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Hymnal, Number:vos1923

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Hymnals

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Published hymn books and other collections

Voices of the Soul

Publication Date: 1923 Publisher: B-Natural Music Co. Publication Place: Dallas, Tex. Editors: C. E. Durham; A. P. Wammack; C. Goodman; B-Natural Music Co.

Texts

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Text authorities

We're going home

Author: Johnson Oatman Appears in 3 hymnals First Line: A few more steps upon the road

There will be joy

Author: James Rowe Appears in 5 hymnals First Line: After the clouds roll by

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals

We're going home

Author: Johnson Oatman Hymnal: VoS1923 #d1 (1923) First Line: A few more steps upon the road Languages: English

It may be you

Author: James Rowe Hymnal: VoS1923 #d2 (1923) First Line: A helper true, the Savior needs Languages: English

There will be joy

Author: James Rowe Hymnal: VoS1923 #d3 (1923) First Line: After the clouds roll by Languages: English

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Johnson Oatman, Jr.

1856 - 1922 Person Name: Johnson Oatman Hymnal Number: d1 Author of "We're going home" in Voices of the Soul Johnson Oatman, Jr., son of Johnson and Rachel Ann Oatman, was born near Medford, N. J., April 21, 1856. His father was an excellent singer, and it always delighted the son to sit by his side and hear him sing the songs of the church. Outside of the usual time spent in the public schools, Mr. Oatman received his education at Herbert's Academy, Princetown, N. J., and the New Jersey Collegiate Institute, Bordentown, N. J. At the age of nineteen he joined the M.E. Church, and a few years later he was granted a license to preach the Gospel, and still later he was regularly ordained by Bishop Merrill. However, Mr. Oatman only serves as a local preacher. For many years he was engaged with his father in the mercantile business at Lumberton, N. J., under the firm name of Johnson Oatman & Son. Since the death of his father, he has for the past fifteen years been in the life insurance business, having charge of the business of one of the great companies in Mt. Holly, N. J., where he resides. He has written over three thousand hymns, and no gospel song book is considered as being complete unless it contains some of his hymns. In 1878 he married Wilhelmina Reid, of Lumberton, N.J. and had three children, Rachel, Miriam, and Percy. Excerpted from Biography of Gospel Song and Hymn Writers by Jacob Henry Hall; Fleming H. Revell, Co. 1914

James Rowe

1865 - 1933 Hymnal Number: d2 Author of "It may be you" in Voices of the Soul Pseudonym: James S. Apple. James Rowe was born in England in 1865. He served four years in the Government Survey Office, Dublin Ireland as a young man. He came to America in 1890 where he worked for ten years for the New York Central & Hudson R.R. Co., then served for twelve years as superintendent of the Mohawk and Hudson River Humane Society. He began writing songs and hymns about 1896 and was a prolific writer of gospel verse with more than 9,000 published hymns, poems, recitations, and other works. Dianne Shapiro, from "The Singers and Their Songs: sketches of living gospel hymn writers" by Charles Hutchinson Gabriel (Chicago: The Rodeheaver Company, 1916)

R. E. Hudson

1843 - 1901 Person Name: Ralph E. Hudson Hymnal Number: d4 Author of "At the cross, at the cross, where I first saw the light" in Voices of the Soul Ralph Hudson (1843-1901) was born in Napoleon, OH. He served in the Union Army in the Civil War. After teaching for five years at Mt. Union College in Alliance he established his own publishing company in that city. He was a strong prohibitionist and published The Temperance Songster in 1886. He compiled several other collections and supplied tunes for gospel songs, among them Clara Tear Williams' "All my life long I had panted" (Satisfied). See 101 More Hymn Stories, K. Osbeck, Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel Publications, 1985). Mary Louise VanDyke