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Text Identifier:"^at_evening_time_may_there_be_light$"

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Evening Time

Author: Horace L. Hastings Appears in 6 hymnals First Line: At evening time may there be light

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[At evening time may there be light]

Appears in 4 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Geo. C. Stebbins Incipit: 55671 17116 71222 Used With Text: At Evening Time
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MORTON

Appears in 1 hymnal Composer and/or Arranger: Geo. C. Stebbins Incipit: 32154 65556 71332 Used With Text: At Evening Time May There Be Light

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At Evening Time

Author: H. L. Hastings Hymnal: Favorite Sacred Songs #13 (1912) First Line: At evening time may there be light Languages: English Tune Title: [At evening time may there be light]
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At Evening Time

Author: H. L. Hastings Hymnal: The Male Chorus No. 1 #49 (1888) First Line: At evening time may there be light Languages: English Tune Title: [At evening time may there be light]
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Evening Time

Author: H. L. Hastings Hymnal: Male Chorus No. 2 #60 (1898) First Line: At evening time may there be light Languages: English Tune Title: [At evening time may there be light]

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George C. Stebbins

1846 - 1945 Person Name: Geo. C. Stebbins Composer of "[At evening time may there be light]" in Favorite Sacred Songs Stebbins studied music in Buffalo and Rochester, New York, then became a singing teacher. Around 1869, he moved to Chicago, Illinois, to join the Lyon and Healy Music Company. He also became the music director at the First Baptist Church in Chicago. It was in Chicago that he met the leaders in the Gospel music field, such as George Root, Philip Bliss, & Ira Sankey. At age 28, Stebbins moved to Boston, Massachusetts, where he became music director at the Claredon Street Baptist Church; the pastor there was Adoniram Gordon. Two years later, Stebbins became music director at Tremont Temple in Boston. Shortly thereafter, he became involved in evangelism campaigns with Moody and others. Around 1900, Stebbins spent a year as an evangelist in India, Egypt, Italy, Palestine, France and England. (www.hymntime.com/tch)

H. L. Hastings

1831 - 1899 Author of "At Evening Time" in Favorite Sacred Songs Hastings, Horace Lorenzo, was born at Blandford, Mass., Nov. 26, 1831; commenced writing hymns, and preaching, in his 17th year, and laboured as an evangelist in various parts of the U. S. In 1866 he established The Christian, a monthly paper, in which many of his hymns have appeared, and in 1865 the Scriptural Tract Repository in Boston. He published Social Hymns, Original and Selected, Boston, 1865; Songs of Pilgrimage, a Hymnal for the Churches of Christ, Part i., 1880; and in August, 1886, the same completed, to tho extent of 1533 hymns, 450 of which are original and signed "H." The best known of these is "Shall we meet beyond the river," written in N. Y. city, 1858, and lately published as a leaflet in 14 stanzas of 8 lines. The text in Gospel Hymns and elsewhere consists of the 1st half of stanzas i., iv., xi. and ix. The Hastings Birthday Book, extracts from his prose writings, appeared 1886. [Rev. F. M. Bird, M.A.] -- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology