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Text Identifier:"^hark_how_your_leaders_bugle_is_sounding$"

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[Hark, how your leader's bugle is sounding]

Appears in 1 hymnal Composer and/or Arranger: B. R. Hanby Incipit: 17215 17215 11234 Used With Text: Follow Your Leader

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Follow Your Leader

Author: B. R. Hanby Hymnal: The Glorious Cause #38 (1888) First Line: Hark, how your leader's bugle is sounding Languages: English Tune Title: [Hark, how your leader's bugle is sounding]

Hark, how your leader's bugle is sounding

Author: B. R. Hanby Hymnal: The Snow-Bird #d13 (1865)

Hark, how your leader's bugle is sounding

Author: B. R. Hanby Hymnal: The Musical Fountain #d21 (1866)

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B. R. Hanby

1833 - 1867 Person Name: B. R. Hanby Author of "Follow Your Leader" Benjamin Russell Hanby was born July 22, 1833, the oldest of eight children, to Bishop William Hanby in Rushville, OH. The family moved to Westerville,OH where Bishop Hanby was a "conductor" on the Underground Railroad. In his short life Benjamin graduated from Otterbein, taught school, became a United Brethren minister, started a singing school, was editor for John Church publishers in Cincinnati and composed many songs and hymns before he died of tuberculosis March 15, 1867. His home in Westerville was Ohio's first memorial to a composer. It was a stop on the Underground Railroad for slaves escaping to Canada and is a national historic site, a Methodist church Landmark and a Network to Freedom site for the National Park Service. There is a Hanby Residence Hall at Otterbein University. Best known for "Up on the housetop" and "Darling Nellie Gray," Hanby published many hymns including "Little Eyes" and "Who is He? Mary Louise VanDyke
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