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Baltimore Shape Note Singing

Join us for Sacred Harp style Shape Note Singing.

Cheese Notes

LPs issued by the Sacred Harp Publishing Co.

Posted on December 1, 2023August 26, 2024

We have taken the text from “Chapter 7: Older Recordings (Pre-1977) of Traditional Singers Reissued on CDs and Internet” found on Steven L. Sabol’s terrific internet resource, and I have inserted the appropriate YouTube videos of the albums he describes.

We have appended the track listing provided by Jeramiah Ledbetter, who uploaded the videos into a playlist.


LPs issued by the Sacred Harp Publishing Co.

Recordings from 1965-1975 by the Sacred Harp Publishing Co. currently on YouTube. An historic series of LP record albums were produced by the Sacred Harp Publishing Co. from 1965 through 1975. Five out of the six original LP recordings featured a select group of the finest traditional Sacred Harpers, many now deceased, singing representative songs in a studio under the direction of Hugh McGraw. Although these were not the first recordings of Sacred Harp singing, Buell Cobb points out that they “stand above the rest in scope and consistency.” The six LP albums were numbered 101-106. In the early 2000s, they were combined into three compact discs (and three cassette tapes) by Morning Trumpet Recordings headed by Ted Mercer and Richard DeLong. Extensive sound restoration and digital remastering were performed. The CDs featured liner notes written by Buell Cobb and graphics by Lisa Grayson. However, when the CDs were sold out, reprinting was not done and Morning Trumpet ceased operation. Hopefully the CDs will be reissued somehow in the future. In the meantime, the original LP recordings have been placed by Sacred Harp singer Jeremiah Ledbetter on his YouTube channel. Photos of the back sides of the LP record jackets are also provided. The recordings are as follows:

Vol. 101: “Original Sacred Harp Singing in Traditional Style” presents 13 tunes.

143 Pleyel’s Hymn 00:00 218 Mount Pleasant 02:44 85 The Morning Trumpet 05:43 532 Peace And Joy 07:24 268 David’s Lamentation 94 Never Part 12:53 146 Hallelujah 15:59 455 Soar Away 18:30 144 Jubilee 21:47 171 Exhortation 23:51 329 Vain World, Adieu 25:49 274t The Golden Harp 27:57 120 Chambers 29:59

Vol. 102: “Fa Sol La Music Album Sung in Traditional Style by Sacred Harp Singers of the Southland” presents 15 tunes. Volumes 101 and 102 (28 songs) were combined and reissued as a CD in 1990 by Bibletone listed on Amazon.com. The entire Bibletone album and individual tracks are also on YouTube.

45t New Britain – 0:00 36b Ninety-Fifth – 2:30 410 The Dying Californian – 4:50 235b Long Sought Home – 6:52 147t Boylston – 9:54 420 Bishop – 13:20 149 The Trumpet – 15:09 282 I’m Going Home – 18:28 358 Murillo’s Lesson – 20:25 129 Heavenly Armor – 22:53 186 Sherburne – 24:58 161 Sweet Home – 26:45 294 Rocky Road – 29:56 122 All is Well – 32:53 62 Parting Hand – 35:15

Vol. 103: “Sacred Harp at the Old Country Church” presents 15 tunes.

64 Nashville – 0:00 40 Lenox – 1:48 99 Gospel Trumpet – 3:39 445b Passing Away – 5:56 460 Sardis – 8:05 569b Sacred Throne – 9:55 288 White – 11:49 213t The Good Old Way – 14:29 392 Manchester – 16:50 126 Babel’s Streams – 19:07 326 Weary Pilgrim – 20:33 236 Easter Anthem – 23:26 290 Victoria – 26:15 512 The Spirit Shall Return – 29:07 388 The Happy Sailor – 31:49

Vol. 104: “Sacred Harp Singing with Dinner on the Ground” presents 16 tunes.

283 Sabbath Morning – 0:00 318 Present Joys – 2:14 500 Living Hope – 4:35 373 Homeward Bound – 6:52 432 Cheves – 8:34 365 Southwell – 10:23 328 Praise God – 13:34 68B Ortonville – 15:30 75 I Would See Jesus – 17:37 39b Sharpsburg – 19:19 128 The Promised Land – 20:45 101t Canaan’s Land – 22:17 361 Loving Jesus – 24:10 422 Burdette – 26:05 523b Pleyel’s Hymn – 27:38 506 The Ark – 29:27

Vol. 105: “Fa-Sol-La Is Here to Stay” presents 15 tunes, mostly of Southern origin, including ones by A.M. Cagle and Ruth Denson Edwards, who headed the company at that time and sang in the group.

63 Coronation – 0:00 192 Schenectady – 2:03 462 Faith and Hope – 4:20 316 New Hope – 7:00 77t The Child of Grace – 8:58 70t Gainesville – 11:06 57 Christian Soldier – 13:01 394 The Messiah’s Praise – 15:13 446 Infinite Day – 17:15 45t New Britain – 19:16 314 Cleburne – 21:46 543 Thou Art God – 23:45 383 Eternal Day – 26:17 528 Showers of Blessing – 29:16 518 Heavenly Anthem – 31:39

Vol. 106: “Sacred Harp Bicentennial Celebration” presents 14 tunes. It was issued in 1975-76 at the time of the U.S. Bicentennial and thus fourteen popular New England tunes and anthems, including five each by Billings and Read. CHESTER is sung with Billings’ original patriotic words. The singing on the this recording is generally very strong because of the larger number of singers at this “open” singing.

36b Windham – 0:00 107 Russia – 1:55 186 Sherburne – 3:17 280 Westford – 5:12 300 Calvary – 7:05 137 Liberty – 9:04 220 Mount Zion – 10:50 299 New Jerusalem – 12:28 155 Northfield – 14:21 91 Assurance – 15:39 236 Easter Anthem – 17:05 268 David’s Lamentation – 19:50 479 Chester – 22:20 254 Rose of Sharon – 23:58

Cheese Notes

A timeline of the Baltimore-Washington All Day

Posted on November 15, 2023August 26, 2024

The broad outline of shape-note singing (and four shape-note in particular) is that it emerged from New England and took hold in the deep south and some western locales where it survived largely among isolated communities. It was in the 1930s that some academics discovered this American musical form had not disappeared, and studied and partook in it. It is mostly through these scholar-practitioners, and motivated enthusiasts that the traditional music and culture has seen several revivals and has slowly expanded into a vibrant and living community of singers around the world.

The first Southern shape-note tunebook was Kentucky Harmony by Ananias Davisson, published in 1816. Philadelphia was a major publishing hub of Shape Note books, and there have even been a couple books published in Baltimore. But, compared to other areas, Mid-Atlantic has had only a moderate history of shape-note singing, though it’s not completely alien, a topic for a different blog.

It is remarkable that Baltimore and Washington teamed up to begin to present All-Day singings beginning in 2013, two centuries after the cultural flight of the music from North to South. The singings were also two-book singings, using the Denson 1991 revision of The Sacred Harp and the Shenandoah Harmony books.

Unfortunately the pandemic that occurred beginning in 2019 did a great deal of damage in many ways, and shape-note singings suffered because of it.


A timeline of the Baltimore-Washington All Day Singings

1st Annual Baltimore-Washington Shenandoah Harmony All Day Singing – 2013
Sat., Oct. 12, 2013 from 10am-3:30pm
Church of the Ascension, 633 Sligo Ave,  Silver Spring MD 20910

There is a video playlist of 12 songs from 2013 available on YouTube.

2nd Annual Baltimore-Washington Shenandoah Harmony All Day Singing – 2014
Sat., Oct. 4, 2014 from 10am-3:30pm
Church of St. Monica/St. James, 222 8th St NE Washington DC

3rd Annual Baltimore-Washington Shenandoah Harmony All Day Singing – 2015
Sat., Oct. 3, 2015 from 10am-3:30pm
Faith Community Church, 5315 Harford Rd. Baltimore, MD 21214

4th Annual Baltimore-Washington Shenandoah Harmony All Day Singing – 2016
Sat., Oct. 1, 2016 from 10am-3:30pm
Cathedral of the Incarnation, 4 E University Pkwy, Baltimore, MD

5th Annual Baltimore-Washington Shenandoah Harmony All Day Singing – 2017
Sat., Oct. 7, 2017 from 10am-3:30pm
Woman’s Club of Arlington, 700 S Buchanan St, Arlington, VA 22204

6th Annual Baltimore-Washington Shenandoah Harmony All Day Singing – 2018
Sat., Oct. 6th, 2018 from 10am-3:30pm
Cathedral of the Incarnation, 4 E University Pkwy, Baltimore, MD

7th Annual Baltimore-Washington Shenandoah Harmony All Day Singing – 2019
Sat., Oct. 5, 2019 from 10am-3:30pm
Capitol Hill Presbyterian Church 201 4th St SE Washington, DC 20003

Uncategorized

From the Library of Mary Wright

Posted on November 5, 2023February 12, 2024

Over the weekend, the James River All Day Singing took place. A local singer, Mary P. Wright, had recently passed on and it was announced she wanted singers to have some of her books and recordings. There were only a few books, and many CDs and cassette tapes.

I picked up two thin books, and a CD or two. I didn’t want take much before others, some who knew her, had a chance to look over the table and take some things. At the next break I looked over the table and picked up a few cassette tapes, and then at the end of the day I picked up a few more things.

My thanks to the Richmond Shape Note Singers for their hospitality and hosting.

Kevin Isaac

On our online catalog, the books are noted:
“From the personal collection of Mary P. Wright, donated by the Richmond Shape Note Singers”


Table of Contents

  • Two books:
  • Index by Tune Name (from archive.org)
  • A Pre-Publication “Review” (from archive.org)
  • Five CDs:
  • Six Cassette Tapes:

Two books:

The Georgian Harmony: A Collection of Hymns & Fuging Tunes in the Shape-note Tradition
by Raymond C. Hamrick

I note here this is the 2008 spiral bound edition that was put out for test-singing. A hardback edition was later published.
john Hollingsworth writes about this book at the Sacred Harp Publishing Website here:
“The Making of The Georgian Harmony“

The Sacred Harper’s Companion
by Glen Wright (Editor). Susan Mampre (Editor)

Index by Tune Name (from archive.org)

Agawam (27) – Bruce Randall,1993
Angels, Roll the Rock Away (32) – Glen Wright,1993
At Rest (1) – John T. Hocutt,1973
Beard (15) – P. Dan Brittain,1981
Boulder (30) – Ted Johnson,1990
Chelton (26) – Judy Hauff,1988
Cumberland (25) – Jim Carnes,1987
David (2) – Glen Wright,1989
Fairhaven (41) – Glen Wright,1993
Glacier (11) – Dennis O’Brien,1992
Glastonbury (31) – Neely Bruce,1993
Immigration (35) – Glen Wright,1990
Leviathan (19) – Judy Hauff,1988
Life’s Troubles (4) – Hugh McGraw,1973
Millbrook (40) – Neely Bruce,1989
Noxubee (12) – Jim Carnes,1988
Oakley (33) – Bruce Randall,1991
Pembroke (36) – Dennis O’Brien,1992
Pilgrim’s Rest (18) – Raymond Hamrick,1986
Redemption’s Free (28) – Hugh McGraw,1973
Refreshment (10) – Mimi Stevens,1990
Rockland (6) – Bruce Randall,1988
Shepherd (14) – Raymond Hamrick,1992
Stow (22) – Glen Wright,1990
Waltham Common (38) – Glen Wright,1993
Waterton (8) – Robert Parr,1989
We’ll Sing the Praise (23) – John T. Hocutt,1973

A Pre-Publication “Review” (from archive.org)

Date: 16 Mar 94 18:52:48 EST
From: Paul Gauthier (paulgauthier@mindspring.com)
Here’s a copy of a message I sent out on the net back last September describing the book:

A new book of original shaped note tunes is in the works. Due out by October, the book is the work of Glen Wright and Susan Mampre of Rutland, MA (Glen’s “Natick” appeared in the new 1991 edition of the Original Sacred Harp. They’ve collected new songs from shaped note composers across the country and combined them into a collection of at least 25 new tunes centered in the OSH tradition.

I asked Susan Mampre the purpose behind their effort. She said “we wanted to collect and share new tunes from all over the country written by composers firmly grounded in the Sacred Harp tradition but who also let their own styles show through. A partial list of composers includes such notables as Jim Carnes and John Hocutt from Alabama, Glen Wright and Bruce Randall from Massachusetts, Judy Hauff and Ted Johnson from Chicago, Ray Hamrick and Hugh McGraw from Georgia, P. Dan Brittain from New York and others. The songs grabbed us. They were moving and also quite singable.”

The book is being typeset by computer and should be very clear and readable (Susan and Glen have actually started a business typesetting shaped note music for Sacred Harp groups and individual composers.) Norumbega Harmony has been singing through the new pieces and have become excited about a number of them.

Paul Gauthier
Image Softworks
Westford, MA
paulgauthier@mindspring.com


Five CDs:

The Waverly Consort
An American Journey: Bound for the Promised Land
Angel 1996

Lookout Mountain Convention 1968
2003 Squirrel Hill Recordings

The Alabama Sacred Harp Convention
White Spirituals from The Sacred Harp
New World Records

Mule Day, Winfield, AL, September 25, 2004
Joe Beasley Memorial Foundation

I Belong to This Band, Eighty-five Years of Sacred Harp Recordings
2006 Dust to Digital


Six Cassette Tapes:

Southern Traditional Singers
The Social Harp: Early American Shape-note Songs
1994 Rounder Records

One Accord
Pleasure Tunes My Tongue
1988 Alexianna Records

Northampton Harmony
The Hookes’ Regular Sing
1996 Hazmat Records

V/A
Bound for Canaan: Sacred Harp Singing from Sand Mountain, Alabama
1990 Hollow Square Productions

V/A
O May My Heart In Tune Be Found: The 1992 Potomac River Sacred Harp Singings Convention
1994 Steven L. Sabol

The St. Louis Shape Note Singers
Songs From The Missouri Harmony
1994 Wings of Song

History

Deleted songs for the 1991 Sacred Harp

Posted on October 7, 2023October 15, 2023

UPDATE 10/15/23: Turns out the website was only down temporarily! The website and page (with linked files) are back online.

Missing images:
513-No More Sorrows.jpg
565-Unending Love.jpg
569-Love Beyond Degree Cncld, Star in th
464-Crown Him.jpg
467-Admonition p2.jpg
481-A Few More Years.jpg
538-The Living Way.jpg


The following post is pulled from an archive.org capture of the now defunct (at the time of my research on 10/01/23) website BostonSing.org. There has been such a great deal of good scholarship/study on the history of Sacred Harp and shape-note music and culture. But for many reasons that material goes out of print or websites go offline and it’s inaccessible. Luckily there are services like archive.org that allow the diligent to reach into the past and pull material into the present.

The original post, reproduced below, had links to images of the songs, used with permission, but those links were broken, so I’ve stripped out the references to them and their files sizes, just leaving the page numbers and titles of the songs.

I have not edited any of the introductory text or altered the links from how it was presented on archive.org, I have not confirmed any of the information.


Table of Contents

  • The Sacred Harp – Deletions for the 1991 Edition
    • Deletions from 1966
    • Deletions from 1971

The Sacred Harp – Deletions for the 1991 Edition

The Sacred Harp 1991 is descended from a series of shape-note books that began in 1844.  Over the years successive revisions added and deleted tunes from previous editions.  However, all tunes that were deleted before 1966 can be found online in either the 1859 edition or in the 1911 James Book. (All the tunes published in editions before 1859 or after that date, but before 1911, can also be found in either the online 1859 or 1911 editions respectively.)

There are, however, tunes that were printed in the 1936 and 1960 revisions that were deleted in the 1966 revision, and additional  tunes printed in the 1966 revision that were deleted upon publication of The Sacred Harp 1991. It is the intent of this webpage to provide images of the pages showing these deleted tunes.

Not all such tunes are illustrated here, only those tunes that can NOT be found on the 1850 and 1911 websites referred to above.

The tunes that are displayed can be found on the following pages in page number order beginning with the 1966 deletions, followed by those that took place in 1992, the actual publication date of The Sacred Harp 1991.

Note that all of these tunes are under copyright. The Sacred Harp Publishing Company has allowed permission for BostonSing.org to display its copyrighted pages online.

Deletions from 1966

469-God’s Promise
473-The Sinking Sun
479-For Me to Live is Christ
487-I My Cross I Have Taken
495-Zion’s Song
497-Heavenly Joys
506-Sewell
507-My Earnest Prayer
513-No More Sorrows
514-Jesus is the Theme
515-Jesus is the Theme Cncld, Calvary’s
523-Lord Hear My Plea
544-Parting With the World
545-Meditation
550-The Love of God
551-The Love of God Cncld
565-Unending Love
566-Unending Love Cncld
567-Love Beyond Degree
568-Love Beyond Degree Ctd
569-Love Beyond Degree Cncld, Star in th
572-Millard
573-God’s Call, Kambia
578-Funeral Hymn
393-Fairview
372-Lakeland
368-Draketown

Deletions from 1971

284-Entrekin
415-Endless Praise
464-Crown Him
466-Admonition
467-Admonition p2
468-Seaborn
469-Seaborn p2
472-Macedonia
474-A Friend to Grace
475-God’s Mercy
481-A Few More Years
484-Land of Rest
485-Land of Rest p2
492-Endless Life
493-Endless Life p2
494-Grace So Full And Free
497-The Choicest Blessing
501 My Soverign God
503-Eternal Blessings
504-In Thy Praise
510-A Song of Praise
516-Liberty Grove
538-The Living Way
539-The Living Way p2
540-Great Jehovah
547-My Desire
548-My Desire Ctd & The Saviour’s Love.j
549-The Saviour’s Love p2
556-Melissa
557-Melissa p2
569-A Parting Prayer
570-Our Saviour

Cheese Notes

Deep Dive | Sacred Harp – 47b Idumea

Posted on September 30, 2023December 1, 2024

“Deep Dive” will be a series of posts where we learn specific songs from our songbooks. Not just how to sing them, but some of the history of the songs and other interesting notes. We will pull learning information from a number of sources online and offline.

This is the first time I’ve tried assembling this type of information for a song. There are a tremendous number of resources out there but I don’t have access to them all and this singer is still relatively new to shape note singing and the history of Sacred Harp.

If you see an error, or using imprecise language, please offer feedback!

-Kevin


Table of Contents

  • The Song
    • Music
    • Poetry
  • Learning the Song
    • “Learn to Sing”
    • Sacred Harp Bremen
  • Field Recordings
  • The Source
    • Makers of the Sacred Harp
    • Introduction to the Poetry
    • First Printing Poetry in Facsimile
    • First Printing Poetry Transcribed
    • The First Printed Arrangement in Facsimile
    • First Printed Arrangement Poetry
    • First Arrangement Tenor Compared to Current Arrangement
    • Christian Harmony Printed Arrangement in Facsimile
    • “Original Sacred Harp” Printed Arrangement in Facsimile
    • Title Pages to Two Editions of Wesley’s Book
    • On Hymns for Children

The Song

This song is featured in the two current popular tune books that Baltimore uses during out singings: Sacred Harp (1991 Denson) and Shenandoah Harmony. The latter has a different arrangement and is truncated to two lines (the first and third lines from Sacred Harp).

In this post, we will focus on the version presented in Sacred Harp (1991 Denson).

The song as presented in The Sacred Harp takes the first two stanzas of Charles Wesley’s “Hymn 59” and divides them into four lines for the song.

Music

Poetry

And am I born to die?
To lay this body down!
And must my trembling spirit fly
Into a world unknown?

A land of deepest shade,
Unpierced by human thought;
The dreary regions of the dead,
Where all things are forgot!

Soon as from earth I go,
What will become of me?
Eternal happiness or woe
Must then my portion be!

Waked by the trumpet sound,
I from my grave shall rise;
And see the Judge with glory crowned,
And see the flaming skies!

Learning the Song

“Learn to Sing”

We’ll begin with Esther Morgan-Ellis’ terrific “Learn to Sing Sacred Harp” video on the song. Andy Ditzler joins her to sing the parts. If you’re not familiar with these videos, you should be! The screen is filled up with the musical notation (click “full screen” and watch on a real monitor or TV!) and Esther introduces the song and then each part is sung separately and then a “field recording” is played and sung along with.

Note: Esther has a website, a twitter. We link to the youtube channel itself on our Links page.

The video is broken down into “chapters” for you to easily find the part you want to practice.

Sacred Harp Bremen

Sacred Harp Bremen has a page for the song and a brilliant music player that gives you a synthesized tune for all the parts, and a track that combines them all: https://sacredharpbremen.org/47b-idumea/


Field Recordings

47b Idumea – Second Ireland Sacred Harp Convention, 2012
Holly Springs Sacred Harp singing: Idumea, #47b (1982)
47b, Idumea, from “The Sacred Harp” (2014, near Goshen, Indiana, the Michiana All Day Singing.)

The Source

The music of The Sacred Harp and shape note tradition often goes through many iterations over the course of their long lives.

Makers of the Sacred Harp

The book The Makers of the Sacred Harp identifies the source of “Idumea” in the following way

IDUMEA. S.M.
Words: Charles Wesley, 1763.
Music: Ananias Davisson, in Kentucky Harmony, 1816. Alto in Walker, Christian Harmony, 1867.

The Makers of the Sacred Harp, Steel, D.W.& Hulan, R. H., Urbana: Univ. of Illinois Press, 2010

I will note that printed below the title is a quote from Ecclesiastes 3:2 – “A time to be born and a time to die.” You can see variations of this line from various bibles at Bible Gateway.

Introduction to the Poetry

The CPDL website identifies the source of the poetry in the following way:

This is an hymn by Charles Wesley, originally published in Hymns for Children, 1763, as Hymn 59, with meter 66. 86. D (S.M.D.). This is not to be confused with “And am I only born to die,” with meter 886. 886, published in the same book as Hymn 64.

First Printing Poetry in Facsimile

The following was taken from an Archive.org scan, slightly cleaned up for presentation here:

First Printing Poetry Transcribed

Note: The following text replaces the archaic “long s” in the original with a modern “s”.

1.    And am I born to die,
      To lay this body down?
And must my trembling spirit fly
      Into a world unknown,
      A world of darkest shade,
      Unpierc'd by human thought,
The dreary regions of the dead,
      Where all things are forgot!

2.    Soon as from earth I go,
      What will become of me?
Eternal happiness or woe
      Must then my portion be:
      Waked by the trumpet’s sound
      I from my grave shall rise,
And see the judge with glory crown’d,
      And see the flaming skies.
 
3.    How shall I leave my tomb?
      With triumph or regret?
A fearful, or a joyful doom,
      A curse or blessing meet?
      Shall angel-bands convey
      Their brother to the bar?
Or devils drag my soul away,
      To meet its sentence there?

4.    Who can resolve the doubt
      That tears my anxious breast?
Shall I be with the damn’d cast out,
      Or number’d with the blest?
      I must from God be driven
      Or with my Savior dwell,
Must come, at his command, to heaven,
      Or else depart to hell.
 
5.    O thou who would not have
      One wretched sinner die,
Who died thyself, my soul to save
      From endless misery,
      Shew me the way to shun
      Thy dreadful wrath severe,
That when Thou comest on the throne,
      I may with joy appear.

6.    Thou art thyself the way:
      Thyself in me reveal,
So shall I pass my life’s short day
      Obedient to thy will;
      So shall I love my God,
      Because he first loved me,
And praise thee in thy bright abode
      Thro' all eternity.

The First Printed Arrangement in Facsimile

The first arrangement of “Idumea” by Ananias Davisson was printed in Kentucky Harmony (1816), and as can be seen, contains none of the lyrics of Charles Wesley’s “Hymn 59”. In fact, it contains the first stanza of the song printed in The Sacred Harp as “147t Boylston”.
Our facsimile is taken from an Archive.org scan.

First Printed Arrangement Poetry

My God, my life, my love,
To thee, to thee I call:
I cannot live if thou remove,
For thou art all in all.

First Arrangement Tenor Compared to Current Arrangement

If we focus on the Tenor, we can see minor differences between the 1816 and 1991 arrangements.

Christian Harmony Printed Arrangement in Facsimile

The setting in Christian Harmony (1867) is in a seven shape note style. It only includes three lines of poetry.
Our facsimile is taken from an Archive.org scan.

“Original Sacred Harp” Printed Arrangement in Facsimile

The setting in “Original Sacred Harp” (1911) is taken from an Archive.org scan.

The poetry here has four lines, the complete first two stanzas of the original hymn.
Note the following text follows the arrangement:

    The original title to these words was "And Others of Riper Years." See history of Charles Wesley on this and other pages of this work. He composed over 6,ooo hymns, and this one was among his favorites. 
    "Idumea" was printed in Walker's "Southern Harmony," in 1835, page 31; "Missouri Harmony," in 1837, page 32. It was first published in 1817. No trace can be found of A. Davidson, author of the music.

The phrase “And Others of Riper Years” was actually second half the enlarged title of a latter printing of the book that contained the original hymn: Hymns for Children, and Others of Riper Years.

Title Pages to Two Editions of Wesley’s Book

Hymns for Children
by Wesley, Charles
Bristol: E. Farley, 1763

Hymns for Children, and Others of Riper Years
by Wesley, Charles
London: R. Hawes, 1778

On Hymns for Children

[Charles Wesley.] Hymns for Children. Bristol: Farley, 1763.
2nd Bristol: Pine, 1768. [adds to title: and Those of Riper Years]
3rd London: Hawes, 1778. [adds to title: and Those of Riper Years]
4th London: Paramore, 1784. [adds to title: and Those of Riper Years]

From a document produced by Duke Center for Studies in the Wesleyan Tradition:

When John Wesley visited the German Moravians at Herrnhut, he made note of an item (#12) in their constitution: “Our little children we instruct chiefly by hymns; whereby we find the most important truths most successfully insinuated into their minds” (see his Journal, 11–14 Aug. 1738). Encouraged by this precedent, John Wesley published a short volume of Hymns for Children (1747), including nine hymns drawn from HSP (1740), CPH (1741), and HSP (1742).
Seven of the hymns included by John Wesley in Hymns for Children (1743) were written by his brother Charles, showing their shared interest in hymns for children. Indeed, five of the hymns came from a set of seven to which Charles assigned that name in HSP (1742), 194–202. Similar hymns are scattered through Charles’s manuscript collections of verse from the early 1740s on. Moreover, he had considered gathering these into a separate volume from at least 1750. On January 29 of that year he wrote to Mrs. Mary Jones, of Fonmon Castle, Wales, that he was preparing a hymn-book for the students at Kingswood school. His plans for publishing this hymn-book were apparently delayed. A decade later, in a letter to his wife dated January 5, 1760, Charles again announced his intention to publish his “hymns for children” (almost certainly now gathered into a manuscript volume). But once again he was delayed. He developed a serious case of gout, from which he would take two years to recover. He devoted this time to Scripture Hymns (1762). Then, in early 1763, he finally published his own Hymns for Children.
This collection gathered together several different types of verse prepared by Charles over the two decades. The first thirty hymns follow closely the outline of the catechism Instructions for Children, which John Wesley published in 1745 (drawing on the work of Claude Fleury & Pierre Poiret). It is hard to imagine a more obvious use of the form of hymns to “insinuate the most important truths” into the minds of children! Moving on, in hymns 40–50 we surely encounter the core of the hymn-book that Charles was preparing in 1750 for the students at Kingswood School. The final section, “Hymns for the Youngest,” includes the only items that had been published previously, from the set of hymns for children in HSP (1742)—shown in blue font in the Table of Contents below.
Hymns for Children (1763) went through four editions over two decades. In late 1787 an abridged form was published. Given Charles’s declining health, the abridgment was surely done by John Wesley, who added a preface to a 1790 reprint. Cf. Hymns for Children (1787) in the section of this website devoted to John Wesley’s hymn collections.

Editions:
[Charles Wesley.] Hymns for Children. Bristol: Farley, 1763.
2nd Bristol: Pine, 1768. [adds to title: and Those of Riper Years]
3rd London: Hawes, 1778. [adds to title: and Those of Riper Years]
4th London: Paramore, 1784. [adds to title: and Those of Riper Years]

History

The Sacred Harp of Hoboken, GA

Posted on September 1, 2023July 28, 2023

Short documentary on Sacred Harp tradition of Hoboken, GA, filmed by Will Payne.

Events

No Scheduled Nov. or Dec. Baltimore Singings

Posted on August 26, 2023August 30, 2023

The Baltimore Shape Note Singing group normally has singings on the fourth Thursday of each month. September and October should proceed as normal, but November’s date is Thanksgiving day and December falls into the zone between Christmas and New Years.

Some people may have private singings in those months, and there may be some regional singings. We will post any regional singings that can be posted on our events calendar.

History

Georgia State Sacred Harp Convention 1971

Posted on August 1, 2023July 28, 2023
Georgia State Sacred Harp Convention 1971 New Hope Church, Villa Rica

Documentary special on shape-note singing (“Fa So La”) from the Sacred Harp, filmed by WGTV (Georgia Public Broadcasting). At 16:21, watch Hugh McGraw teach singing school to a local high-school choir. Digital transfer courtesy of P Dan Brittain. For more information: https://fasola.org/

David Warren Steel: Makers of the Sacred Harp

Posted on July 1, 2023February 12, 2024
YouTube video of lecture by David Warren Steel on his book “The Makers of the Sacred Harp”

Library of Congress: Jan 6, 2011

David Warren Steel discusses his new book, “The Makers of the Sacred Harp,” newly published by the University of Illinois Press. Speaker Biography: David Warren Steel, associate professor of music and southern culture at the University of Mississippi, has been singing in the Sacred Harp since 1972. A graduate of Harvard College and the University of Michigan, he edited the collected works of early American composers Stephen Jenks and Daniel Belknap. He was an editor of “The Sacred Harp,” 1991 Edition, and provided liner notes for several recordings of Sacred Harp music; he has taught at Camp Fasola, a residential singing school, and appears in the documentary film “Awake My Soul.”

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