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Text Identifier:"^father_we_implore_thee$"

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Hear Us While we Pray

Author: Jessie H. Brown Appears in 2 hymnals First Line: Father, we implore thee Refrain First Line: May thy will be dearer Used With Tune: [Father, we implore thee]

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[Father, we implore thee]

Appears in 1 hymnal Composer and/or Arranger: J. H. F. Incipit: 12345 21234 21234 Used With Text: Hear Us While we Pray

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Hear Us While we Pray

Author: Jessie H. Brown Hymnal: Grateful Praise #43 (1884) First Line: Father, we implore thee Refrain First Line: May thy will be dearer Languages: English Tune Title: [Father, we implore thee]

Hear us while we pray

Author: Jessie H. Brown Pounds Hymnal: Praise and Rejoicing #d24 (1884) First Line: Father, we implore thee Refrain First Line: May thy will be dearer

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J. H. Fillmore

1849 - 1936 Person Name: J. H. F. Composer of "[Father, we implore thee]" in Grateful Praise James Henry Fillmore USA 1849-1936. Born at Cincinnati, OH, he helped support his family by running his father's singing school. He married Annie Eliza McKrell in 1880, and they had five children. After his father's death he and his brothers, Charles and Frederick, founded the Fillmore Brothers Music House in Cincinnati, specializing in publishing religious music. He was also an author, composer, and editor of music, composing hymn tunes, anthems, and cantatas, as well as publishing 20+ Christian songbooks and hymnals. He issued a monthly periodical “The music messsenger”, typically putting in his own hymns before publishing them in hymnbooks. Jessie Brown Pounds, also a hymnist, contributed song lyrics to the Fillmore Music House for 30 years, and many tunes were composed for her lyrics. He was instrumental in the prohibition and temperance efforts of the day. His wife died in 1913, and he took a world tour trip with single daughter, Fred (a church singer), in the early 1920s. He died in Cincinnati. His son, Henry, became a bandmaster/composer. John Perry

Jessie Brown Pounds

1861 - 1921 Author of "Hear Us While We Pray" Jessie Brown Pounds was born in Hiram, Ohio, a suburb of Cleveland on 31 August 1861. She was not in good health when she was a child so she was taught at home. She began to write verses for the Cleveland newspapers and religious weeklies when she was fifteen. After an editor of a collection of her verses noted that some of them would be well suited for church or Sunday School hymns, J. H. Fillmore wrote to her asking her to write some hymns for a book he was publishing. She then regularly wrote hymns for Fillmore Brothers. She worked as an editor with Standard Publishing Company in Cincinnati from 1885 to 1896, when she married Rev. John E. Pounds, who at that time was a pastor of the Central Christian Church in Indianapolis. A memorable phrase would come to her, she would write it down in her notebook. Maybe a couple months later she would write out the entire hymn. She is the author of nine books, about fifty librettos for cantatas and operettas and of nearly four hundred hymns. Her hymn "Beautiful Isle of Somewhere" was sung at President McKinley's funeral. Dianne Shapiro, from "The Singers and Their Songs: sketches of living gospel hymn writers" by Charles Hutchinson Gabriel (Chicago: The Rodeheaver Company, 1916)

Jessie H. Brown

Author of "Hear Us While we Pray" in Grateful Praise See Pounds, Jessie Brown, 1861-1921