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American hymn writer (1856–1913) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mary Jane "Jennie" Bain Wilson (November 13, 1856 – September 3, 1913) was an American hymn writer.
Mary Jane "Jennie" Bain Wilson was born on a farm in Cleveland, Indiana in 1856,[1] the younger daughter of Robert Wilson and Mary Frances Russell Wilson.[2] She survived typhoid fever as a little girl, but her spine was damaged by the bacterial infection ("typhoid spine" was first described in the medical literature many years later).[3] She used a wheelchair from childhood[4] and she was educated at home.[5]
Wilson wrote thousands and published hundreds of Christian hymns;[6] she was known as the "Fanny Crosby of the West".[2] She also wrote poetry and spoke at Bible conferences in Indiana.[5] Her hymn "Hold to God's Unchanging Hand" (1905)[7] was especially popular in the 1910s and 1920s.[8]
Wilson was also the author of the slogan of Fort Wayne, Indiana, "Fort Wayne with Might and Main", taking the $50 prize in the city's slogan contest, out of 25,000 submissions.[9][10][11]
After 1902 Wilson lived with her married older sister. She sought some surgical treatment of her paralysis in Indianapolis, and "improved somewhat".[10] Wilson died in 1913, aged 57 years, from kidney disease, in South Whitley, Indiana.[1][4]
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