William Lamartine Thompson (November 7, 1847 – September 20, 1909) was an American composer and music publisher. He founded the W. L. Thompson Music Company and tried his hand with some success at secular compositions before finding his forte in hymns and gospel songs.
Education, family, community
Thompson was born November 7, 1847, in East Liverpool, Ohio, the youngest son of seven children of Josiah Thompson, who was a successful merchant, manufacturer, and banker, and a two-term member of the Ohio state legislature. His mother, Sarah Jackman Thompson, was devoted to social and charitable work.[1]
Thompson married Elizabeth Johnson. They had a son, William Leland Thompson (born 1895), who was known by his middle name. The Thompsons built a large hilltop mansion on Park Boulevard in East Liverpool. The house still stands and is known locally as "the Softly and Tenderly House" (see "Hymns and gospel songs" infra).
Thompson took a strong interest in local history, and paid for a large stone and tablet to mark the spot where ConfederateGeneralJohn Hunt Morgan and his raiders were captured near Lisbon, Ohio. Thompson donated large tracts of land to East Liverpool for public parks, stipulating that no alcohol would be permitted there.[2]
Secular career
Thompson began composing in his teens and in addition to hymns, wrote about 100 secular songs, including "My Home on the Old Ohio" and "Gathering Shells from the Seashore."[3]
Both a lyricist and composer, Thompson ensured he would always remember words or melodies that came to him at odd times. He said, "No matter where I am, at home or hotel, at the store or traveling, if an idea or theme comes to me that I deem worthy of a song, I jot it down in verse. In this way I never lose it."
Rebuffed in an early attempt to sell his songs to a commercial publisher, Thompson eventually opened the W. L. Thompson Music Company in East Liverpool. By the 1880s, it was one of the most prominent and successful such businesses in the United States. Thousands of music teachers and musicians ordered sheet music, instruments, and other supplies from Thompson's store. Thompson later founded a music and publishing company in Chicago.
Hymns and gospel songs
A member of the Church of Christ,[4] Thompson is best known as the writer and composer of hymns and gospel songs, to which he increasingly devoted his talents after his teenage years.
Thompson published his own works under a variety of pseudonyms, such as James Orr, J. Calvin Bushey, Warren Bestley, S. S. Meyers, Will T. Meyers, Will Baker, John Rutledge, John Armstrong, and Will Lamartine.[13]
Final illness and death
Thompson fell ill during a tour of Europe, and his family cut short their travels to return home. He died a few weeks later in New York City on September 20, 1909.
Legacy
The famous evangelist Dwight L. Moody admired Thompson's music and used "Softly and Tenderly" in many of his evangelistic rallies in America and Britain. When Moody lay dying, after all visitation had stopped, Thompson called on him. He was refused until Moody learned it was Thompson. Then he insisted on seeing the songwriter. Moody is said to have encouraged Thompson by saying, "Will, I would rather have written 'Softly and Tenderly' than anything I have been able to do in my whole life." Moody died shortly afterwards while singing the words of that hymn.[14][8]
"Softly and Tenderly Jesus Is Calling" was sung by the choir of Atlanta's Ebenezer Baptist Church at the funeral for Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.[15] and is used widely today as an invitation hymn in evangelistic services.
^ abEvelyn Bence, Spiritual Moments with the Great Hymns, (Grand Rapids, MI:Zondervan, 1997/ p. 248
^Hymns (1948 and subsequent editions to the present (2014) ed.). Salt Lake City, UT: Deseret Book Company. 1948. p. 252.
^Wiegand, John P., ed. (1997). Praise for the Lord (Expanded ed.). Nashville, Tennessee: Praise Press. Items 379, 674, 348. "Softly and Tenderly" is Item 584.
^Latter-Day Saint Hymns (1927 and subsequent editions to the present (2014) ed.). Salt Lake City, UT: Deseret Book Company. 1927. p. 416.
^Hymns (1948 and subsequent editions to the present (2014) ed.). Salt Lake City, UT: Deseret Book Company. 1948. p. 206.