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Text Identifier:"^here_we_come_with_gladness$"
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Julia H. Johnston

1849 - 1919 Author of "Here We Come With Gladness" in The Mennonite Hymnary, published by the Board of Publication of the General Conference of the Mennonite Church of North America Julia Harriet Johnston, who was born on Jan. 21, 1849, at Salineville, OH, in Columbiana County. Her father was a minister and he mother was a poet. She began writing when she was nine years old but really started writing verse in high school. She lived in Peoria, Ill. Dianne Shapiro, from "The Singers and Their Songs: sketches of living gospel hymn writers" by Charles Hutchinson Gabriel (Chicago: The Rodeheaver Company, 1916)

Martin Shaw

1875 - 1958 Composer of "OFFIDANS MEWS" in The Hymnal for Boys and Girls Martin F. Shaw was educated at the Royal College of Music in London and was organist and choirmaster at St. Mary's, Primrose Hill (1908-1920), St. Martin's in the Fields (1920-1924), and the Eccleston Guild House (1924-1935). From 1935 to 1945 he served as music director for the diocese of Chelmsford. He established the Purcell Operatic Society and was a founder of the Plainsong and Medieval Society and what later became the Royal Society of Church Music. Author of The Principles of English Church Music Composition (1921), Shaw was a notable reformer of English church music. He worked with Percy Dearmer (his rector at St. Mary's in Primrose Hill); Ralph Vaughan Williams, and his brother Geoffrey Shaw in publishing hymnals such as Songs of Praise (1925, 1931) and the Oxford Book of Carols (1928). A leader in the revival of English opera and folk music scholarship, Shaw composed some one hundred songs as well as anthems and service music; some of his best hymn tunes were published in his Additional Tunes in Use at St. Mary's (1915). Bert Polman

C. Hylton Stewart

1884 - 1932 Person Name: C. Hylton Stewart Composer of "GLADNESS" in The Church and School Hymnal Stewart, Charles Hylton; b. 1884, Chester; d. Nov. 14, 1932, Windsor; English organist

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