翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Thomas Jefferson Mayfield
・ Thomas Jefferson Medal
・ Thomas Jefferson Medal in Architecture
・ Thomas Jefferson Middle School
・ Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
・ Thomas Jefferson Page
・ Thomas Jefferson Ramsdell
・ Thomas Jefferson Randolph
・ Thomas Jefferson Rusk
・ Thomas Jefferson Ryan
・ Thomas Jefferson School
・ Thomas Jefferson School (disambiguation)
・ Thomas Jackson (Royal Navy officer)
・ Thomas Jackson (theologian)
・ Thomas Jackson (trade unionist)
Thomas Jackson Denson
・ Thomas Jackson Rodman
・ Thomas Jacob
・ Thomas Jacob (journalist)
・ Thomas Jacob (luger)
・ Thomas Jacobs
・ Thomas Jacobsen
・ Thomas Jacobsen (footballer)
・ Thomas Jacobsen (sailor)
・ Thomas Jacobsen (sledge hockey)
・ Thomas Jacomb
・ Thomas Jacomb Hutton
・ Thomas Jacques
・ Thomas Jacques (footballer)
・ Thomas Jaeschke


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Thomas Jackson Denson : ウィキペディア英語版
Thomas Jackson Denson

Thomas Jackson Denson (January 20, 1863 – September 14, 1935) was a notable Alabama musician and singing school teacher within the Sacred Harp tradition. He was the youngest of the four sons of the Levi Phillip Denson, a farmer, a gold miner in Arbacoochee, Cleburne County and a Methodist minister, and Julia Ann Jones Denson. Thomas J. Denson was born in 1863 in Arbacoochee and named after Stonewall Jackson. He was married to Amanda Burdette, a music and literary teacher, a singer, and song composer, until her death in 1910; she was the younger sister of Sidney Burdette, his brother's wife. They had five children: two sons, Paine W. Denson and William Howard Denson; and three daughters, Anna Eugenia Denson, Maggie Francis Denson, and Jarusha (Aunt Rush/Ruth) Henrietta Denson. In 1914, he married Lola Mahalia Akers, with whom he had three daughters: Violet Denson Hinton, Vera Denson Nunn, and Tommye Mahalia Denson Mauldin.
Along with his brother Seaborn McDaniel Denson, Thomas Denson formed the Sacred Harp Publishing Co. In 1933 they purchased the rights to the 1911 J. S. James ''Sacred Harp'' and began a revision of it. This revision, known as the ''Original Sacred Harp (Denson Revision)'', was published in 1936.
Thomas J. Denson was a popular singing school professor and taught singing schools from Georgia to Texas. Some claim that he taught more Sacred Harp singers than any other man. He was affectionately known to many as "Uncle Tom." When he died suddenly in a community near Jasper, Alabama, he was preparing to go to a singing. Mrs. Edwards wrote in the hymnal: "Birmingham news reporters estimated a crowd of 15,000 people in attendance" at Fairview Cemetery in Double Springs.
A granite monument to the memory of Thomas J. and Seaborn M. Denson was erected on the courthouse square in Double Springs, Alabama. This was done in 1944, the centennial year of the Sacred Harp. Part of the inscription reads, ''"By the loving hands of their families, pupils of their singing schools, and legions of singers and friends."''
Thomas J. Denson died September 14, 1935. His brother Seaborn died in 1936, and Tom's son, Paine Denson worked with his sister Ruth Denson Edwards and other members of the revision committee to see the "Denson" edition of the Sacred Harp through to completion.
==References==

*Reverend Levi Phillips Denson (1819-1889): Denson families in America, ed. M.E. (Eddie) Denson (Paducah, Ky.: Turner Publishing, 1997)
*Ruth Denson Edwards, "Music" foreword, Original Sacred Harp (Denson Revision 1844-1977) (Cullman, Ala.: Sacred Harp Publishing, 1977)


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Thomas Jackson Denson」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.