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Tune Identifier:"^nearer_my_home_evans$"

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NEARER HOME

Appears in 25 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: John M. Evans Incipit: 53323 21512 25435 Used With Text: I'm nearer my home, nearer my home

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I'm nearer my home, nearer my home

Appears in 726 hymnals First Line: One sweetly solemn tho't Used With Tune: NEARER HOME
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Nearer my home

Appears in 71 hymnals First Line: A crown of glory bright Refrain First Line: I'm nearer my home Topics: Communion with God Used With Tune: [A crown of glory bright]
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Am Tag des Herrn

Appears in 22 hymnals First Line: So feierlich und stille Refrain First Line: Am tag des Herrn, am Tag des Herrn Used With Tune: [So feierlich und stille]

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals
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Nearer my home

Hymnal: The Little Seraph #156b (1874) First Line: One sweetly solemn thought Refrain First Line: I'm nearer my home, nearer my home Lyrics: 1 One sweetly solemn thought Comes to me o'er and o'er: I'm nearer home today Than I've ever been before. Chorus: I'm nearer my home, nearer my home. nearer my home today; Yes! nearer my home in heav'n today, Than ever I've been before. 2 Nearer my Father's house, Where the many mansions be; Nearer the great white throne, Nearer the jasper sea. [Chorus] 3 Nearer the the bound of life, Where we lay our burdens down; Nearer leaving my cross, Nearer wearing my crown. [Chorus] 4 But lying darkly between, Winding down through the night, Is that dim and unknown stream Which leads at last to light--[Chorus] 5 For even now my feet May stand upon its brink; I may be nearer my home, Nearer now, than I think. [Chorus] Tune Title: [One sweetly solemn thought]
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Nearer My Home

Author: Phoebe Cary Hymnal: Songs of the Kingdom #150 (1896) First Line: One sweetly solemn thought Refrain First Line: I'm nearer my home, nearer my home Lyrics: 1 One sweetly solemn thought Comes to me o’er and o’er; I’m nearer home today Than e’er I’ve been before. Refrain: I’m nearer my home, nearer my home, Nearer my home today; Yes, nearer my home in heav’n today, Than ever I’ve been before. 2 Nearer my Father’s house, Where many mansions be; Nearer the great white throne, Nearer the jasper sea. [Refrain] 3 For ever now my feet May stand upon its brink; I may be nearer home, Nearer than now I think. [Refrain] Topics: Heaven Scripture: Hebrews 11:16 Languages: English Tune Title: [One sweetly solemn thought]
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I'm nearer my home, nearer my home

Hymnal: Gospel Hymn and Tune Book #427 (1879) First Line: One sweetly solemn thought Languages: English Tune Title: NEARER MY HOME

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Love H. Jameson

1811 - 1892 Person Name: L. H. Jameson Arranger of "I'm nearer my home" in New Christian Hymn and Tune Book Born: April 17, 1811, Jefferson County, Indiana. Died: April 12, 1892, Indianapolis, Indiana. Buried: Crown Hill Cemetery, Indianapolis, Indiana. Love Humphreys Jameson was born in Jefferson County in what was then the Territory of Indiana on May 17, 1811, the son of Thomas Jameson. Thomas had moved from Virginia to Kentucky around 1800 and later to the Indiana Territory in 1810 or early 1811. Thomas’s parents were members of the Calvinistic Kirk of Scotland and his wife’s parents held the views of the Church of England, but the family became Christians in 1816 with Love’s father and mother being baptized by John McClung, a young associate of Barton Warren Stone. Love, whose education was attended with all the difficulties associated with frontier life and was mostly under the tuition of his parents, was baptized in the fall of 1829 during a protracted meeting with Beverly Vawter and then preached his first sermon that same year on Dec. 25, following which he began preaching the gospel regularly. From 1830 to 1834, Jameson taught school during the winters and made preaching trips in the summers. One of his mentors was Walter Scott, with whom he frequently travelled and worked. Moving to southern Ohio, in 1834, he, along with Scott, attended the famous debate of 1837 between Alexander Campbell and Bishop Purcell at Cincinnati, OH. In addition, he wrote frequently for Campbell’s paper, The Millennial Harbinger, in which Campbell spoke of him as the brother “whose praise is in all the churches in Indiana.” After preaching at various churches in Hamilton County, OH, Jameson worked with the church in Dayton from 1835 to 1837, when he married Elizabeth M. Clark. Also, in the closing years of B. W. Stone’s life, Jameson often accompanied the elderly preacher on his journeys. In 1840 he returned to Indiana and located at Madison, IN, the following year. His wife died of an apoplectic stroke suddenly soon afterwards, and he married Elizabeth R. Robinson in 1842, moving to Indianapolis, IN, which became his headquarters for the rest of his life. In 1845, Jameson was asked, along with John O’Kane, to evangelize in the southwestern part of the state. Then after 1854, he made regular preaching trips into Ohio, Kentucky, Western Missouri, Illinois, New York, and even portions of New England. “There is a Habitation” was penned about 1860, with both words and original music by Jameson, but it never achieved any degree of popularity because of its slow, ponderous, torpid melody. The song as we know it was first published under the title, “O Sion, Sion,” in the New Christian Hymn and Tune Book, Part II, compiled at Cincinnati, OH, in 1882 by James Henry Fillmore. Jameson, who also provided the lyrics for “Night, With Ebon Pinion,” died ten years later, on May 1, 1892, in Indianapolis. --hymnstudiesblog.wordpress.com

Phoebe Cary

1824 - 1871 Author of "Nearer My Home" in Songs of the Kingdom Phoebe Cary, (1824-1871) was born and raised in Mount Healthy in Hamilton County, Ohio. Her family came from Lyme, New Hampshire to Ohio when her grandfather was given land in return for his service in the Continental Army. She was the younger sister of Alice Cary (1820-1871). She and Alice submitted poetry to religious periodicals. Phoebe remained in Ohio and continued to write many hymns, including, "One sweetly solemn thought." Mary Louise VanDyke =========================================== Cary, Phoebe, sister of Alice Cary, born near Cincinnati, Ohio, Sept. 4, 1824, and died within six months of the death of the same sister at Newport, July 31, 1871. Her works include Poems and Parodies, 1854; and Poems of Faith, Hope and Love, 1868. With Dr. Charles F. Deems she compiled Hymns for all Christians, 1869. Her hymns are:— 1. One sweetly solemn thought. Anticipation of Heaven. This piece was not intended for public use, nor is it a suitable metre for musical treatment, yet it has won universal acceptance and popularity. In some instances this has been attained by change of metre as in the Supplement to the Baptist Psalms & Hymns 1880, No. 1185. Johnson's Encyclopedia is in error in saying it was "written at the age of 17." The Congregational Quarterly for Oct., 1874, says, "it was written, she tells us, in the little back third story bedroom, one Sabbath morning in 1852, on her return from church." This statement shows that it was composed when she was 28, and not 17. The popularity of the hymn in Great Britain arose mainly through its use in the Evangelistic services of Messrs. Moody and Sankey. In the Protestant Episcopal Hymns for Church and Home, Phila., 1860, No. 383, it is given as "A sweetly solemn thought." The following additional pieces by this author are in the Lyra Sacra Americana, 1868:— 2. Go and sow beside all waters. Seed Sowing. 3. Great waves of plenty rolling up. Gratitude. 4. I had drunk, with lips unsated. Living Waters. [Rev. F. M. Bird, M.A.] --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

John M. Evans

Person Name: J. M. Evans Composer of "[One sweetly solemn thought]" in The Little Seraph Evans, John M. (Hilltown, Pennsylvania, November 30, 1825--?). Baptist. Appointed superintendent of the Sunday School at Tenth Baptist Church, Philadelphia, in 1854. Under his direction, the Sunday School became the first in that city to make music a prominent feature of its activities. In 1872, he was elected President of the Baptist Sunday School Association of Philadelphia. Author of several hymns and tunes. Included in Devotional Hymn Book (Philadelphia, 1864) is the text "Amid the joyous scenes of earth" which is interesting in that the refrain is the same as the one for the Doddridge text "Oh, happy day, that fixed my choice." --Deborah Carlton Loftis, DNAH Archives
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