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Tune Identifier:"^i_am_on_a_shining_pathway_scott$"
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Christian Science Publishing Society

Person Name: CSPS Harmonizer of "ANNIE LAURIE" in Christian Science Hymnal

May Agnew Stephens

1865 - 1935 Arranger of "[Oh, who'll stand up for Jesus]" in Hymns of the Christian Life. No. 3 Born: 1865, Kings­ton, On­tar­io, Ca­na­da. Died: March 19, 1935, Ny­ack, New York. Stephens joined the Sal­va­tion Ar­my in New York’s 3 Corps in 1890. She helped ed­it The War Cry, and worked on the train­ing home staff and in the Can­di­dates De­part­ment. Around 1897, she be­gan serv­ing as song lead­er and pi­an­ist at the Gos­pel Ta­ber­na­cle with Al­bert Simp­son. Two years lat­er, she helped found the Eighth Av­e­nue Mis­sion, and in 1902 mar­ried Har­old Ste­phens (lat­er pas­tor of the Park­dale Al­li­ance Ta­ber­na­cle in To­ro­nto, Ca­na­da). For the next two and half de­cades she and her hus­band were tra­vel­ing evan­gel­ists in Amer­i­ca, Ca­na­da and Bri­tain. Her works in­clude: Missionary Mess­ag­es in Song, cir­ca 1910 www.hymntime.com/tch

M. L. McPhail

Person Name: Matthew Lindsay McPhail, 1854-1931 Arranger of "MCPHAIL" in The Cyber Hymnal

John Clements

Person Name: J. C. Author (chorus) of "Jesus, the Very Thought" in The Gospel Trumpeter

W. M. Leftwich

Arranger of "O When Shall I See Jesus?" in Best Hymns

H. C. Boyd

Arranger of "[Jesu, the very tho't of thee]" in The Gospel Trumpeter

Stephen Collins Foster

1826 - 1864 Person Name: Foster Composer of "[There's a love that passeth knowledge]" in Gospel Hosannas

John C. Morgan

1831 - 1899 Person Name: Dr. J. C. Morgan Author of "All My Doubts I Give to Jesus" in Songs of Victory John Coleman Morgan MD USA 1831-1899. Born in Philadelphia, PA, he attended school and became a drug clerk, then a surgeon’s steward in the U.S. Navy. In 1850 he matriculated to PA Medical University, graduating in 1852, studying medicine and homeopathics. He was appointed professor of Materia Medica at PMU. In 1856 he married Sallie Levick of Philadelphia and relocated to Hamilton, IL, finding insufficient infrastructure to practice his medical discipline. He then moved to St. Louis, MO, where in 1857 he co-founded the Homeopathic Medical College of MO. In 1858 he settled in Alton, IL, and, under mentorship of William T Babb, had a surgeon’s commission with the 29th MO Infantry Volunteers during the Civil War. In 1865 he returned to Philadelphia, PA, and took the Chair of Anatomy at the Hahnemannian Institute for Homeopathic Medicine there. From 1867-1875 he was the first faculty surgeon there. In 1875 he left and took a position with the University of Michigan as a professor of Homeopathic Theory and Practice (retaining his Hahnemannian emeritus status while gone). In 1877 he returned to Hahnemannian Institute in Philadelphia and resumed his position there, becoming lecturer of history and instructions In 1886-87. He was a professor of medical instruction 1887-1890, after which he retired to Vineland, NJ. He lived in Millville, and Ocean Grove, NJ, (1898). He edited American Journal of Homeopathic Materia Medica. He died in California. John Perry

John H. Lozier

Person Name: John H. Lozier, 1832-1907 Author of "The Man of Galilee" in The Cyber Hymnal John Hogarth Lozier, 37th Indiana Infantry. He served from Oct. 1, 1861, to Oct. 27, 1864. He was active in the Grand Army of the Republic (GAR) after the war and rose to the rank of first chaplain. During the war he was known as “the Fighting Chaplain” and received special mention for conspicuous bravery at the battle of Stones River in Tennessee Dec. 31, 1862, to Jan. 2, 1863. He obtained national celebrity during the war, using his own compositions that were full of patriotism and inspiration. He later composed the hymn “The Man of Gallilee.” Lozier died at his home in Mount Vernon, Iowa, on Aug. 5, 1907, at age 78. He was graduate of DePauw University in Indiana, a Methodist college. He was a Methodist Episcopal minister for 25 years in Indiana and Iowa. Rich Gotshall, historian, Grace United Methodist Church, Franklin, Ind. (used by permission)

Owen F. Pugh

1867 - 1920 Person Name: O. F. Pugh Arranger of "[I am on a shining pathway]" in Great Tabernacle Hymns

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