Sounding Childhood

Part 1: Hymns & Religious Songs

Nineteenth-Century British Children's Hymns

In today’s society, hymns--when they are still sung at all--are primarily sung in church, or church-related activities (camps, etc.), and they are usually sung as the entire congregation, of all ages.  Pop music dominates what children sing on their own, even what might be sung in schools and at home as community activities.  In the nineteenth century, in both England and America, folk songs and popular music existed but what children—of all classes—would sing on a daily basis were hymns: they sang them at home, they sang them at the church-sponsored schools, they sang them at the public (boarding) schools, later they sang them at the national schools. Yet this culture of children’s hymn-singing has not been studied thoroughly.  My study stems both from my personal love of hymn-singing, as a youth and now as an adult, and from my two areas of scholarship--Victorian aesthetics and children’s literature—as they converge into a study of Victorian children’s hymnody.  It focuses primarily on the situation in England and spans the entire nineteenth century.  It is based on three research trips to England, as I delved into archives and libraries for extant hymn books for children of the era, and amassed an incredibly large bibliography of over 200 hymn books.  Placing their indices into an Excel database, I began to determine the most commonly appearing hymns in these hymn books. 

From this research of nine years, I consider children’s hymns from many different disciplinary angles, from children’s literature to 19th century hymnody.  The results are a book published by Ashgate Publishers (now Routledge) in 2016: British Hymn Books for Children, 1800-1900: Re-Tuning the History of Childhood, with the following chapters:
1) Creating Communities of Song: Class and Gender in Children’s Hymn-Singing Experiences;  
2) Re-Writing the History of Children’s Literature: Three Periods of Children’s Hymnody;
3) Erasing Child-Adult Distinctions: “Crossover” Children’s Hymn-Texts and Tunes;
4) Staging the Child: Agency and Stasis for Children in Art and Hymn-Book Illustrations;
5) Reforming Society:  Missionary, Bands of Hope, and Bands of Mercy Hymns; and
6) Resurrecting the Child: The Cult of the Deathbed, Hymns of Faith, and Children of Life.  

In my analysis of these various hymn venues I make the following claims:
1) hymns challenge and empower children, placing deep theology and rich poetry within the grasp of children;  
2) the music is just as powerful, and perhaps even more inspirational at times, as the text, making hymns for adults with engaging tunes very popular in children’s hymn books;  and
3) hymns offered children a way to impact the world around them, in missionary work, temperance work, and even animal welfare (temperance leagues for children were called Bands of Hope and animal-welfare organizations were called Bands of Mercy). 

My daughter, Annetta Itnyre, grew up during the writing of this book, accompanying my husband and me to England all three times and learning quite a few of these hymns.  Then, in June 2015, with immense help from my colleague Dr. Jessica Raposo, director of music at Indiana University East, I auditioned for and created a “Hymn Camp” for 18 children grades 4th through 8th grade, including Annetta, to learn some of these hymns. For a week, Jessica taught them about 17 hymns which we then recorded at the end of the week.  It was inspiring to see children of today become as excited about hymns as I imagined many nineteenth-century children might be!  (see all their names, below).     

On this accompanying website, sponsored by my home School of Humanities and Social Sciences at Indiana University East, you will find a chart of the “top 30” children’s hymns of the era, with date of composition and most commonly used tune name, as well as a complete bibliography to the project (thank you to Dr. Greg Weber, computer professor at IU East, for creating this initial website). 

Linked below, you will find those most popular hymns, listed in the order of their popularity according to my study; with each linked hymn, you will find a contemporary score from books I own and my analysis of the hymn. Then, thanks to these children from the Hymn Camp, my daughter, and two of her friends, you will find audio versions of these hymns as sung by children.

2015 Victorian Song-Camp Singers (all children’s voices and images used with parental permission):
(more camp pictures found by using the right- and left-arrows)

  1. Heather Metzger, age 8 
  2. Grace Stewart, age 9 
  3. Mary Jetmore, age 9 
  4. Kristen Urich, age 10 
  5. Eden Judd, age 10 
  6. Malory Bolser, age 10 
  7. Ben Schweitzer, age 10 
  8. Graham Milligan, age 11 
  9. Madeline Stults, age 12 
  10. Luke Schweitzer, age 12 
  11. Heidi Metzger, age 13 
  12. Grace Blakely, age 13 
  13. Natalie Milligan, age 13 
  14. Annetta Itnyre, age 13 
  15. Natalie Pegg, age 13 
  16. Alexa Turner, age 15 

Co-directors: Jessica Raposo, Alisa Clapp-Itnyre
Pianist: Caryl Bailey
Recording engineer: Chris Robinson
Location: Central United Methodist Church, Richmond IN
Recordings are also archived in IU's Media Collection Online

Additional hymn-singers:
(also used with parents' permission)
Solo: Annetta Itnyre, age 8 
Duets “Jesus bids of shine” & “Gentle Jesus, meek & mild”: Madelyn Brunton & Annetta Itnyre, age 8 
Rest of Duets: Annetta Itnyre & Lydia Shively, ages 13 & 14

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