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Person Results

Text Identifier:"^who_will_build_the_world_anew$"
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Richard Redhead

1820 - 1901 Composer of "REDHEAD" in The Hymnal of The Evangelical United Brethren Church Richard Redhead (b. Harrow, Middlesex, England, 1820; d. Hellingley, Sussex, England, 1901) was a chorister at Magdalen College, Oxford. At age nineteen he was invited to become organist at Margaret Chapel (later All Saints Church), London. Greatly influencing the musical tradition of the church, he remained in that position for twenty-five years as organist and an excellent trainer of the boys' choirs. Redhead and the church's rector, Frederick Oakeley, were strongly committed to the Oxford Movement, which favored the introduction of Roman elements into Anglican worship. Together they produced the first Anglican plainsong psalter, Laudes Diurnae (1843). Redhead spent the latter part of his career as organist at St. Mary Magdalene Church in Paddington (1864-1894). Bert Polman

Thomas Curtis Clark

1877 - 1953 Person Name: Thomas C. Clark, b. 1877 Author of "Who Will Build the World Anew?" in The Hymnal of The Evangelical United Brethren Church Thomas Curtis Clark (born on January 8, 1877) author of over sixty hymns, studied at University of Chicago in Chicago, Illinois 1901-02 and served on the editorial staff of the Christian Century in Chicago, Illinois 1912-48. Won first prize in the 1943 Hymn Society of America nation-wide contest with his "Thou Father of Us All." --legacy.lincolnchristian.edu/library/ =============================== Ammanford, Carmarthenshire, England --Five New Hymns on the City , 1954. Used by permission.

Mary Eyre MacElree

Composer of "EYRE" in Twelve New Hymns of Christian Patriotism

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