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Text Identifier:"^heavenly_home_heavenly_home_precious_nam$"

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Heavenly Home

Appears in 39 hymnals First Line: Heav'nly home! heav'nly home! Used With Tune: [Heav'nly home! heav'nly home!]

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[Heavenly home! heavenly home]

Appears in 12 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: John Pond Ordway; Horace Waters Tune Key: E Flat Major Incipit: 34534 56553 23333 Used With Text: Heavenly Home
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[Heav'nly home! heav'nly home! precious name to me!]

Appears in 2 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: G. W. Linton Tune Key: E Flat Major Incipit: 34533 51513 54356 Used With Text: Heavenly Home
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[Heavenly home! heavenly home! precious name to me]

Appears in 1 hymnal Composer and/or Arranger: Dr. A. B. Everett Used With Text: Heavenly Home

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Heavenly home! heavenly home! precious name to me!

Hymnal: The New Sabbath School Hosanna #52 (1870) Lyrics: 1 Heavenly home! heavenly home! precious name to me! I love to think the time will come when I shall rest in thee. I've no abiding city here, I seek for one to come, And tho' my pilgrimage be drear, I know there's rest at home. Chorus: Heavenly home! heavenly home! precious name to me! I love to think the time will come when I shall rest in thee. 2 Heavenly home! heavenly home! there no clouds arise, No tear-drops fall no dark nights dim thy ever-smiling skies. This earthly home is fair and bright, Yet clouds will often come; And oh! I long to see the light That gilds my heavenly home! Chorus: Heavenly home! heavenly home! there no clouds arise, No tear-drops fall no dark nights dim thy ever-smiling skies. 3 Heavenly home! heavenly home! ne'er shall sorrow's gloom, Nor doubts nor fears, disturb me there, for all is peace at home. I know I ne'er shall worthy be To dwell 'neath heavens bright dome; But Christ, my Saviour, died for me, And now he calls me home. Chorus: Heavenly home! heavenly home! ne'er shall sorrow's gloom, Nor doubts nor fears, disturb me there, for all is peace at home. Tune Title: HEAVENLY HOME
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Heavenly Home

Author: J. W. Sampson Hymnal: Chapel Melodies #16 (1868) First Line: Heavenly home, heavenly home, precious name to me Languages: English Tune Title: [Heavenly home, heavenly home, precious name to me]
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Heavenly Home

Hymnal: Kind Words #64 (1871) First Line: Heav'nly home! heav'nly home! precious name to me! Refrain First Line: Will you go with me the joys to see Lyrics: 1 Heav'nly home! heav'nly home! precious name to me! I love to think the time will come when I shall rest in thee. I've no abiding city here, I seek for one to come; And though my pilgrimage be drear, I know there's rest at home. Chorus: Will you go with me the joys to see, Of that home above where all is love, That heav'nly home above? 2 Heav'nly home! heav'nly home! there no clouds arise, No tear-drops fall, no dark nights dim thy ever smiling skies. This earthly home is fair and bright, Yet clouds will often come; And, oh, I long to see the light That gilds my heav'nly home. [Chorus] 3 Heav'nly home! heav'nly home! ne'er shall sorrow's gloom, Nor doubts nor fears, disturb me there, for all is peace at home. I know I ne'er shall worthy be, To dwell 'neath heaven's bright dome; But Christ, my Saviour, died for me, And soon he'll call me home. [Chorus] Languages: English Tune Title: [Heav'nly home! heav'nly home! precious name to me!]

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A. Brooks Everett

1828 - 1875 Person Name: Dr. A. B. Everett Composer of "[Heavenly home! heavenly home! precious name to me]" in Good News Asa Brooks Everett MusDoc USA 1828-1875. Born in VA, he planned to be a doctor, but decided to study music instead. He studied in Boston for four years and also in Leipzig, Germany for four years.. He composed many gospel tunes and edited “The Sceptre” a New York publication. His brothers, Benjamin and Leonard, were also composers. He and Leonard organized a musical instruction system in Richmond, VA, in the 1850s. By 1861, 50 teachers and singing schools were representing them and using their publications. He died in Nashville, TN. John Perry

Julia S. Haskell

Person Name: Julia W. Sampson Haskell Author of "Heavenly Home" in The Cyber Hymnal [Julia W. Sampson] Sampson, J. W. Miss Sampson is set forth in I. D. Sankey's Sacred Songs & Solos, 1878, as the author of "Weary of wandering long" (Divine Guidance Desired). --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, Appendix, Part II (1907) ================ Sampson, J. W., p. 1588, ii. Her hymn "Weary of wandering long" appeared in W. B. Bradbury's Golden Censer, 1864, p. 65 as by "Miss J. W. Sampson, Utica, N.Y." Other hymns with the same signature include "Sweetly sing, sweetly sing," in Bradbury's Golden Chain, 1861, p. 70, and "O, the Sabbath morning, beautiful and bright," in Happy Voice, 1865, No. 101. [Rev. James Mearns, M.A.] --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, New Supplement (1907) ==================== 19th Century Died: After 1901. She was listed as living in her husband’s obituary in the Utica Sunday Journal, July 20, 1902. Haskell’s maiden name appears in an 1857 teacher’s directory of Utica, New York. She married Charles Freeman Haskell of Utica in 1866. An article in the July 6, 1876, issue of the Utica Daily Observer mentioned a poetry reading by her. Lyrics Heavenly Home Over the Ocean Wave Pilgrim Halting, Staff in Hand Sweetly Sing, Sweetly Sing This Life Is a Battle with Satan and Sin Weary of Wandering Long --www.hymntime.com/tch

G. W. Linton

Composer of "[Heav'nly home! heav'nly home! precious name to me!]" in Kind Words