Samuel Longfellow

Samuel Longfellow

Hymn writer • Lyricist

Biography last updated 2 hours ago

3 hymns on Hymnal Library 3 biography views
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3 Hymns on Hymnal Library
3 Biography views
1,255 Total hymn views

About Samuel Longfellow

Reverend Samuel Longfellow, AI generated

Reverend Samuel Longfellow. Source: Wikipedia

Samuel Longfellow (1819–1892) was an eminent American Unitarian minister, poet, and hymn writer whose progressive theology and lyrical skill left a lasting imprint on nineteenth-century religious verse. Born in Portland, Maine, on June 18, 1819, he was the younger brother of the celebrated American poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. He completed his undergraduate studies at Harvard University in 1839 and graduated from the Harvard Divinity School in 1846. Following his ordination into the Unitarian ministry, Longfellow served several congregations across the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic, holding successive pastorates in Fall River, Massachusetts (1848), Brooklyn, New York (1853), and Germantown, Pennsylvania (1860). Beyond his ministerial duties, he was a dedicated biographer, compiling and publishing the definitive biography of his famous brother in 1886. He passed away on October 3, 1892.

In the realm of American hymnody, Longfellow is best remembered for his close, lifelong collaboration with his seminary classmate, Samuel Johnson. Together, the two men fundamentally reshaped the landscape of liberal American church music. They co-edited A Book of Hymns for Public and Private Devotion (1846; revised 1848), a compilation so distinct in its progressive, Transcendentalist-leaning selections that it became affectionately known in literary circles as the "Book of Sams." The duo reunited two decades later to compile Hymns of the Spirit (1864). Longfellow also compiled an independent liturgical collection, Vespers, in 1859, reflecting his interest in creating artistic, atmospheric evening services.

Longfellow’s original hymn contributions were vast and highly versatile, frequently focusing on the inner life of the spirit, divine presence in nature, and the continuous unfolding of truth. Among his most popular liturgical texts were his majestic evening selections, "Again as evening's shadow falls" and "Now on land and sea descending," alongside deeply intimate personal prayers such as "Holy Spirit, Truth divine" and "I look to Thee in every need." A unique dimension of his hymnological legacy was his practice of rewriting existing orthodox English hymns—such as Edward Osler's "O God unseen, yet ever near"—to realign them with his own Unitarian theological perspective. Following his death, his niece Alice Longfellow gathered and preserved his complete poetic output in the posthumous collection Hymns and Verses (1904), cementing his status as one of the most enduring voices of American liberal hymnody.

Hymns by Samuel Longfellow

# Title Year Views
1 Bless Thou the Gifts 1886 512 View
2 Holy Spirit, Truth Divine 1864 362 View
3 Now on Land and Sea Descending 1859 381 View

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