Charles T. Brooks

Charles T. Brooks
www.hymntime.com/tch
Short Name: Charles T. Brooks
Full Name: Brooks, Charles Timothy, 1813-1883
Birth Year: 1813
Death Year: 1883

Brooks, Charles Timothy. An American Unitarian Minister, born at Salem, Mass., June 20, 1813, and graduated at Harvard, 1832, and the Divinity School, Cambridge, U.S., 1835. In that year he began his ministry at Nahant, subsequently preaching at Bangor and Augusta (Maine), Windsor (Vermont). In 1837 he became pastor of Newport, Rhode Island, and retained the same charge until 1871, when he resigned through ill-health. [Rev. F. M. Bird, M.A.]

-- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

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Brooks, C. T. (p. 184, i,). He died at Newport, Rhode Island, June 14, 1883.

--John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, Appendix, Part II (1907)

Wikipedia Biography

Charles Timothy Brooks (June 20, 1813 – June 14, 1883) was a noted American translator of German works, a poet, a transcendentalist and a Unitarian pastor.

Texts by Charles T. Brooks (36)AsAuthority LanguagesInstancessort descending
Brook said to stream: Ah me! swallowed so suddenlyCharles T. Brooks (Author)1
I know not whither I goCharles T. Brooks (Author)1
O make our house thy sanctuaryRev. C. T. Brooks (Translator (from German))1
At thy call, O voice divineCharles T. Brooks (Author)2
Earth rolls round from day to nightCharles T. Brooks (Author)2
Father, beneath thy chastening strokeCharles T. Brooks (Author)2
Golden gleams of noonday fellCharles T. Brooks (Author)2
Great God, within these temple gatesCharles T. Brooks (Author)2
Great Lord of all, our Father, GodCharles T. Brooks (Author)2
Heavenward swells our fervent songCharles T. Brooks (Author)English2
I say to every man I meetCharles T. Brooks (Author)2
O friend, endeared to heart and mindCharles T. Brooks (Author)2
O heart brightener! sorrow lightener!Charles T. Brooks (Author)English2
O praise the Lord, ye youthful choirs, adore himCharles T. Brooks (Author)2
Once more on balmy wingsCharles T. Brooks (Author)2
Raise a glad and grateful songC. T. Brooks (Author)English2
Spirits of the mighty deadCharles T. Brooks (Author)2
The break of morn and MayCharles T. Brooks (Author)2
The poor ye always have with youCharles T. Brooks (Author)2
A voice from the sea to the mountainsCharles T. Brooks (Author)English3
And the sun he set out on his mighty rideC. T. Brooks (Translator)English3
Canst thou count the stars up yonderChas. T. Brooks (Translator)English3
Come forth, O Christian childrenRev. Chas. T. Brooks (Author)3
Father of the world and soulCharles J. Brooks (Author)English3
God is in the heavens above usRev. C. T. Brooks (Author)English3
Lamb of God's fold, 'tis well with theeCharles T. Brooks (Author)3
Life is a sea, like ships we meetCharles Timothy Brooks (Author)English3
Spring is abroad on the new born earthC. T. Brooks. (Author)3
O Father, by Thy holy willRev. C. T. Brooks (Author)English4
Why need I pine for stores of wealthCharles T. Brooks (Author)4
Our fathers' God to Thee, Author of libertyC. T. Brooks (Author)English6
Rejoice, O weary soulCharles T. Brooks (Author)6
Summer days once more are comingRev. Chas. T. Brooks (Translator)English7
Word, whose creative thrill wakes in all nature stillCharles T. Brooks (Author)7
O God, in Thine autumnal skiesCharles Timothy Brooks (Author)English8
God bless our native land! Firm may she ever standC. T. Brooks (Author)English190

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