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Search Results

Text Identifier:"^we_bring_no_glittering_treasures$"

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Texts

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We Bring No Glittering Treasures

Author: Harriet Phillips Appears in 115 hymnals First Line: We bring no glitt'ring treasures Used With Tune: [We bring no glitt'ring treasures]

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[We bring no glitt'ering treasures]

Appears in 104 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Silcher Incipit: 55651 76544 33212 Used With Text: We Bring No Glittering Treasures
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[We bring no glitt'ring treasures]

Appears in 641 hymnals Incipit: 51765 13455 67122 Used With Text: We Bring No Glittering Treasures
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[We bring no glitt'ring treasures]

Appears in 1,657 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: C. J. Webb Incipit: 51131 16151 2325 Used With Text: Treasures

Instances

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We Bring no Glittering Treasures

Author: Harriet Phillips Hymnal: Select Sunday School Songs #96 (1885) Languages: English Tune Title: [We bring no glittering treasures]
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We Bring No Glittering Treasures

Hymnal: The Salvation Army Songs and Music #134 (1917) Refrain First Line: The Light of the world is Jesus Languages: English Tune Title: [We bring no glittering treasures]
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We Bring No Glittering Treasures

Author: Harriet Phillips Hymnal: Imperial Songs #41 (1894) First Line: We bring no glitt'ering treasures Languages: English Tune Title: [We bring no glitt'ering treasures]

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Friedrich Silcher

1789 - 1860 Person Name: Silcher Composer of "[We bring no glitt'ering treasures]" in Imperial Songs

Harriet Phillips

1806 - 1884 Author of "We Bring No Glittering Treasures" in Imperial Songs Phillips, Harriet Cecilia, was born in Sharon, Connecticut, in 1806, and was for many years an active worker in Sunday Schools in New York city. She contributed five hymns to the Rev. W. C. Hoyt's Family and Social Melodies, 1853, and has also written for various magazines. "We bring no glittering treasures" (Sunday School Anniversary), was written circa 1848 for a Sunday School Festival in New York city, and published in the Methodist Episcopal Hymns, 1849 (Nutter's Hymn Notes, 1884, p. 31l). --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, Appendix, Part II (1907)

William B. Blake

1852 - 1938 Person Name: Wm. B. Blake Composer of "[We bring no glitt'ring treasures]" in Sabbath Bells William Burdine Blake, 1852-1938. William B. Blake, Sr., was born January 21, 1852, in London, Ohio; went to Virginia in the early 1870s and became connected with the music publishing house of the Ruebush-Kieffer Company, and remaining with this firm until 1889, when he moved to Ronceverte. He married Miss Alice Mary Horne, of Augusta county, Virginia, a daughter of Strother P. and Sarah Home. (Strother P. Horne was a Confederate soldier throughout the Civil war.) To this union were born seven children: Charles Stanley Blake, Bessie Mabel, William B,. Jr.. Henry St. John, Robert Russell, Mary Ellen and Edward Lester. At Ronceverte, Mr. Blake, Sr., associated himself in partnership with J. W. Hess in the publication of the Ronceverte News, a newly-established paper in the new lumber town, buying out the interest of Richard Burke, who had been a prominent figure in West Virginia journalism for a number of years. Burke had been the publisher of a vigorous newspaper at Union, Monroe county. About the year 1891, Mr. Blake bought out the interest of Mr. Hess and became the sole proprietor of the enterprise, changing the name of the paper to the Valley Messenger and News. This publication continued until April 21, 1901. Several years prior to this, in December, 1897, The West Virginia News had been established with Mr. Blake as publisher, and from one newspaper plant two newspapers were issued until April 21, 1901, when the latter publication, which covered a more extensive field, absorbed the Valley Messenger. This consolidation brought to the newer paper the good will of the older and the growth of the West Virginia News has been steady and continuous to this day. At the present time and for a number of years the News has enjoyed a larger circulation than any other weekly newspaper published in the State. History of Greenbrier County J. R. Cole, Lewisburg, WV, 1917 (accessed 12/25/2023 from http://www.leighlarson.com/william_burdine_blake.htm)
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