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Text Identifier:"^i_love_my_savior_god$"

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I love my Saviour, God

Appears in 12 hymnals Used With Tune: ALL GOODNESS FLOWS

Tunes

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ALL GOODNESS FLOWS

Appears in 997 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Hugh Wilson Incipit: 51651 23213 53213 Used With Text: I love my Saviour, God

NEWRY

Appears in 3 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: M. C. H. Davis Incipit: 56123 16535 32132 Used With Text: I love my Saviour God

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals

I love my Savior God

Hymnal: Primitive Baptist Hymn and Tune Book. Rev. #d67 (1935)

I love my Savior God

Hymnal: The Old School Hymnal No. 7. Rev. #d116 (1939)

I love my Savior God

Hymnal: Primitive Baptist Hymnal #d129 (1961)

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Hugh Wilson

1766 - 1824 Composer of "ALL GOODNESS FLOWS" in Primitive Baptist Hymn and Tune Book Hugh Wilson (b. Fenwick, Ayrshire, Scotland, c. 1766; d. Duntocher, Scotland, 1824) learned the shoemaker trade from his father. He also studied music and mathematics and became proficient enough in various subjects to become a part-­time teacher to the villagers. Around 1800, he moved to Pollokshaws to work in the cotton mills and later moved to Duntocher, where he became a draftsman in the local mill. He also made sundials and composed hymn tunes as a hobby. Wilson was a member of the Secession Church, which had separated from the Church of Scotland. He served as a manager and precentor in the church in Duntocher and helped found its first Sunday school. It is thought that he composed and adapted a number of psalm tunes, but only two have survived because he gave instructions shortly before his death that all his music manuscripts were to be destroyed. Bert Polman

M. C. H. Davis

1795 - 1880 Composer of "NEWRY" in The Good Old Songs A clock mak­er and sil­ver smith, Davis grew up in New­ber­ry County, South Car­o­li­na, and appears in the 1850 and 1860 censuses there. By 1870, he and his wife Me­lin­da had moved in with their daugh­ter in Con­cord, South Car­o­li­na, and were liv­ing there through at least 1880. --www.hymntime.com/tch
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