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Text Identifier:"^callest_thou_thus_o_master$"
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George C. Hugg

1848 - 1907 Person Name: George Crawford Hugg Composer of "[Callest Thou thus, oh Master?]" in The Cyber Hymnal George Crawford Hugg USA 1848-1907. Born near Haddonfield, NJ, he became choirmaster at the Berlin, NJ, Presbyterian Church at age 12. At age 14 he published his first song, “Walk in the light”, which became very popular. He married Anne E Ketchum, and they had a daughter, Evangeline. He served as choirmaster of the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia, and also the Broad Street and Arch Street Methodist Episcopal Churches there. He was also closely associated with the Harper Memorial Presbyterian Church there. He was a prolific composer with over 2000 works, publishing 18 books of revival and Sunday school music, and 90 songs for special occasions (Christmas, Easter, etc.). He died in Philadelphia, PA. John Perry

Helen M. Burnside

b. 1844 Person Name: Helen Marion Burnside Author of "Callest Thou?" in Light in the Valley Miss Helen Marion Burnside It was really a terrible affliction which led this gifted lady to become a poetess. "During my girlhood days," she once said to the writer, "my greatest desire was to become a musician, but at thirteen years of age a terrible calamity befell me. I became totally deaf as the result of an attack of scarlet fever, and never regained my hearing. Then it was I took to verse writing as another way of making music, for it was the desire to write words for music which, in the first instance, induced me to try the art of rhyming." At the same time, Miss Burnside disclaims the title of poetess. "1 have never called myself anything more ambitious than a verse writer," she says. Miss Burnside is an old lady now - she was born in 1844 - with a face as sweet and a voice as gentle as the messages she sends round the world. She lived for many years at Putney, reading, gardening, and walking in her leisure hours. A prolific worker, Miss Burnside has written four hundred verses a year for the last twenty years, and sometimes as many as eight or ten different poems in one day. from "Every Woman's Encyclopaedia".

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