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Person Results

Text Identifier:"^come_let_us_join_our_cheerful_songs$"
In:people

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Showing 51 - 60 of 63Results Per Page: 102050

Thomas Greatorex

1758 - 1831 Person Name: T. Greatorex Composer of "TOTTENHAM" in The Y.M.C.A. Hymnal

Wesley

Author of "Come, let us join our cheerful songs" in International Song Service

J. M. Coombs

1769 - 1820 Person Name: James Morris Coombs Composer of "OXFORD NEW" in The Book of Common Praise

Isaac Naylor

Composer of "[Come, let us join our cheerful songs]" in Songs of the Pentecost for the Forward Gospel Movement

I. C. Pierson

Composer of "[Come, let us join our cheerful songs]" in Westminster Sabbath School Hymnal, a collection of hymns and tunes for use in sabbath-schools and social meetings

G. W. Linton

Composer of "KNOWLES" in Kind Words

George W. Torrance

1835 - 1907 Person Name: Rev. George William Torrance, Mus. Doc. Composer of "GLADNESS" in Children's Hymnal

Micah John Walter

Composer of "CHANEY" in The Greenwood Harmony (2nd ed.)

W. J. C. Thiel

Person Name: Wm. J. C. Thiel Composer of "OLD ROCHESTER" in Sabbath Hymns

Bruno Spangenberg

1851 - 1937 Composer of "[Come, let us join our cheerful songs]" in Kindly Light Bruno Richard Spangenberg 1851–1937. Born in Bromberg, Germany. Bruno was a music teacher, organist, and later, business owner who spent most of his adult life in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. At the age of 13, Bruno, with his minster father and 3 brothers, immigrated to Missouri. His pastor father came to serve the growing German population there. The family later moved to Reading, Ohio where his father founded St John’s German Evangelical Lutheran Church, now St. John’s United Church of Christ. Bruno attended Eastern Lutheran Teachers’ Seminary (now Concordia University) in Addison, Illinois, where he pursued a teaching certificate. Mr. Spangenberg taught in a Harrisburg public school for eleven years. He also led the choir and played the organ at St. Michael’s Lutheran Church. He helped establish the German Maennerchoir in Harrisburg and was their vocal teacher and organist. In the early 1890s Bruno moved to Rochester, NY to teach in a Lutheran school and serve as organist for a congregation there. He married Sara Blankenhorn whom he had met in Harrisburg. After a short tenure the Spangenbergs moved to Rondout (Kingston), NY to serve a school and larger congregation – the Trinity German Evangelical Lutheran Church. Bruno served there from 1893–98. Following the death of their first child Bruno and Sara moved back to Harrisburg, nearer family and friends. About 1900, Bruno and Sara became the proprietors of Spangenbergs’ Ice Cream, a new and increasing popular product. Their market was heart of Harrisburg and its capitol region. Church music became a secondary pursuit, but still an active one. The Spangenbergs eventually bought a home with acreage in Camp Hill, across the Susquehanna River, where they retired and lived their remaining years. Richard Spangenberg (grandson)

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