You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
The extraordinary story of a woman of the Victorian era who was born at Hempnall, Norfolk, nurtured in Lowestoft, Suffolk, became a 'fringe' member of the Gurney family, and then married a pioneer CMS Missionary priest, David Hinderer, with whom she travelled to West Africa in 1852. They established the first Christian mission at Ibadan where they lived until 1869. During the years at the Mission, Anna and David endured the most horrendous ordeals of isolation, illness and starvation as a result of tribal warfare, before returning to England. Anna died in a Norfolk vicarage.
In Sarah Anna Glover: Nineteenth Century Music Education Pioneer, Jane Southcott explores the life and pedagogy of Sarah Anna Glover, the female music education pioneer of congregational singing (psalmody) and singing in nineteenth-century schools. Glover devoted her life to the creation and propagation of a way of teaching class music that was meticulously devised, musically rigorous, and successfully promulgated. Southcott analyzes Glover’s methods, history, and memory, and works to correct inaccuracies and misrepresentations that have emerged since Glover’s death.
This is the last remaining and only printed reference guide to the British aristocracy currently available.
None