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Text Identifier:"^i_will_be_a_little_helper$"

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Little Helpers

Appears in 2 hymnals First Line: I will be a little helper

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[I will be a little helper]

Appears in 1 hymnal Composer and/or Arranger: W. H. Martigny Incipit: 54346 53125 34323 Used With Text: Little Helpers

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Little Helpers

Author: ** Hymnal: Sunny-Side Songs for Sunday Schools #159 (1893) First Line: I will be a little helper Languages: English Tune Title: [I will be a little helper]

Little helpers

Author: George Cooper Hymnal: Christian Work-songs #d79 (1890) First Line: I will be a little helper Languages: English

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George Cooper

1840 - 1927 Author of "Little helpers" in Christian Work-songs George Cooper, poet, was born in the city of New York, May 14, 1840 son of John and Hepzibah Cooper, He was educated in the public schools of his native city, and afterwards studied law under the late Chester A. Arthur. After practicing for a short time, he renounced his profession to devote himself to the vocation to which his natural gifts inclined him. In his early years, he had developed a taste for writing, and before his sixteenth year had begun to contribute acceptable verses to several leading magazines. Encouraged by the success that met his early productions, he wrote constantly, and became a regular contributor to such periodicals as “The Independent,” “Harpers’ Young People,” and “Harper’s Magazine,” “Atlantic Monthly,” “Putman’s Monthly,” “Our Young Folks,” and “Appleton’s Journal.” Writing constantly for more than a decade, Mr. Cooper has frequently enriched the periodical literature of America by verses of much felicity, and has attracted a wide circle, among his poems are always welcomed with pleasure. His happiest verse has been written for children, and in it lies his chief claim to remembrance. A number of his children’s poems have been published in the collection known as “School and Home Melodies;” and he also issued a volume of hymns consisting exclusively of his own writing and entitled, “The Chaplet.” Among his best-known songs are: “Beautiful Isle of the Sea,” “Must We Then Meet as Strangers,” “Sweet Genevieve,” “While the days Are Going By,” and “God Bless the Little Church Around the Corner.” He has written song words for such composers as Wallace, Abt, Thomas, Millard, and Foster. Of His Other poems, “After,” and “Hereafter” are general favorites; the “Ballad of the Storming of Stony Point” was awarded a prize, and “Learning to Walk” was honored by a commendation from the late William Cullen Bryant. Mr. Cooper was married, in 1877, to Mary E., Daughter of William Tyson, and has since resided at Jersey Heights, where he still employs his leisure in writing. --http://www.mamalisa.com/blog/only-one-mother-–-a-poem

Anonymous

Person Name: ** Author of "Little Helpers" in Sunny-Side Songs for Sunday Schools 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.

W. H. Martigny

Composer of "[I will be a little helper]" in Sunny-Side Songs for Sunday Schools
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