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The Blue Letter Bible
Study Resources :: Music Resources :: Music beginning with 'A' :: William Wallace Gilchrist

Hymns / Music :: William Wallace Gilchrist

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Hymns Supplied Through the Gracious Generosity
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Cyber Hymnal Website

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William Wallace Gilchrist (1846-1916) Born: January 8, 1846, Jersey City, New Jersey.

Died: December 20, 1916, Easton, Pennsylvania.

Gilchrist’s family moved to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, when William was nine years old. He attended school there until the outbreak of the American civil war, when his father’s business failed and William had to seek other work. Having a good voice, he sang in choirs and choruses, first as a soprano, and later a smooth, flexible baritone. He began singing some of the principal parts in the Handel and Haydn Society, where his first real musical life began.

At age 19, Gilchrist began studying organ and voice with Professor H. A. Clarke, gradually concentrating on theory. At age 25, he spent a year in Cincinnati, Ohio, as organist and teacher, returning to Philadelphia to take post of choir master at St. Clement’s Protestant Episcopal Church. He later became conductor of the Mendelssohn Club, Tuesday Club of Wilmington, and Philadelphia Symphony Society.

Gilchrist was best known as a composer. His first success was in 1878, winning two prizes from the Abt Society of Philadelphia for best choruses for male voices. In 1881, he won three similar prizes from the Mendelssohn Glee Club of New York. In 1884, he took a $1,000 prize from the Cincinnati Festival Association; the judges included Saint-Saëns, Reinecke, and Theodore Thomas. This work was an elaborate setting of the Forty-sixth Psalm, and was enthusiastically received. Gilchrist afterwards modified it and brought it out at the Philadelphia Festival in 1885.

Gilchrist also served as editor of the 1895 Presbyterian hymnal, as musical editor of The Magnificat in 1910, and wrote symphonies, chamber and choral music. His works include:

  • An Easter Idyll
  • Psalm 46 (New York: 1882)
  • One Hundred and Third Psalm
  • Ninetieth Psalm
  • Fifth Psalm
  • Prayer and Praise
  • De Profundis
  • The Rose (New York: 1887)
  • Ode to the Sun
  • A Christmas Idyll (Boston, Massachusetts: 1898)
  • The Lamb of God (New York: 1909)

Music:

  1. Glad Day
  2. O Wonder Amazing
  3. Schubert
  4. Wakefield
  5. Wavertree

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The Blue Letter Bible ministry and the BLB Institute hold to the historical, conservative Christian faith, which includes a firm belief in the inerrancy of Scripture. Since the text and audio content provided by BLB represent a range of evangelical traditions, all of the ideas and principles conveyed in the resource materials are not necessarily affirmed, in total, by this ministry.