

Pages


Export as CSV
It looks like you are using an ad-blocker. Ad revenue helps keep us running. Please consider white-listing Hymnary.org or getting Hymnary Pro to eliminate ads entirely and help support Hymnary.org.