Charles Whitney Coombs

Charles Whitney Coombs (1859, Bucksport, Maine – 1940, Montclair, New Jersey) was an American composer and organist.[1][2] He was prolific in both sacred and secular music.[3]

Works

  • "The Four Leaf Clover"
gollark: Graphene oxide? Why are people being thing about graphene oxide, of all things?
gollark: People can get used to basically arbitrarily bad things.
gollark: Well, what I'd actually want is to have COVID-19 be mostly insignificant, not for it to still be quite bad but for people to be used to it.
gollark: Oh, another issue is that it's not really possible to test that unless you do challenge trials or something, which people are unwilling to.
gollark: It is a violation of bodily autonomy, since viruses aren't allowed to infect you without your consent.

References

  1. The American Organist Volume 30 1996 p. 92 "CHARLES WHITNEY COOMBS, b. 1859 Bucksport, Maine; d. 1940 Montclair, N.J. S: Stuttgart, Dresden, Italy, Switzerland O: American Church, Dresden, 1887—91 Church of Holy Communion, New York. N.Y., 1892–1908 St. Luke's Church."
  2. The International who is who in Music Alfred Victor Frankenstein, Sigmund Gottfried Spaeth, John Townsend Hinton Mize – 1951 p.125 "COOMBS. (Dr.) CHARLES WHITNEY (1859– 1940): American Church Organist, and Composer."
  3. Our American music, three hundred years of it John Tasker Howard, James Lyons – 1954 p.599 Charles Whitney Coombs (1859–1940), was prolific in both sacred music and secular music. "



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