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Tune Identifier:"^quit_you_like_men_be_strong_gilmour$"

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[Quit you like men, be strong]

Appears in 5 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: H. L. Gilmour Incipit: 53213 51754 23334 Used With Text: Quit You Like Men

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Quit You Like Men

Author: F. G. Burroughs Appears in 5 hymnals First Line: Quit you like men, be strong Refrain First Line: Stand fast in the faith Used With Tune: [Quit you like men, be strong]

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Quit You Like Men

Author: F. G. Burroughs Hymnal: Hymns New and Old, No. 2 #147 (1890) First Line: Quit you like men, be strong Refrain First Line: Stand fast in the faith Lyrics: 1 Quit you like men, be strong Lean on Thy Lord's right hand! Why should you faint or be dismayed, When He is in command? Chorus: Stand fast in the faith, Quit you like men, be strong! Hearken to what your Lord hath said; He is thy strength and song. 2 Quit you like men, be strong, Hold up faith's mighty shield! thine are the weapons of His grace, To these His foes shall yield. [Chorus] 3 Quit you like men, be strong, For bold is Satan's host; Courage, ye soldiers of the Lord, That may His triumphs boast! [Chorus] 4 Quit you like men, be strong, In God's whole armour clad, War a good warfare to the end; Spread ye the tidings glad. [Chorus] Languages: English Tune Title: [Quit you like men, be strong]
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Quit You Like Men

Author: F. G. Burroughs Hymnal: Sunlit Songs #12 (1890) First Line: Quit you like men, be strong Refrain First Line: Stand fast in the faith Languages: English Tune Title: [Quit you like men, be strong]
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Quit You Like Men

Author: F. G. Burroughs Hymnal: Hymns New and Old, Revised #62 (1891) First Line: Quit you like men, be strong Refrain First Line: Stand fast in the faith Languages: English Tune Title: [Quit you like men, be strong]

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H. L. Gilmour

1836 - 1920 Composer of "[Quit you like men, be strong]" in The Praise Hymnal Henry Lake Gilmour United Kingdom 1836-1920. Born at Londonderry, Ireland, he emigrated to America as a teenager, thinking he wanted to learn navigation. When he reached the U.S., he arrived in Philadelphia and decided to seek his fortune in America. He started working as a painter, then served in the American Civil War, where he was captured and spent several months in Libby Prison, Richmond, VA. He married Letitia Pauline Howard in 1858. After the war he trained as a dentist and did that for many years. In 1869 he moved to Wenonah, NJ, and helped found the Methodist church there in 1885. He served as Sunday school superintendent and, for four decades, directed the choir at the Pittman Grove Camp Meeting, also working as song leader at camp meetings in Mountain Lake Park, MD, and Ridgeview Park, PA. He was an editor, author, and composer. He edited and/or published 25 gospel song books, along with John Sweney, J Lincoln Hall, John J Hood, Howard Entwistle, Joshua Gill, E L Hyde, Milton S Rees and William J Kirkpatrick. He died in Delair, NJ, after a buggy accident. John Perry

F. G. Burroughs

1856 - 1949 Author of "Stand fast in the faith" in The Praise Hymnal F. G. Burroughs was born in 1856 (nee Ophelia G. Browning) was the daughter of William Garretson Browning, a Methodist Episcopal minister, and Susan Rebecca Webb Browning. She married Thomas E. Burroughs in 1884. He died in 1904. She married Arthur Prince Adams, in 1905. He was a minister. Her poem, "Unanswered yet" which was written in 1879, was published in the The Christian Standard in 1880 with the name F. G. Browning. She also wrote under the name of Ophelia G. Adams and Mrs. T. E. Burroughs. Dianne Shapiro from The Literary Digest, July 29, 1899., The Register, Pine Plains, NY, October 24, 1884, Alumni Record of Wesleyan University, Middleton, Conn. 1921