William howard doane biography of martin
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TO GOD BE THE GLORY (Doane)
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[Hymn of the Month] ‘To God Be the Glory’ by William Howard Doane
Our tune this month is written by a most remarkable American William Howard Doane
Doane was born in Connecticut in 1832 to prosperous parents. His father was the head of Doane and Treat, cotton manufacturers. Doane showed impressive musical talent and by early adolescence he was playing the flute, violin and double bass fiddle.
Doane attended the Woodstock Academy and musical talents enabled him to serve as the school’s choir director. As well as music he was a talented engineer and successfully filed many patents for woodmaking machinery.
Doane was a prolific composer of Christian hymn tunes. He edited forty-three collections of hymns and composed an estimated 2,300 works, including hundreds of original hymns and hymn settings. He is best known as a longtime collaborator of Fanny Crosby, having written music for an estimated 1,500 of Crosby’s poems.
Doane generously supported Baptist churches a
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Ex-library with usual marks. No marks noted in text. Binding is tight and square. . . . . . . . What we now call OMSC began officially in 1922 as the Society for Foreign Mission Welfare and was called the Houses of Fellowship. Founders Marguerite and Ida Doane (daughters of renowned hymnwriter William Howard Doane) sought to provide a place for North American missionaries on furlough to recover their health and have their spirits lifted before returning to their fields abroad. The Doanes established a complex of missionary furlough apartments in Ventnor-by-the-Sea, Absecon Island, New Jersey, and housed nearly 3,400 adult missionaries in their first 25 years (in addition to another four thousand children, pastors, and other visitors). These early visitors represented 106 mission agencies and denominational boards, 97 fields, and 443 overseas stations.
Title: Six Decades of Renewal for Mission: A history of the Overseas Ministries Study Center formerly known as the Houses of Fel