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Tune Identifier:"^comrade_conant$"

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COMRADE

Meter: 8.8.8.8 Appears in 2 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Grace Wilbur Conant Tune Key: C Major Incipit: 35653 43232 35

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O Son of Man, who walked each day

Author: Nancy Byrd Turner Meter: 8.8.8.8 Appears in 14 hymnals Topics: For Youth Used With Tune: COMRADE

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals
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O Son of Man, who walked each day

Author: Nancy Byrd Turner Hymnal: The Church School Hymnal for Youth #144 (1928) Languages: English Tune Title: COMRADE

O Son of Man, who walked each day

Author: Nancy Byrd Turner Hymnal: The Book of Common Praise #645 (1939) Meter: 8.8.8.8 Topics: For Youth Tune Title: COMRADE

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Grace Wilbur Conant

1858 - 1948 Composer of "COMRADE" in The Book of Common Praise Pseudonym: A. B. Ponsonby. Born: Sep­tem­ber 9, 1858, Bos­ton, Mass­a­chu­setts. Died: Ap­ril 7, 1948, Malden, Mass­a­chu­setts. Grace re­mained sin­gle all her life. Her mid­dle name was her mo­ther’s maid­en name. She served as mu­sic­al ed­it­or for the Kin­der­gar­ten Review for at least six years, star­ting in 1908. Her works in­clude: Songs for Lit­tle Peo­ple, with Fran­ces Weld Dan­i­el­son (Bos­ton, Mass­a­chu­setts: The Pil­grim Press, 1905) Worship and Song, with Ben­ja­min S. Win­ches­ter (Pilg­rim Press, 1913) Religious Dan­gers of Mo­dern Ten­den­cies in So-Called Re­li­gious Songs, 1917 Song and Play for Child­ren, with Fran­ces Weld Dan­iel­son (Pil­grim Press, 1925) --The Cyber Hymnal

Nancy Byrd Turner

1880 - 1971 Author of "O Son of Man, who walked each day" in The Book of Common Praise Turner, Nancy Byrd. Born in Boydton, Virginia, July 29, 1880, daughter of Byrd Thornton Turner and Nancy Addison (Harrison) Turner. Composed her first verse at three. First published verse at age of 8--a romantic ballad, "Ruth in the Dentist's Chair" (he fell in love). Her father was an Episcopal minister; they lived in about a dozen small towns or rural communities during her childhood. In 1916, she went to Boston and joined the staff of Youth's Companion. She wrote under many pen names, and published in several magazines. She won numerous awards, including the "Golden Rose" of the New England Poetry Society and the Lyric Associates award of 1951. --Letter from Turner Rose to Jean Woodward Steele, Westminster Press, 1 February 1974, DNAH Archives.
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