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Tune Identifier:"^look_up_behold_the_fields_are_sherwin$"

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[Look up! behold, the fields are white] (Sherwin)

Appears in 3 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: William F. Sherwin Incipit: 51133 53134 43125

Texts

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The Harvest Time

Author: Rev. M. L. Hofford Appears in 15 hymnals First Line: Look up! behold, the fields are white Used With Tune: [Look up! behold, the fields are white]

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals
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The Harvest Time

Author: Rev. M. L. Hofford Hymnal: Royal Praise for the Sunday School #6 (1888) First Line: Look up! behold, the fields are white Languages: English Tune Title: [Look up! behold, the fields are white]
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The Harvest Time

Author: Rev. M. L. Hofford Hymnal: The Missionary Triumph #21 (1889) First Line: Look up! behold, the fields are white Languages: English Tune Title: [Look up! behold, the fields are white]
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The Harvest Time

Author: Rev. M. L. Hofford Hymnal: The Y.M.C.A. Praise Book #130 (1890) First Line: Look up! behold, the fields are white Languages: English Tune Title: [Look up! behold, the fields are white]

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

William F. Sherwin

1826 - 1888 Person Name: W. F. Sherwin Composer of "[Look up! behold, the fields are white]" in The Y.M.C.A. Praise Book Sherwin, William Fisk, an American Baptist, was born at Buckland, Massachusetts, March 14,1826. His educational opportunities, so far as schools were concerned, were few, but he made excellent use of his time and surroundings. At fifteen he went to Boston and studied music under Dr. Mason: In due course he became a teacher of vocal music, and held several important appointments in Massachusetts; in Hudson and Albany, New York County, and then in New York City. Taking special interest in Sunday Schools, he composed carols and hymn-tunes largely for their use, and was associated with the Rev. R. Lowry and others in preparing Bright Jewels, and other popular Sunday School hymn and tune books. A few of his melodies are known in Great Britain through I. D. Sankey's Sacred Songs and Solos, where they are given with his signature. His hymnwriting was limited. The following pieces are in common use:— 1. Grander than ocean's story (1871). The Love of God. 2. Hark, bark, the merry Christmas bells. Christmas Carol. 3. Lo, the day of God is breaking. The Spiritual Warfare. 4. Wake the song of joy and gladness. Sunday School or Temperance Anniversary. 5. Why is thy faith, 0 Child of God, so small. Safety in Jesus. Mr. Sherwin died at Boston, Massachusetts, April 14, 1888. -- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907) ================== Sherwin, W. F., p. 1055, i. Another hymn from his Bright Jewels, 1869, p. 68, is "Sound the battle cry" (Christian Courage), in the Sunday School Hymnary, 1905, and several other collections. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, New Supplement (1907)

M. Lowrie Hofford

1825 - 1888 Person Name: Rev. M. L. Hofford Author of "The Harvest Time" in The Y.M.C.A. Praise Book Born: January 27, 1825, Doylestown, Pennsylvania. Died: January 9, 1888, Trenton, New Jersey. Hofford attended Lafayette and Princeton, where he graduated in 1849. He studied theology at the Princeton seminary for a year, and became principal of the Camden collegiate institute. While there, he organized a church at Beverly, New Jersey, being licensed by the Presbytery in Philadelphia in 1852. In 1855, he was ordained an evangelist in Burlington, New Jersey. In 1860, he began teaching at the Trenton Institute, and in 1863 took charge of a military institute at Allentown, Pennsylvania that was later incorporated as Muhlenberg College; he served there as a professor and later president. He taught and pastored at Camden and Beverly, New Jersey, and Doylestown, Pennsylvania (1868-78), then became pastor at Morrisville, Pennsylvania. --www.hymntime.com/tch
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