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Merrill Bradshaw

1929 - 2000 Person Name: Merrill Bradshaw, 1929–2000 Author of "We Will Sing of Zion" in Hymns of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

Nellie Shorthill Bradshaw

Person Name: N. Bradshaw Author of "My Savior Walks With Me"

Ralph Bradshaw

Composer of "O JESUS, THE GIVER" in Hymns of the Saints

William Bradshaw

Person Name: Wm. Bradshaw Composer of "[Hark! listen to the trumpeters!]" in Children of Zion

Bradsky

Composer of "BRADSKY" in School and College Hymnal

Anne Bradstreet

1612 - 1672 Author of "As spring the winter doth succeed" in Hymnal

Edith V. Bradt

Author of "Onward Soldiers"

Claude C. Brady

Author of "The return of the prodigal son"

G. F. Brady

Person Name: G. F. B. Author (stanzas 1, 2) of "Â'n ddi-ddim holl bwerau'r byd (All realms of earth and time go by)" in Mawl a chân = praise and song

Nicholas Brady

1659 - 1726 Author of "Through all the changing scenes of life" in Book of Worship with Hymns and Tunes Nicholas Brady, the son of an officer in the Royalist army, was born in Brandon, Ireland, 1659. He studied at Westminster School, and at Christ Church College, oxford, and graduated at Trinity College, Dublin. He held several positions in the ministry, but later in life retired to Richmond Surrey, where he established a school. Here he translated some of the Psalms. Several volumes of his sermons and smaller works were published, but his chief work, like that of his co-colabourer Tate, was the "Metrical Version of Psalms." This version was authorized by King William in 1696, and has, since that time, taken the place of the earlier translation by Sternhold and Hopkins, which was published in 1562. The whole of the Psalms, with tunes, appeared in 1698, and a Supplement of Church Hymns in 1703. Of this version, which has little poetic merit, Montgomery says "It is nearly as inanimate as the former, though a little more refined." None of the "Metrical Psalms" are to be compared with the Psalms of the Prayer Book Psalter, and very few of them are worthy a place in a collection of hymns. --Annotations of the Hymnal, Charles Hutchins, 1872.

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