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Tune Identifier:"^there_is_a_fountain_filled_with_grape$"

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[There is a fountain filled with blood]

Appears in 2 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: John T. Grape Incipit: 55556 55435 66616 Used With Text: O Sinner Believe It

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O Sinner, Believe It

Appears in 2,541 hymnals First Line: There is a fountain filled with blood Used With Tune: [There is a fountain filled with blood]

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O Sinner Believe It

Hymnal: Loving Voices #107 (1887) First Line: There is a fountain filled with blood Languages: English Tune Title: [There is a fountain filled with blood]
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O Sinner, Believe It

Hymnal: The Emory Hymnal No. 2 #161 (1891) First Line: There is a fountain filled with blood Languages: English Tune Title: [There is a fountain filled with blood]

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John T. Grape

1835 - 1915 Composer of "[There is a fountain filled with blood]" in The Emory Hymnal No. 2 John Thomas Grape USA 1835-1915. Born at Baltimore, MD, he became a successful coal merchant. He married Sophia F MacCubbin, and they had one daughter, Agnes. He was a member of Monument St. Methodist Church in Baltimore, where he played the organ, directed the choir, and was active in the Sunday school. Later, he directed the choir at the Hartford Avenue Methodist Church. The hymn noted below was composed by Grape in 1868, with lyrics composed by Envina Mable Hall of the same church in 1865 while sitting in the choir loft during a sermon. Both words and music had been given to the pastor, Rev George W Schreck, at different times, and one day he remembered he had been given both. Grape's tune had a refrain, so Ms Hall, hearing it, then added words to her poem for that, and the hymn was complete. At Schreck's urging they sent the hymn to Professor Theodore Perkins, publisher of “Sabbath Carols” periodical, and it became popular. Grape died in Baltimore. John Perry
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