Julia C. Cory (Julia Buckley Cady Cory) was born in New York, NY in 1882. She was the daughter of a prominent New York architect, J. Cleveland Cady. Her father was also a Sunday school superintendent and amateur hymnologist. Partly because of his influence Julia began to write hymns at an early age. She was a member of the Brick Presbyterian Church. She married Robert Haskell Cory in 1911 and was a member of the Presbyterian Church in Englewood, NJ for all of her married life. She was a member of the Hymn Society that met in New York City all her adult life and died in Englewood, NJ in 1963. She raised 3 sons and they had 15 grandchildren.
Psalter Hymnal Handbook, 1998 and D. Lincoln Cory Go to person page >
Translator: George P. Simmonds
Used pseudonyms G Paul S., J. Paul Simon, and J. Pablo Símon
Go to person page >
The tune KREMSER owes its origin to a sixteenth-century Dutch folk song "Ey, wilder den wilt." Later the tune was combined with the Dutch patriotic hymn 'Wilt heden nu treden" in Adrianus Valerius's Nederlandtsch Gedenckclanck [sic: Nederlandtsche Gedenckclank] published posthumously in 1626. 'Wilt…
Display Title: Loor Te ofrecemos, Creador y Dios nuestroFirst Line: Loor Te ofrecemos, Creador y Dios nuestroTune Title: KREMSERAuthor: George P. Simmonds; Julia CoryDate: 1995