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Search Results

Text Identifier:"^this_is_not_our_time_of_resting$"

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Texts

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We Shall Rest

Author: Eden Reeder Latta Appears in 2 hymnals First Line: This is not our time of resting Refrain First Line: We shall rest, shall rest, yes

Tunes

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[This is not our time of resting]

Appears in 1 hymnal Composer and/or Arranger: Fred A. Fillmore Incipit: 56532 16176 51712 Used With Text: We Shall Rest
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[This is not our time of resting]

Appears in 1 hymnal Composer and/or Arranger: Henry Lockwood Incipit: 34511 76532 34654 Used With Text: We Shall Rest

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals
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We Shall Rest

Author: E. R. Latta Hymnal: Joy and Gladness #10 (1880) First Line: This is not our time of resting Refrain First Line: We shall rest, shall rest from toil and weeping Languages: English Tune Title: [This is not our time of resting]
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We Shall Rest

Author: E. R. Latta Hymnal: Songs of Rejoicing #110 (1888) First Line: This is not our time of resting Refrain First Line: We shall rest, shall rest, yes Languages: English Tune Title: [This is not our time of resting]

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

E. R. Latta

1839 - 1915 Person Name: Eden Reeder Latta Author of "We Shall Rest" Rv Eden Reeder Latta USA 1839-1915. Born at Haw Patch, IN, the son of a Methodist minister, (also a boyhood friend of hymn writer Willam A Ogden) he became a school teacher. During the American Civil War he preached for the Manchester Methodist Church and other congregations (possibly as a circuit rider filling empty pulpits). In 1863 he married Mary Elizabeth Wright, and they had five children: Arthur, Robert, Jennie, two others. He taught for the public schools of Manchester, and later Colesburg, IA. He moved to Guttenberg, IA, in the 1890s, and continued writing song lyrics for several major gospel composers, including William Ogden, James McGranahan, James Fillmore, and Edmund Lorenz. He wrote 1600+ songs and hymns, many being widely popular in his day. His older brother, William, composed hymn tunes. He died at Guttenbert, IA. John Perry

Fred A. Fillmore

1856 - 1925 Composer of "[This is not our time of resting]" in Songs of Rejoicing Born: May 15, 1856, Par­is, Ill­i­nois. Died: No­vem­ber 15, 1925, Ter­race Park, Ohio. Buried: Mil­ford, Ohio. Frederick Augustus Fillmore, who was born on May 15, 1856, in Paris, IL, one of seven children, five sons and two daughters, born to Augustus Damon and Hannah Lockwood Fillmore. His father was a preacher in the Christian Church, as well as a composer, songbook compiler, and hymn publisher who developed his own system of musical notation using numbers on the staff in place of note heads. Augustus eventually settled in Cincinnati, OH, and established a music publishing business there. Until 1906, there was no official distinction between "Christian Churches" and "Churches of Christ." The names were used pretty much interchangeably, and many older churches of Christ which are faithful today were once known as "Christian Churches." Fred and his older brother James took over their father's publishing business following the death of Augustus in 1870 and established the Fillmore Brothers Music House. This became a successful Cincinnati music form, publishing church hymnals and later band and orchestral music. For many years the firm issued a monthly periodical, The Music Messenger. The brothers edited many hymnbooks and produced many songs which became popular. Beginning with the songbook Songs of Glory in 1874, there appeared many Fillmore publications which became widely used through churches, especially in the midwest. For these collections, Fred provided a great deal of hymn tunes. --launch.groups.yahoo.com/group/hymnoftheday

Henry C. Lockwood

Person Name: Henry Lockwood Composer of "[This is not our time of resting]" in Joy and Gladness
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