Robert Hall Baynes

Robert Hall Baynes (* 10 March 1831, Wellington, Somerset; † 27 March 1895, Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire) was a bishop, a hymnodist and a hymn writer.[1][2][3][4] He was editor of the Lyra Anglicana, which was among the most influential hymnals of the Oxford Movement in the 1860s and 1870s, having a relatively broad selection of Anglican authors.[5]

Life

Baynes was born on 10 March 1831 at Wellington, Someset as a son of the Rev. Joseph Baynes and Ann Day Ash.[6][7] In total he had 14 brothers and sisters: Susanna Ash Baynes, Joseph Ash Baynes, Thomas Spencer Baynes, John Ash Baynes, Mary Ann Baynes, Henry Martyn Baynes, Alfred Vaughan Baynes, Elizabeth Cadbury Baynes, William Wilberforce Baynes, Reginald Heber Baynes, Alfred Henry Baynes, George Whitefield Baynes, Elizabeth Emily Baynes and Helton Arnold Baynes.[8] Robert Hall Baynes married to Ann Day Ash; on May 25, 1856 he married for the second time to Clara Tate in Kensington, London.[9] He got four children: Clara Margaret Baynes, Henry Montagu Francis Baynes, Edith Aldwyn Baynes and Ethel Mary Baynes.[10]

He was educated at St. Edmund Hall, Oxford and graduated in 1856 for his Bachelor of Arts, and in 1859 for his Master of Arts.[11] He took Holy Orders (deacon 1855, priest 1856), and was successively curate of Christ Church, Blackfriars, London (1855–58), perpetual curate of St Paul, Whitechapel (1858–62) and Holy Trinity, Maidstone (1862–66), and vicar of St Michael and All Angels, Coventry (1866–79).[12] In 1870 he became Bishop designate of Madagascar; but he resigned in 1871. In 1873 he was appointed as Hon. Canon of Worcester Cathedral, and in 1880 Vicar of Holy Trinity, Folkestone.[13]

Robert Hall Baynes is more widely known as the compiler of some most successful books of sacred poetry than as an original hymn-writer, although some of his hymns are of considerable merit, and are in extensive use. Of these the best known are “Jesu, to Thy table led," and "Holy Spirit, Lord of glory." He was editor of Lyra Anglicana (1862), English Lyrics (1865), The Canterbury Hymnal (1864) and the Supplementary Hymnal (1869), The Illustrated Book of Sacred Poems (1867) and author of the Autumn Memories and other Verses (1869). His hymns appeared in The Canterbury Hymnal, the Autumn Memories, and in the Churchman’s Shilling Magazine, of which he was sometime editor. His Home Songs for Quiet Hours were published in 1878, and the Hymns for Home Mission Services in the Church of England in 1879. To his eucharistic manual, At the Communion Time, a series of hymns for Holy Communion were added.[14]

Works

Hymnbooks

Other books

Hymns

References

  1. Birth and death Robert Hall Baynes, Canterbury Dictionary of Hymnology, retrieved, 23 December 2014
  2. Compiler of hymn books and hymn writer, hymnary.org, retrieved 23 December 2014
  3. Death, hymntime.org, retrieved 23 December 2014
  4. Place of death, wikitree.com, retrieved 23 December 2014
  5. Kirstie Blair, Form and Faith in Victorian Poetry and Religion, 2012, p. 214
  6. Birth, hymnary.org, retrieved 23 December 2014
  7. Mother, wikitree.com, retrieved 23 December 2014
  8. Brothers and sisters, wikitree.com, retrieved 23 December 2014
  9. Marriages, wikitree.com, retrieved 23 December 2014
  10. Marriages, wikitree.com, retrieved 23 December 2014
  11. Education, hymnary.org, retrieved 23 December 2014
  12. Holy Orders, Canterbury Dictionary of Hymnology, retrieved 23 December 2014
  13. Bishop and Canon of Worcester, hymnary.org, retrieved 23 December 2014
  14. Julian, J., A Dictionary of Hymnology, 1907
  15. Supplemental Hymnal, hymntime.com, retrieved 23 December 2014
  16. Hymns for Home Mission Services, hymntime.com, retrieved 23 December 2014
  17. Lyra Anglicana 1884, onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu, retrieved 23 December 2014
  18. At the Communion, hymntime.com, retrieved 23 December 2014
  19. Bend every knee, hymnary.org, retrieved 23 December 2014
  20. Great Shepherd, hymnary.org, retrieved 23 December 2014
  21. Jesu, Thou true and living Bread, hymnary.org, retrieved 23 December 2014
  22. Who didst die to save, hymnary.org, retrieved 23 December 2014
  23. The day is done, hymnary.org, retrieved 23 December 2014
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