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Edmund Hart Turpin
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Edmund Hart Turpin : ウィキペディア英語版
Edmund Hart Turpin

Professor Dr. Edmund Hart Turpin (4 May 1835, Nottingham – 25 October 1907, Middlesex) was an organist, composer, writer and choir leader based in Nottingham and London.〔Men of Nottingham and Nottinghamshire. R Mellors. S.R. Publishers Ltd. 1969〕
==Life==

Edmund Hart Turpin was born into a musical family which ran a dealership in musical instruments at 20 Chapel Bar, Nottingham. His father, James Turpin, was a lace maker and enthusiastic musical amateur.〔(Lace maker ), cyberhymnal.org, retrieved 25 October 2014〕〔(James Turpin ), ebooksread.com, retrieved 9 November 2014〕 On 3 November 1857 he married Sarah Anne Watson (
*1834- 26 January 1903), second daughter of Mr. Robert Watson of Whitemoor, Nottingham.〔(Birthyear Sarah Anne Watson ), familysearch.org, retrieved 30 October 2014〕〔(Time of death Sarah Anne ), genesreunited.co.uk, retrieved 7 November 2014〕 They had known each other from early childhood, and had attended their first school together.〔Charles William Pearce, ''A Biographical Sketch of Edmund Hart Turpin, 1911, p. 15〕 Together they had one daughter, Florence Elizabeth.〔(Florence Elizabeth ), ancestry.com, Retrieved 7 November 2014〕〔Charles William Pearce, ''A Biographical Sketch of Edmund Hart Turpin, 1911〕 On 26 January 1903 his wife, Sarah Anne, died. It was at St. Bride's, Fleet Street on 2 May 1905, that he secondly married Miss Sarah Hobbs (? - 10 November 1918), daughter of the late Mr. John Hobbs, a surgeon of Bloomsbury.〔(Death Sarah Hobbs ), genesreunited.co.uk, retrieved 7 November 2014〕 Miss Sarah Hobbs had been a most ardent church-worker in the parish of St. Bride's.〔(Miss Hobbs ), forgottenbooks.com, retrieved on 29 October 2014〕
Although by descent a French Huguenot, and a consistent member of the Church of England for nearly the whole of his life, E.H. Turpin always preserved the memories of this official connection with the Roman Catholic cathedral in a warm corner of his heart.〔Charles William Pearce, ''A Biographical Sketch of Edmund Hart Turpin'', 1911, p. 10-11〕 The solemn stately ceremonial, the devotional breath of the incense, the tender pleading of the Latin liturgy by the voice of its own native plainsong, were subjects he ever delighted to discourse upon. It was a pleasure to him to bear witness during the whole eriod being organist at St. Barnabas (1850-1865), although in constant and daily touch with the cathedral clergy, no one ever attempted to persuade him to renounce his ancestral Protestantism in order to embrace the Catholic Faith. The services of the Anglican Church with which he was so closely associated later on in life, much as he admired and respected them, never seemed to appeal to his highly strung emotional temperament as strongly as did either those of the Church of Rome, or of the Catholic and Apostolic Communion. The beautiful ritual and music of the stately Catholic Apostolic Church must have consoled him for his severance from the still greater magnificence of the worship of the Roman Church.〔Charles William Pearce, ''A Biographical Sketch of Edmund Hart Turpin'', 1911, p. 17〕
E.H. Turpin was buried at Highgate Cemetery (London), and his funeral was at St. Bride's, Fleet Street.〔Charles William Pearce, ''A Biographical Sketch of Edmund Hart Turpin'', 1911, p. 65-66〕 His funeral service was attended by a many Fellows, Associates and Members of the Royal College of Organists, and other distinguished musicians. He was succeeded by Mr. T. Westlake Morgan, a former organist of Bangor Cathedral.〔(Funeral ), ebooksread.com, Retrieved 16 December 2015〕 The flat stone which covers his grave has the words of the fist verse of "On the Resurrection Morning" inscribed on it. A memorial tablet has also been placed in the hall of the Royal College of Organists, close to the door of his official private room; this has his portrait and the melody of his tune "Mansfield", with the words of the first verse of the hymn engraved below the music.

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