James Lawson
LAWSON, James. b. Elston, Nottinghamshire, England, 17 March 1847; d. Ottawa, Canada, 1 May 1926. Lawson has been difficult to identify, if only because his best-known hymn, ‘I will follow thee, my Savior’*, has, in some books, been incorrectly attributed to ‘James L., Elginburg’. In his 1989 Companion to the Song Book of the Salvation Army of 1986, Gordon Taylor suggested that ‘it seems likely that his name was James Lawson, and that Elginburg was not a surname but was possibly a place with which he was associated’ (p. 295).
Since that time, Taylor has done further research for his forthcoming Companion to the Song Book of 2015, and confirmed his speculation. Several tributes in Canadian...
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. "James Lawson."
The Canterbury Dictionary of Hymnology. Canterbury Press. Web. 15 Oct. 2024.<
http://www.hymnology.co.uk/j/james-lawson>.
Chicago style (see The Chicago Manual of Style, 16th Ed.)
. "James Lawson."
The Canterbury Dictionary of Hymnology. Canterbury Press, accessed October 15, 2024,
http://www.hymnology.co.uk/j/james-lawson.