Hutchins, Charles L. (Charles Lewis), 1838-1920

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Charles Lewis Hutchins born in Concord, New Hampshire, August 5, 1838. He graduated from Williams in 1861 with Master of Arts degree, and from the General Theological Seminary, New York City, in 1865 with a Doctor of Divinity degree. He entered the ministry of the Episcopal Church in 1865. In 1867, Rev. Hutchins was the Rector of Saint John's in Lowell. From 1869 to 1872 he served as an assistant pastor at St. Paul's Cathedral, Buffalo New York. In 1872 became rector of Grace Church, Medford, Massachusetts and served there until 1890. In 1871 and 1874 he was assistant secretary of the General Convention and in 1877 he was made Secretary of the Convention.

Rev. Hutchins remained in the Boston area until his death in 1920. He began publishing around 1865 and produced a large number of books and hymnals for the Episcopalian Church, including "Sunday School Hymnal" (Buffalo, 1871), "Annotations of the Hymnal" (Hartford, 1872), "The Canticles" (Hartford, 1872) "Church Hymnal" (Medford, 1879), "Sunday School Hymnal and Service Book" (Medford, 1871, 1881, 1892), which is said to have included an early publication of the Rev. John Young Translation of "Silent Night, Holy Night," one of the most popular English translations, "The Church Hymnal : revised and enlarged ; in accordance with the action of the General Convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America ; in the year of our Lord 1892" ( Boston : Parish Choir, 1892), "A Hymnal and Service-Book for Sunday schools, day schools, guilds, brotherhoods, etc." (Boston: Parish Choir, circa 1893), "The Chant and Service Book : containing the choral service for morning and evening prayer, chants for the canticles, with the pointing set forth by the General Convention, music for the communion service, chants and anthems for the burial office, etc., etc." (Boston: Parish Choir, circa 1894), "Carols Old and Carols New" (Boston: Parish Choir, 1916) "The Church Psalter", "The Pointed Prayer Book", "The Echoes of Pinebrook" (Published by The Young Peoples Church of the Air), and numerous others.

He was just 34 when he edited "The Church Hymnal," the official hymnal of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States. It had at least 68 editions and variants and was revised and enlarged in 1893. He was also the editor of "The Parish Choir," a weekly publication issued from 1874 to about 1919. "The Parish Choir" was both the name of the serial and the name of the Episcopal publishing house.

His largest volume was Carols Old and Carols New: For Use At Christmas and Other Seasons of the Christian Year (Boston: Parish Choir, 1916). It was 659 pages in length and contained 751 carols, about 63% were for Christmas (approximately 470). The Christmas carols were international in scope, and included both worldwide favorites and uncommon or unique compositions. It remains today the largest collection of carols ever printed in the English language. Hutchin's Carols Old and Carols New contains three translations of Stille Nacht. None gives the name of the translator. Although common today, Hutchins’ Carols contained a number of features which were uncommon at the time, including a preface, a composer and music source index, a first-line index, a valuable four-page bibliography, and a moderate amount of data of the authorship of carols. Only 1000 copies were printed; the death of Rev. Hutchins in 1920 precluded another edition.

Relation Name
correspondedWith Brooks, Phillips, 1835-1893 person
associatedWith Farrar, Frederic William, 1831-1903. person
associatedWith Morgan, J. Pierpont (John Pierpont), 1837-1913, person
correspondedWith Patterson, Carlile Pollock person
correspondedWith Smithsonian Institution corporateBody
correspondedWith Wendell family. family
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Birth 1838

Death 1920

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