I SHALL NOT WANT
Charles Force Deems was a minister in the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. From 1866 until his death, in 1893, he was pastor of the Church of the Strangers, an independent congregation in New York City.
Charles Force Deems was a minister in the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. From 1866 until his death, in 1893, he was pastor of the Church of the Strangers, an independent congregation in New York City.
William Cutter, an editor and publisher, was born in North Yarmouth, Maine in 1801.
Fanny Crosby was the most prolific and perhaps the most popular writer of Sunday school hymns that America has ever produced. She was born in Putnam County, New York in 1820. When only six weeks old she lost her eyesight. Her first poem was written when she was eight.
Jane Crewdson was born in Cornwall, England in 1809. Always delicate in health, toward the close of her life she was unable to leave her home. Most of her hymns were written during this period.
Arthur Cleveland Coxe, a bishop of the Episcopal Church, graduated from the University of New York in 1838, took orders in the ministry in 1841, and served as rector in Hartford, Baltimore, and New York City.
William Cowper was born in Hertfordshire, England in 1731. His father, Reverend John Cowper, was a chaplain to George II. He spent ten years in Westminster School and then began reading law; abandoning it for literature after a very brief practice. He became the most distinguished poet of the English language in the latter half of the eighteenth century.
Thomas Cotterill, a clergyman in the Church of England, was born in Staffordshire, England in 1779. In 1817 he became perpetual curate of St. Paul’s at Sheffield, where he spent the rest of his life.
Josiah Conder was born in London in 1789. At an early age he lost the sight of his right eye. In 1832 he started a newspaper, which he continued to edit and publish until his death in 1855.
William Bengo Collyer was the pastor of a Congregational church from 1801, when he was ordained, until his death in 1854.
Annie Louisa Coghill was born in Kiddermore, England in 1836. “Work, for the night is coming” was written in 1854 when she was only 18.