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Hattie Bell Allen

1896 - 1981 Person Name: Hattie A. Allen Hymnal Number: 30 Author of "While the Days Are Going By" in Songs for Service Hattie Bell McCracken Allen 1896-1981 Residence: Born in Columbus, MS; lived in Nashville, TN; Hartsville, SC; Winston-Salem, NC Education: Mississippi Women's College Occupation: Teacher, editor of children's books for Broadman Press, author Notes: All of her books are of a religious nature; married to Clifton J. Allen --www.lib.usm.edu/legacy

Clarence M. Seamans

1869 - 1939 Person Name: C. M. S. Hymnal Number: 220 Author of "Like Zion's Holy Mount" in Songs for Service Seamans, Clarence Milton. (Johnston, Rhode Island, February 8, 1869--July 21, 1939, Whitman, Massachusetts). Direct descendant of Roger Williams, the founder of the Rhode Island Colony. Seamans married Annie May Bennett on October 8, 1890; they had four children. Ordained to the ministry of the Advent Christian Church, he served their churches in Pascoag and River Point, R.I.; Dover, New Hampshire; Chelsea, Springfield, and Boston, Mass.; and Rutland, Vermont. His last 19 years were spent as pastor in Whitman, Mass. For many years, he was secretary of the Massachusetts Advent Christian Conference and of the Marion (Mass.) Campmeeting Association. He was also active in the Alton Bay (N.H.) Campmeeting Association. He contributed many articles to his denomination's periodical, The World's Crisis. He was an ardent pastor, preaching the Christian life and the imminent Second Coming, subjects reflected in his hymns. In addition to writing and composing a number of hymns and tunes, he was a joint editor of the Golden Sheaf (1902) and Carols of Hope (1906). --Russell J. Cross and Leonard Ellinwood, DNAH Archives

W. H. Hyde

Hymnal Number: 86 Author of "We Have Heard" in Songs for Service 19th Century For a while in 1845 Hyde was associated with Ellen Harmon White & others who eventually formed the Seventh-Day Adventists. --www.hymntime.com/tch/

G. Tabor Thompson

Hymnal Number: 20 Author of "My Old Country Home" in Songs for Service Thompson, G. Tabor. (19th century). Little information has been available on this author, except that he succeeded J.H. Burke as song leader under A.B. Simpson at the New York Gospel Tabernacle about 1890. --Paul Milburn, DNAH Archives

S. M. Sayford

Hymnal Number: 88 Author of "We're on the Way" in Songs for Service

Mrs. M. T. Haughey

Person Name: M. T. H. Hymnal Number: 98 Author of "The Blessed Hope" in Songs for Service Late 19th Century Music SUNLIGHT IN THE HEART --www.hymntime.com/tch

Asa Smith

Hymnal Number: 48 Composer of "[Jesus, I my cross have taken]" in Songs for Service

Sidney Martin Grannis

1827 - 1907 Person Name: S. M. Grannis Hymnal Number: 134 Composer of "[Do you know a heart that hungers]" in Songs for Service Born: September 23, 1827, Geneseo, New York. Died: 1907, Los Angeles, California. Buried: Angelus Rosedale Cemetery, Los Angeles, California. Grannis’ family moved to Le Roy, New York in 1831. His father Samuel owned a hardware business which in 1844 was located in the Barrett Block, known as the "Dock," on the present site of the Le Roy Post Office. Samuel was involved on the Underground Railroad. Sidney would drop into Samuel’s Store where he would sit down at the melodeon and sing until the room filled with people. Although it was said that he never learned to read music, he wrote music to several poems. Grannis established a reputation with "Do They Miss Me at Home?" Caroline Mason wrote the poem "Do They Miss Me at Home?" and Sidney Grannis put it to music. It became a popular favorite during the Civil War. One of the lines reads: “Does someone repeat my name over and sigh that I tarry so long? And is there a chord in the music "That’s miss’d when my voice is away, And a chord in each heart that awaketh, regret at my wearisome stay?" He also composed the ballads, "Only Waiting," "Cling to the Union," and "People Will Talk You Know." In 1856 Grannis wrote the words and music for Sparking Sunday Night. Sheet music was published by Joseph P. Shaw, Rochester, New York, affiliated with Oliver Ditson (Boston), who also distributed the song. The sheet music is preserved in the Sibley Library, Eastman School of Music, University of Rochester, New York. As a solo singer, Grannis had a remarkable tenor voice, and it was said that his voice "was of marvelous flexibility, sweet as a flute, and had a range of three octaves." A newspaper in Pultneyville mentioned that Grannis performed at the Union Church in 1864 "to an appreciative audience." He sang at more than five thousand concerts. He organized the Amphion Troupe, a vocal quartet which included "Pixley and Bryant" and Emily Goodenou, who sang solo. The group toured the country giving concerts. In 1864, Grannis was in New Haven, Connecticut, where he composed his music for Your Mission. In the later days of the Civil War, Philip Phillips, who had a wonderfully sweet tenor voice, was invited to sing at a great meeting of the United States Christian Commission in the Senate Chamber at Washington, February, 1865, President Lincoln and Secretary Seward (then president of the commission) were there, and the hall was crowded with leading statesmen, army generals, and friends of the Union. The song selected by Mr. Phillips was Mrs. Gates’ "Your Mission." The hushed audience listened spell-bound as the sweet singer went on, their interest growing to feverish eagerness until the climax was reached in the fifth stanza. In the storm of enthusiasm that followed, President Lincoln handed a hastily scribbled line on a bit of paper to Chairman Seward, "Near the close let us have Your Mission repeated." In 1884, Grannis moved to Los Angeles, California, where several of his admirers presented him a cottage and grounds. It was said of him: "He was the best man we ever knew, going in and out among us like a ray of light, never complaining, always cheerful, always happy, never a cloud on his sunny countenance. His nature was musical, he loved to sing. His songs were inspiring, his mirth contagious. Who that has heard his favorite laughing song, can forget his sunlit face, or fail to recall the effect the song produced? His invitation "please join the chorus" was superfluous. Throughout this broad land his rollicking laughter has been heard and his sweet and musical songs have flowed like soothing and peace giving rivers." --www.hymntime.com/tch/

L. D. Santee

Person Name: Eld. L. D. Santee Hymnal Number: 56 Author of "The Beautiful Land" in Songs for Service

Mrs. W. J. Kennedy

1842 - 1900 Hymnal Number: 92 Author of "Hold Thou My Hand" in Songs for Service Full name: Mary Maria Kiernan Kennedy

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