Theodore F. Seward | |
---|---|
circa 1889 |
|
Born | January 25, 1835 Florida, New York |
Died | August 30, 1902 East Orange home of daughter |
(aged 67)
Residence | East Orange, New Jersey from 1868 |
Education | Institute at Florida, New York, Normal Musical Institutes at North Reading |
Occupation | Organist Music educator Composer Hymnodist |
Religion | Congregational, Episcopalian, Christian Science |
Spouse | Mary Holden Coggeshall Seward (m. 1860) |
Children | 3 |
Relatives | William H. Seward, second cousin |
Theodore Frelinghuysen Seward (January 25, 1835 - August 30, 1902) the Founder of the Brotherhood of Christian Unity and the Don't Worry Club.[1]
He was born in Florida, New York, January 25, 1835. He left his father's farm at, the age of eighteen to study music under Lowell Mason and Thomas Hastings, became organist of a church in New London, Connecticut, in 1857, and in Rochester, New York, in 1859, moved to New York City in 1867, and conducted the "Musical Pioneer," and afterward the New York " Musical Gazette." He first became interested in the tonic sol-fa system during a visit to England in 1869, and on his return worked to introduce the method without adopting the notation. He then took charge of the performances of the Fisk Jubilee Singers, wrote down more than one hundred of their plantation melodies, and, while making the tour of Europe with them, in 1875-1876. became more impressed with the advantages of the new system of musical instruction. After a course of study at the Tonic sol-fa college in London, he returned to the United States in 1877, to establish the system. Besides writing on the subject for many religious and educational journals, and lecturing before gatherings of teachers, he has edited the "Tonic Sol-Fa Advocate" and the "Musical Reform," taught the system in classes and public schools, and prepared a series of textbooks. He was the founder of the American tonic sol-fa Association, and of the American vocal music association. He died on August 30, 1902.[2]
This article incorporates text from the public domain Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography.