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Tune Identifier:"^i_have_something_i_would_tell_duncan$"

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[I have something I would tell you]

Appears in 2 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: S. E. Duncan, 19th Century Incipit: 12313 56532 11232 Used With Text: I Have Something I Would Tell You

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Something I Would Tell You

Author: E. R. Latta Appears in 3 hymnals First Line: I have something I would tell you Refrain First Line: I have something I would tell you Used With Tune: [I have something I would tell you]

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I Have Something I Would Tell You

Author: Eden R. Latta, b. 1839 Hymnal: Christian Hymnal (Rev. ed.) #334 (1959) Languages: English Tune Title: [I have something I would tell you]
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Something I Would Tell You

Author: E. R. Latta Hymnal: Church and Sunday School Hymnal with Supplement #344 (1902) First Line: I have something I would tell you Refrain First Line: I have something I would tell you Languages: English Tune Title: [I have something I would tell you]

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S. E. Duncan

Person Name: S. E. Duncan, 19th Century Composer of "[I have something I would tell you]" in Christian Hymnal (Rev. ed.)

E. R. Latta

1839 - 1915 Person Name: Eden R. Latta, b. 1839 Author of "I Have Something I Would Tell You" in Christian Hymnal (Rev. ed.) 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
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