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Text Identifier:"^o_pueblecito_de_belen_afortunada_tu$"
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Anonymous

Person Name: Desconcido Translator of "¡Oh Aldehuela De Belén!" in The Cyber Hymnal In some hymnals, the editors noted that a hymn's author is unknown to them, and so this artificial "person" entry is used to reflect that fact. Obviously, the hymns attributed to "Author Unknown" "Unknown" or "Anonymous" could have been written by many people over a span of many centuries.

Phillips Brooks

1835 - 1893 Person Name: P. Brooks Author of "Oh, aldehuela de Belén" in El Himnario para el uso de las Iglesias Evangelicas de Habla Espanola en Todo el Mundo Brooks, Phillips, D.D., was born at Boston, Dec. 13, 1835, graduated at Harvard College 1855, and was ordained in 1859. Successively Rector of the Church of the Advent, Philadelphia, and Trinity Church, Boston, he became Bishop of Mass. in 1891, and died at Boston in Jan., 1893. His Carol, "O little town of Bethlehem," was written for his Sunday School in 1868, the author having spent Christmas, 1866, at Bethlehem. His hymn, "God hath sent His angels to the earth again," is dated 1877. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, New Supplement (1907)

Thomas M. Westrup

1837 - 1909 Person Name: T. M. Westrup Translator of "Oh, pueblecito de Belén" in Mil Voces para Celebrar Thomas Martin Westrup moved with his family from London to Mexico when he was fifteen years old. He translated hundreds of hymns and, along with his son, Enrique, published a three-volume hymnal Incienso Christiano. Dianne Shapiro from Celebremos su Gloria (Colombia/Illinois: Libros Alianza/Celebration), 1992

Lewis H. Redner

1831 - 1908 Composer of "ST. LOUIS" in Mil Voces para Celebrar Lewis Henry Redner (1831-1908) was born in Philadelphia, where he became a real estate agent and served on weekends as an organist and Sunday School Superintendent. He spent nineteen years at Holy Trinity church where Phillip Brooks was rector, and is credited with increasing attendance at the Sunday School from thirty-one to more than a thousand. In 1868 Brooks asked him to write a tune for his new text for children inspired by his recent trip to Bethlehem. Redner composed the tune the night before it was to be sung in worship on Sunday morning. The text and tune were first published in 1894 in The Church Porch, where the tune was named ST. LOUIS, possibly after the composer’s name. Redner is remembered today because of this one tune that has remained a Christmas favorite. Emily Brink

T. M.

Translator of "Oh, aldehuela de Belén" in El Himnario para el uso de las Iglesias Evangelicas de Habla Espanola en Todo el Mundo

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