T. G. Crippen

Short Name: T. G. Crippen
Full Name: Crippen, Thomas G. (George), 1841-1929
Birth Year: 1841
Death Year: 1929

Crippen, Thomas G., a descendant of an old Huguenot family long resident in Canterbury, was born in London in 1841, and educated for the Congregational Ministry at Airedale College, Bradford, Yorkshire. His first pastorate was at Boston Spa, Yorkshire, 1866, and his present (1891) is at Milverton, Somerset. Mr. Crippen published in 1868 translations of Ancient Hymns and Poems. Two of his original hymns are in the Congregational Church Hymnal, 1887:— "Lord Jesu Christ, by Whom alone" (Election of Deacons), and "O God, Who boldest in Thy hand" (Before a Parliamentary Election). The first of these was written specially for that Hymnal. His metrical rendering of one of Mr. Rodwell's prose translations of Jared's Abyssinian hymns (see p. 8, i.) was printed in the Oldbury Weekly Times, circa 1880, and subsequently as a broadsheet. It begins "To Christ, uprising from the dead be sung." His Popular Introduction to the History of Christian Doctrine was published in 1883.

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

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Crippen, T. G., p. 1558, ii. In 1896 Mr. Crippen was appointed Librarian at the Congregational Hall, Farringdon Street, London. In addition to his Ancient Hymns and Poems, Translated from the Latin, 1869, he has contributed numerous hymns to various periodicals, especially the Evangelical Magazine. His hymn "O Thou Who givest corn and wine" was written for Band of Hope gatherings in 1885, and first printed in the Sunday School Chronicle. It is in the Sunday School Hymnary, 1905, and others.

--John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, New Supplement (1907)


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