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Search Results

Tune Identifier:"^baird_pollock$"

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Tunes

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Tune authorities

BAIRD (Pollock)

Meter: 7.7.7.7 Appears in 2 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Charles Edward Pollock Tune Key: D Major Incipit: 33555 61165 65323

Texts

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Text authorities
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When Thou, my righteous Judge shall come

Author: Lady Huntington Appears in 441 hymnals Used With Tune: BAIRD
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Jesus, canst Thou bid me live?

Author: Rev. A. J. Baird, D.D. Appears in 1 hymnal Used With Tune: BAIRD

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals
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Jesus, canst Thou bid me live?

Author: Rev. A. J. Baird, D.D. Hymnal: The Songs of Zion #205 (1915) Languages: English Tune Title: BAIRD
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When Thou, my righteous Judge shall come

Author: Lady Huntington Hymnal: Waves of Melody #97 (1901) Languages: English Tune Title: BAIRD

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

A. J. Baird

1820 - 1884 Person Name: Rev. A. J. Baird, D.D. Author of "Jesus, canst Thou bid me live?" in The Songs of Zion

Charles Edward Pollock

1853 - 1928 Person Name: Chas. Edw. Pollock Composer of "BAIRD" in Waves of Melody Charles Edward Pollock USA 1853-1928. Born at Newcastle, PA, he moved to Jefferson City, MO, when age 17. He was a cane maker for C W Allen. He also worked 20 years for the MO Pacific Railroad, as a depot clerk and later as Assistant Roadmaster. He was a musician and prolific songwriter, composing 5000+ songs, mostly used in Sunday school settings and church settings. He took little remuneration for his compositions, preferring they be freely used. He produced three songbooks: “Praises”, “Beauty of praise”, and “Waves of melody”. In 1886 he married Martha (Mattie) Jane Harris, and they had three children: Robert, Edward, and a daughter. He died in Merriam, KS. John Perry ================= Pollock, Charles Edward. (Jefferson City, Missouri, 1853-1924). Records of Jefferson City indicate the following: 1897 clerk at depot; residence at 106 Broadway (with Mildred Pollock) 1904-1905 cane maker for C. W. Allen 1908-1909 musician; residence at 106 Broadway (with wife Matty) 1912-1913 residence at St. Louis Road, east city limits --Wilmer Swope, DNAH Archives Note: not to be confused with Charles Edward Pollock (c.1871-1924).

Selina Hastings, Countess of Huntingdon

1707 - 1791 Person Name: Lady Huntington Author of "When Thou, my righteous Judge shall come" in Waves of Melody Born: August 24, 1707, Astwell House, Nottinghamshire, England. Died: June 17, 1791, London, England. Buried: St. Helen’s Church, Ashby-de-la-Zouch, Leicester, England. Selena Huntingdon, née Shirley, Countess of, daughter of Washington, Earl Ferrers, was born Aug. 24, 1707; married to Theophilus Hastings, 9th Earl of Huntindon, June, 1728; and d. in London, June 17, 1701. At an early age she received serious religious impressions, which continued with her, and ruled her conduct through life. She was a member of the first Methodist Society, in Fetter Lane, London, and the first Methodist Conference was held at her house in June, 1744. Her sympathies, however, were with the Calvinism of G. Whitefield, and when the breach took place between Whitefield and Wesley she joined the former. Her money was freely expended in chapel building, in the founding of Trevecca College, South Wales (now Cheshunt), and in the support of her preachers. A short time before her death the Connection which is known by her name was founded; and at her death it numbered more than sixty chapels. For use in these chapels she compiled A Select Collection of Hymns. Her own part in hymn-writing is most uncertain. The hymns, "Come, Thou Fount of every blessing," and "O when my righteous Judge shall come", have been specially claimed for her, but upon insufficient testimony. No mention of these hymns as being by her is made in her Life and Times, 1839. Miller says, "although the Countess was not much known as a hymn-writer, yet it is proved beyond doubt that she was the author of a few hymns of great excellence" (Singers & Songs, 1869, p. 183): but he neither names the hymns, nor submits the evidence. It is most uncertain that she ever wrote a hymn; and it is quite clear that upon reliable evidence not one has yet been ascertained to be of her composing. Her history and that of her Connexion are elaborately set forth in The Life and Times of Selina, Countess of Huntingdon, London, Painter, 1839. --Dictionary of Hymnology, John Julian, 1907.
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