BarryJ/Dpl queries/Tune names
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List of tune names, from my editions
1715
- A Better Day is Coming By and By – Robert Lowry – A better day is coming – 187519191934
- Aberdeen – Oliver Holden – The Almighty spake, and Gabriel sped – 1793
- Abyssinia – Jacob French – Greatly beloved – 1789
- Acceptance – Oliver Holden – When midnight darkness veils the skies – 1797
- Acton – Abraham Wood – Vain man, thy fond pursuits forbear – 17931806
- Acton – Daniel Belknap – Farewell, bright soul, a short farewell – 1800
- Acworth – Samuel Holyoke – Deep in the dust before thy throne – 1803
- Adams – Daniel Read – Why did the nations join to slay – 1793
- Adams – William Billings – To spend one sacred day – 1794
- Addison – Alexander Gillet – How pleasant 'tis to see – 1795
- Addison – Oliver Holden – Thy mercy sweetens every soil – 1800
- An Address for All – William Walker – I sing a song which doth belong – 1846
- Adieu – Stephen Jenks – Far from our friends and country dear – 1818
- Admiration – Lemuel Babcock – Infinite grace! almighty charms – 1793
- Admonition – Daniel Read – Sinners, awake betimes – 1807
- Advent – Oliver Holden – Joy to the world! The Lord is come – 1800
- After a While – Charles Albert Tindley – The world of forms and changes – 19011909
- Alarm – Stephen Jenks – Why do we mourn departing friends – 1803
- Albany – Daniel Read – No, I shall envy them no more – 1785
- Albany – Hezekiah Moors – O come, loud anthems let us sing – 1809
- Albion – Robert Boyd – Come, ye that love the Lord – 1816
- Aldsworth – Samuel Holyoke – Blest is the man, forever blest – 1803
- Alexandria – Alexander Gillet – My spirit sinks within me, Lord – 1791
- Alibama – Oliver Holden – Hark! 'Tis the trumpet's piercing sound – 1800
- All Saints – Alexander Gillet – This life's a dream, an empty show – 1794
- All Things Fair and Bright are Thine – Oliver Shaw – Thy art, O God, the life and light – 1817
- Alpha – Oliver Holden – When faith presents the Savior's death – 17921797
- Alstead – Oliver Holden – Shepherds, rejoice, lift up your eyes – 1788
- Amanda – Alexander Gillet – Death, like an overflowing stream – 1795
- Amanda – Justin Morgan – Death, like an overflowing stream – 1790
- Amboy – Daniel Read – I am not concerned to know – 1785
- Amelia – Solomon Howe – When Christ, the virgin's glorious son – 1804
- Amen – Hezekiah Moors – Faithful and true, the man divine – 1809
- America – Truman Wetmore – Amid surrounding foes – 1798
- America – William Billings – Come, let us sing unto the Lord – 1770
- Amiens – Oliver Holden – Welcome, sweet day of rest – 1803
- Amity – Daniel Read – How pleasant tis to see – 1785
- Andover – Abraham Wood – My passions fly to seek their King – 1783
- Andover – Oliver Holden – Of all the joys that mortals know – 1800
- Andover – Samuel Babcock – My Redeemer, let me be – 1795
- Andover – Samuel Holyoke – And let this feeble body fail – 1791
- Andover – William Billings – Awake, my heart; arise, my tongue – 1781
- Angel's Hymn – Jeremiah Ingalls – Hark! ye mortals, hear the trumpet – 1805
- Angola – Daniel Belknap – Down from the top of earthly bliss – 1797
- Animation – Philo Sherman – My drowsy powers, why sleep ye so – 1808
- Annapolis – Daniel Read – Awake, ye saints, to praise your King – 1785
- Annapolis – Jacob French – He reigns! the Lord, the Savior reigns – 1789
- Annapolis – Solomon Howe – While we admire the vast design – 1804
- Anstruther – Oliver Holden – Light of those whose dreary dwelling – 1803
- An Anthem for Easter – Daniel Belknap – See from the dungeon of the dead – 1797
- An Anthem for Ordination – Jacob French – Descend from heaven, celestial Dove – 1802
- Anthem for Thanksgiving – Stephen Jenks – Come, let us sing a new made song – 1805
- Anticipation – James P. Carrell – On Jordan's stormy banks I stand – 1831
- Anticipation – Philo Sherman – What sinners value I resign – 1808
- Antipatris – Oliver Holden – Awake, my heart; arise, my tongue – 1793
- The Apple Tree – Jeremiah Ingalls – The tree of life my soul hath seen – 1805
- Appleton – Timothy Swan – Now to the Lord a noble song – 1801
- Arabia – James P. Carrell – Our journey is a thorny mazeLord! what a wretched land is this – 1831
- Arabia – Oliver Holden – Early, my God, without delay – 1803
- Arkham – Samuel Holyoke – Great God, while nature speaks thy praise – 1807
- Arland – Samuel Holyoke – Now plead my cause, almighty God – 1803
- Armenia – Stephen Jenks – Lord of the worlds above – 1803
- Arnheim – Samuel Holyoke – All ye bright armies of the skies – 1791
- Arnon – Timothy Swan – Great God, to thy almighty love – 1801
- Ascension – Abraham Wood – Jesus, our triumphant head – 1789
- Ascension – Hezekiah Moors – O for a shout of sacred joy – 1809
- Ascension – Jacob French – Hail the day that saw him rise – 1802
- Ashburnham – Jacob Kimball – O praise ye the Lord, prepare your glad voice – 1793
- Ashby – Jacob Kimball – To spend one sacred day – 1793
- Ashby – Oliver Holden – Come, happy souls, approach your God – 1803
- Ashford – Daniel Belknap – Loud let the tuneful trumpet sound – 18061806
- Ashford – Hezekiah Moors – Let heaven and earth rejoice – 1809
- Ashford – Samuel Babcock – Jesus is become at length – 1795
- Ashham – William Billings – Thou whom my soul admires above – 1778
- Ashley – Hezekiah Moors – Tis but a few whose days amount – 1809
- Asia – Daniel Read – When man grows bold in sin – 1785
- Asia – William Billings – Behold, the lofty sky – 1779
- Aspiration – Abraham Wood – Tis pure delight without alloy – 1793
- Aspiration – Jacob French – Weary world, when will it end – 1789
- Aspiring Praise – Oliver Holden – My song shall bless the Lord of all – 1803
- Assiduity – Abijah Forbush – Be this my one great business here – 1803
- Association – Jacob French – Content, thou dear object of all our desires – 1802
- Assurance – William Billings – Now shall my head be lifted high – 1781
- Athens – Hezekiah Moors – All hail, happy day – 1809
- Athens – Jacob French – Touch, heavenly Word, O touch these curious souls – 1789
- Athens – Oliver Holden – Had I the tongues of Greeks and Jews – 1800
- Attleborough – Hezekiah Moors – Lord, shall it be forever said – 1809
- Attleborough – William Billings – To God the only wise – 1770
- Augusta – Abraham Maxim – Shout to the Lord, and let our joys – 1802
- Augusta – Alexander Gillet – O tell me no more – 1792
- Augusta – Philo Sherman – Our God our help in ages past – 18081848
- Aurora – Abijah Forbush – God of the morning, at whose voice – 1803
- Aurora – William Billings – Awake, my soul, awake – 17781779
- Auspicious Morn – Oliver Holden – No war or battles' sound – 1800
- Auspicious Morn – Samuel Babcock – Again the Lord of life and light – 1806
- Austria – Samuel Holyoke – Ye that obey the immortal King – 1791
- Autumn – Amos Pilsbury – Savior, the world's and mine – 1799
- Autumn – Daniel Belknap – Twas spring, twas summer, all was gay – 1800
- Avon – Oliver Holden – Arise, my tenderest thoughts, arise – 1806
- The Babe of Bethlehem – William Walker – Ye nations all, on you I call – 1835
- Babel – Jacob French – O all ye nations, praise the Lord – 1789
- Babel – Samuel Babcock – Sitting by the streams that glide – 1795
- Babylon (1786) – Alexander Gillet – Along the banks where Babel's current flows – 1786
- Babylon – Alexander Gillet – Along the banks where Babel's current flows – 1794
- Babylon – Asahel Benham – Along the banks where Babel's current flows – 1785
- Babylon – Jacob French – Along the banks where Babel's current flows – 1802
- Babylonian Captivity – Elkanah Dare – Along the banks where Babel's current flows – 1813
- Baggaduce – Jacob French – Broad is the road that leads to death – 1789
- Baldwin – William Hauser – And let our bodies part – 1848
- Balloon – Timothy Swan – Behold, I fall before Thy face – 1783
- Baltimore – William Billings – Father of mercies, thou – 1778
- Bancroft – Oliver Brownson – Of justice and of grace I sing – 1797
- Barnet – Jeremiah Ingalls – Come, we that love the Lord – 1805
- Barnstable – Daniel Read – Hail the day that saw him rise – 1785
- Barre – William Billings – How glorious is our heavenly King – 1770
- Barrington – Anonymous – Stay, my beloved with me here – 1780
- Barrington – Daniel Read – How long wilt thou forget me, Lord – 1785
- Bashan – Hezekiah Moors – How vain are all things here below – 1809
- Beaufort – Merit Woodruff – How vain are all things here below – 1800
- Beauty – Jacob French – We are a garden walled around – 1789
- Bedford – Ezra Goff – There is a house not made with hands – 1806
- Bedford – Oliver Brownson – My never-ceasing songs shall show – 1783
- Bedford – Stephen Jenks – How beauteous are their feet – 1803
- Beggar's Prayer – Jeremiah Ingalls – Encouraged by thy word – 1805
- Begone unbelief – Jeremiah Ingalls – Begone unbelief – 1805
- Belfast – Daniel Belknap – With flowing eyes and bleeding hearts – 1802
- Belgorod – Jacob French – And now the scales have left mine eyes – 1789
- Bellevue – Elkanah Dare – Ye tribes of Adam, join – 1813
- Bellingham – Jacob French – Come, dearest Lord, descend and dwell – 1802
- Bellingham – William Billings – Begin, my tongue, some heavenly theme – 1794
- Beneficence – Oliver Holden – Father of our feeble race – 1800
- Beneficence – William Billings – That man is blest who stands in awe – 1786
- Benevolence – William Billings – Happy the man whose tender care – 1778
- Benevolent Street – Oliver Shaw – Up to the Lord, that reigns on high – 1815
- Bennington – Daniel Read – Had not the Lord, let Israel say – 1785
- Bennington – Ebenezer Child – Lord, what is man, poor feeble man – 1804
- Bensalem – Oliver Holden – Jesus! and shall it ever be – 18061806
- Benson – Ebenezer Child – How short and hasty is our life – 1804
- Berkeley – Jacob Kimball – Come, let us join our cheerful songs – 1793
- Berkley (1792) – Alexander Gillet – Jesus Christ, the Lord's anointed – 1792
- Berkley – Alexander Gillet – The Lord my pasture shall prepare – 1794
- Berkshire – Ephraim Reed – O, if my soul were formed for woe – 1817
- Berlin – Daniel Belknap – The Lord Jehovah reigns – 1800
- Berwick – Jacob French – Speak, O ye judges of the earth – 1786
- Bethany – Jacob French – Mourn, mourn ye saints, as if you see – 1789
- Bethel – Anonymous – Let Zion and her sons rejoice – 18131816
- Bethesda – Elisha West – If your heart is unbelieving – 1807
- Bethesda – James P. Carrell – Show pity, Lord, O Lord, forgive – 1821
- Bethlehem – James P. Carrell – All glory to God in the sky – 1821
- Bethlehem – William Billings – While shepherds watched their flocks by night – 1778
- Bethlehem – William Moore – All glory to God in the sky – 1825
- Bethlehem Judah – Oliver Holden – The fountain of Christ – 1803
- Bethsaida – Oliver Holden – Beside the gospel pool – 1800
- A Better Home – Charles Albert Tindley – Ever since I have been – 190119091916
- The Bird – William Billings – Since I have placed my trust in God – 1790
- Birmingham – Samuel Holyoke – And why will God neglect my call – 1791
- Bitter Sweet – Oliver Holden – What is the world, with all its toys – 1800
- Blendon – Daniel Belknap – Our sins, alas! How strong they be – 1806
- Blue Hill – Daniel Belknap – Eternal power, whose high abode – 1797
- Bolton – Ebenezer Child – What shall I render to my God – 1804
- Bolton – Oliver Brownson – I'll praise my Maker with my breath – 1783
- Bolton – William Billings – Rejoice, the Lord is king – 17781780
- Bondage – Timothy Swan – Along the banks where Babel's current flows – 1801
- Born to Die – Jeremiah Ingalls – Thou God of glorious majesty – 1805
- Boston New – Ephraim Reed – Jesus, and shall it ever be – 1817
- Boundbrook – Samuel Holyoke – Life is the time to serve the Lord – 1803
- Bourbon – Oliver Holden – How oft have sin and Satan strove – 1803
- Boxborough – Abraham Wood – Like sheep we went astray – 1793
- Boxford – Samuel Holyoke – This is the day when Christ arose – 1791
- Boxford – Timothy Swan – My sorrows, like a flood – 1801
- Boylston – Daniel Belknap – Great Father of mankind – 1802
- Brackley – Samuel Holyoke – Lord, thou wilt hear me when I pray – 1803
- Bradford – Daniel Belknap – These glorious minds, how bright they shine – 1806
- Bradford – Jacob Kimball – How short and hasty is our life – 1793
- Braintree – William Billings – Ye holy souls, in God rejoice – 1770
- Brandford – Asahel Benham – Why should the children of a King – 1783
- Brandon – Samuel Holyoke – The scattered clouds are fled at last – 1791
- Brattle Street (1770) – William Billings – Just are thy ways, and true thy word – 17701780
- Brattle Street (1786) – William Billings – Sweet is the work, my God, my King – 1786
- Brest – William Billings – Praise, everlasting praise, be paid – 1779
- Brevity – Abraham Wood – Man, born of woman, like a flower – 1800
- Bridge Town – Elkanah Dare – Grace! 'tis a charming sound – 1813
- Bridgewater – Lewis Edson – O come, loud anthems let us sing – 1782178317971820183518481860
- Bridgwater – William Billings – Majestic God, when I descry – 1770
- Bright Reversion – Oliver Holden – When conscious grief laments sincere – 1800
- Bristol – Timothy Swan – The lofty pillars of the sky – 1783
- Brixham – Samuel Holyoke – No sleep nor slumber to his eyes – 1803
- Broomsgrove – James P. Carrell – Lamb of God for sinners slain – 1821
- Brownford – Samuel Holyoke – Show pity, Lord, O Lord, forgive – 1803
- Brownson – Oliver Brownson – Teach me the measure of my days – 1802
- Buckland – Oliver Brownson – The Eternal speaks, all heaven attends – 1783
- Bunker Hill – Abraham Wood – We are exposed all day to die – 1793
- Bunker Hill – Sylvanus Ripley – Why should vain mortals tremble at the sight – 1781
- Burlington – Daniel Read – Disciples of Christ, ye friends of the Lamb – 1785
- Burlington – Nehemiah Shumway – My God, my God, why leavest Thou me – 1793
- Burlington – Samuel Holyoke – Awake, my soul, to sound his praise – 1791
- Burlington – Walter Janes – Jesus shall reign where-e'er the sun – 1807
- Burlington – William Billings – Canaan promised is before – 1786
- Burton – Elisha West – Lord, what a thoughtless wretch was I – 1802
- Burwick – Timothy Swan – Now for a tune of lofty praise – 1801
- Bushwick – Samuel Holyoke – Now let the Lord my Savior smile – 1803
- Buxton – Daniel Belknap – Shout to the Lord, ye surging seas – 1806
- Buxton – Jacob French – Hark! from the tombs a doleful sound – 1789
- By the offense of one – Hezekiah Moors – By the offense of one – 1809
- Byfield – Samuel Holyoke – Shout to the Lord, and let our joys – 1803
- Byford – Oliver Brownson – Not to our names, Thou only just and true – 1783
- Caelestis – Jacob French – Rise, my soul, and stretch thy wings – 1802
- Caledonia – Samuel Babcock – I will praise thee every day – 1795
- Caledonia – Samuel Holyoke – Lord, we have heard thy works of old – 1803
- Calvary – Daniel Read – My thoughts, that often mount the skies – 1785
- Calvary – Samuel Holyoke – Deep in our hearts let us record – 1803
- Calvary – Timothy Swan – Infinite grief! Amazing woe – 1801
- Calvary New – James P. Carrell – Now let our lips with holy fear – 1821
- Cambridge – Amos Pilsbury – My tongue repeats his vows – 1799
- Cambridge – Oliver Brownson – Deep in our hearts let us record – 1783
- Cambridge – Samuel Babcock – With one consent let all the earth – 1803
- Cambridge – William Billings – Ye that delight to serve the Lord – 1770
- Camden – Daniel Read – Out of the deeps of long distress – 1793
- Camden – Oliver Holden – The God of glory sends His summons forth – 1793
- Cana – Oliver Holden – Why is my heart so far from Thee – 1803
- Canaan – Amos Pilsbury – Head of the church triumphant – 1799
- Canaan – Jeremiah Ingalls – Come all ye dear souls, who are of Adam's loin – 1805
- Canaan – Stephen Jenks – I send the joys of earth away – 1799
- Canaan – Timothy Swan – How sweet the voice, how sweet the hand – 1797
- Canada – Samuel Holyoke – O Lord, to our request give ear – 1803
- Canton – Oliver Holden – How did my heart rejoice to hear – 1796
- Canton – Timothy Swan – When marching to thy blest abode – 1790
- Captain Kidd – Jeremiah Ingalls – Through all this world below – 1818
- Carlisle – Daniel Belknap – Now shall my inward joys arise – 1800
- Carolina – Jacob French – O Israel's shepherd, Joseph's guide – 1789
- Carthagena – Samuel Holyoke – The Lord, the Sovereign, sends his summons forth – 1803
- Castile – Jacob French – Come, let us sing unto the Lord – 1789
- Castle Island – Jacob French – Great God, whom heavenly hosts obey – 1789
- Castleton – Samuel Holyoke – In anger, Lord, rebuke me not – 1803
- Celebration – Walter Janes – Loud hallelujahs to the Lord – 1807
- Celestial Watering – Jeremiah Ingalls – Savior, visit thy plantation – 1805
- Ceylon – Oliver Holden – From my sad prison set me free – 1796
- Champlain – Samuel Holyoke – Angels, roll the rock away – 1791
- Changing Seasons – Ananias Davisson – When winter is over and spring is begun – 1820
- Channel of Mercy – Jeremiah Ingalls – Thy mercy, my God, is the theme of my song – 1805
- Charity – Jeremiah Ingalls – O! Jesus my Savior to thee I submit – 1805
- Charity – Samuel Babcock – Had I the tongues of Greeks and Jews – 1803
- Charleston – Amos Pilsbury – Come, thou fount of every blessingMercy, O thou son of David – 179918301832183518441848
- Charlestown – Daniel Read – When God revealed His gracious name – 1785
- Chelsea (1770) – William Billings – He reigns! The Lord, the Savior reigns – 1770
- Chelsea – Abijah Forbush – How blest is our brother, bereft – 1803
- Chelsea – Samuel Holyoke – Thou sacred one, almighty three – 1791
- Chelsea – William Billings – What beauties divine – 1786
- Chesterfield – Anonymous – In boundless mercy, gracious Lord, appear – 1799
- The Child's Request – Lewis Edson – Thou giver of my life and joy – 1782
- China – Jacob French – O praise the Lord with one consent – 1789
- China – Samuel Babcock – Nature, with all her powers, shall sing – 1793
- Chosen Race – Oliver Holden – To bless Thy chosen race – 1803
- Christ is the Way – Charles A. Tindley, Jr. – Christ the way! in exaltation – 1916
- Christian Hope – Joseph Funk – My soul would fain indulge a hope – 18351869
- Christian Soldier – Daniel Read – Soldiers of Christ, arise – 18051807
- Christian Soldier – James P. Carrell – Am I a soldier of the cross – 18211831
- Christian Song – Jeremiah Ingalls – Mine eyes are now closing to rest – 1805
- The Christian's Conflicts – William Walker – See how the wicked kingdom – 1835
- Christian's Hope – Samuel Babcock – Hear what the voice from heaven proclaims – 1803
- The Christian's Hope – William Walker – A few more days on earth to spend – 1835
- The Christian's Warrant – Samuel Holyoke – Though troubles assail – 1804
- Christianity – Jacob French – Tis by the faith of joys to come – 1802
- Christmas – Oliver Holden – Behold, the grace appears – 1792
- Christmas – Samuel Babcock – Shout, shout for joy, rejoice, O earth – 1795
- Christmas Anthem – James P. Carrell – Shepherds rejoice, lift up your eyes – 1821
- Citation – Ebenezer Child – When the great Builder arched the skies – 1804
- Clapboardtree Grove – Daniel Belknap – The gentle breeze which through the grove – 1797
- Claradon – Timothy Swan – O come let us join – 1801
- Close of the Day – Hezekiah Moors – The night draws near, we must away – 1809
- The Close of the Year – Samuel Holyoke – So fly our months and years – 1791
- Cobham – William Billings – Teach me the measure of my days – 17801794
- Colchester – Jacob French – Let sinners take their course – 1802
- Colchester – Oliver Brownson – Great God, the heav'ns well-ordered frame – 1783
- Columbia – Alexander Johnson – As down a lone valley with cedars o'erspread – 181818211835
- Columbia – Jeremiah Ingalls – And is the lovely shadow fled – 1805
- Columbia – Stephen Jenks – In vain the noisy crowd – 1800
- Columbia – William Billings – Not all the powers on earth – 1778
- Columbus – Stephen Jenks – Let party names no more – 1805
- Comfort ye, comfort ye, my people – Samuel Babcock – Comfort ye, comfort ye, my people – 1795
- Coming By and By – Robert Lowry – A better day is coming – 1875
- Commemoration – Oliver Holden – Worthy the Lamb that died, they cry – 1793
- Communion – Jacob French – Father, we wait to feel thy grace – 1789
- Compassion – Oliver Holden – Did Christ for sinners weep – 18001806
- Compassion – Stephen Jenks – Did Christ for sinners die – 1818
- Complainer – Jeremiah Ingalls – I set myself against the Lord – 1805
- Complaint – Abijah Forbush – Thou God of love, thou ever-blest – 1806
- Complaint – Asahel Benham – O were I like a feathered dove – 1790
- Complaint – Daniel Read – And am I only born to die – 1785
- Complaint – James P. Carrell – Ah! whither should I go – 1831
- Complaint – Oliver Shaw – O God of grace and righteousness – 18081808
- The complaint of a sinner – Anonymous – Where righteousness doth say – 1621
- Concord – Abijah Forbush – Adam and all his race have fell – 18031806
- Concord – Daniel Belknap – Tis finished, so the Savior cried – 1797
- Concord – Oliver Holden – The hill of Zion yields – 1793
- Concord – William Billings – How long wilt Thou conceal Thy face – 1770
- Condescending – Anonymous – How condescending and how kind – 18131816
- Condescension – Daniel Read – Hark! The Redeemer from on high – 1786
- Condescension – Hezekiah Moors – Thy favors, Lord, surprise our souls – 1809
- Confession – Oliver Holden – Lord, 'tis against Thy face – 1793
- Confession – Stephen Jenks – Lord, I am vile, conceived in sin – 1803
- Confidence – Joseph Funk – When Hannah, pressed with grief – 183218351869
- Confidence – Oliver Holden – Now can my soul in God rejoice – 1796
- Congress – Anonymous – To thine almighty arm we owe – 1780
- Connecticut – Jacob French – Come, let us sing unto the Lord – 1802
- Connexion – Walter Janes – Come, join our cheerful songs – 1803
- Conquest – William Billings – Sing the triumphs of your conquering head – 1786
- Consecration – Oliver Holden – It grieves me, Lord, it grieves me sore – 1792
- Consecration – Samuel Babcock – Change me, O God, my flesh shall be – 1803
- Consolation – Abijah Forbush – Hear what the voice from heaven proclaims – 1803
- Consolation – Anonymous – Come on, my partners in distress – 18131825182518351844
- Consolation – Charles Albert Tindley – Ye pilgrims through this vale of tears – 19091916
- Consolation – Jeremiah Ingalls – Come and taste along with me – 1805
- Consolation – Samuel Holyoke – Hear what the voice from heaven declares – 1791
- Consolation – William Billings – He's come, let every knee be bent – 17781780
- Constant Peace – Oliver Holden – Jehovah, with amazing noise – 1800
- Contemplation – Anonymous – When quiet in my house I sit – 183218351869
- Content – Walter Janes – Since God is all my trust – 1803
- Contentment – Oliver Holden – Now let the Lord my Savior smile – 1796
- Contrast – Oliver Holden – This life's a dream, an empty show – 1797
- Contrition – Oliver Holden – Lord, I'm ashamed to say – 1793
- The Converted Thief – William Moore – As on the cross the Savior hung – 18261835184418671911
- Conviction – Abijah Forbush – Lord, how secure my conscience was – 18031806
- Conviction – Jacob French – Alas, my aching heart – 1802
- Copeland – Samuel Holyoke – O blessed souls are they – 1803
- Corinth – Oliver Holden – Bless God, O my soul, rejoice in His name – 1800
- Coronation – Oliver Holden – All hail the power of Jesus' name – 17931841
- Corsica – William Billings – The Lord almighty is a God – 1770
- Coventry – Daniel Read – Let strangers walk around – 1807
- Coventry – Jacob French – Man has a soul of vast desires (these editions) – 1802
- Cowper – Oliver Holden – Forgive the song that falls so low – 180318031806
- Cranbury – Nehemiah Shumway – Great God, the heavens' well-ordered-frame – 1793
- Creation – Elisha West – He framed the globe, he built the sky – 1802
- Creation – Jacob French – Blest be the man whose piercing mind – 1802
- Creation – Jeremiah Ingalls – How firm a foundation, ye saints of the Lord – 1805
- Creation – Oliver Holden – Lord, when my raptured thoughts survey – 1803
- Creation – Philo Sherman – When God the new-made world surveyed – 1808
- Creation – William Billings – When I with pleasing wonder stand – 17791794
- Crete – Samuel Babcock – In deep distress I oft have cried – 1803
- Crisis – Abijah Forbush – Think of the sands run down to waste – 1803
- The Cross – Oliver Holden – O! The sweet wonders of that cross – 1800
- Cross-Street – William Billings – The Lord my pasture shall prepare – 1794
- Crostic – Jeremiah Ingalls – Jesus, our great high priest, was slainLord, I can suffer thy rebukes – 1805
- Crucifixion – Abijah Forbush – Alas! and did my Savior bleed – 18031806
- Crucifixion – Alexander Johnson – Jesus, my all, to heaven is gone – 1818
- Crucifixion – Ananias Davisson – Saw ye my Savior – 1820
- Crucifixion – Asahel Benham – Jesus, whom every saint adores – 1792
- Crucifixion – Barnabas McKyes – Behold, the Savior of mankind – 1798
- Crucifixion – Samuel Babcock – Now let our mournful songs record – 1803
- Crucifixion – Walter Janes – Now let our mournful songs record – 1803
- Crucifixion – William Billings – Mourn, mourn, ye saints – 17791787
- Cuba – Oliver Holden – While some on me with wonder gaze – 1800
- Cumberland – William Billings – Behold the glories of the Lamb – 1770
- Curiosity – Stephen Jenks – He framed the globe, he built the sky – 1799
- Cypress – Daniel Read – Hark! From the tombs a doleful sound – 17951805
- Cyrene – Abijah Forbush – Well, if our days must fly – 18031806
- Cyrene – Samuel Holyoke – Why will ye die, O wretched man – 1791
- Dalton – Hezekiah Moors – No burning heats by day – 1809
- Danbury – Joseph Stone – Alas, the brittle clay – 1786
- Danbury – William Billings – Lord, what a feeble piece – 1779
- Danville – Jeremiah Ingalls – Ill tidings never can surprise – 1805
- Danville – Oliver Holden – When gladness wings my favored hour – 1803
- Danville – Stephen Jenks – Save me, O God, the swelling floods – 1805
- Dartmouth – Amos Pilsbury – Redemption great he gave – 1799
- Dartmouth – Daniel Belknap – Blest are the humble souls that see – 1806
- Dartmouth – Stephen Jenks – To bring the glorious news – 1803
- Dartmouth – William Billings – Let every mortal ear attend – 1780
- Dauphin – Jacob French – Welcome, sweet day of rest – 1793
- David's Victory – Robert Boyd – New your festal rites prepare – 1822
- Davis – Anonymous – O thou in whose presence my soul takes delight – 181318181820182018251826183218351848
- Dawning Light – Oliver Holden – From the first dawning light – 1800
- Death's Alarm – Elisha West – The rising morning can't assure – 1793
- Decay – Hezekiah Moors – In age and feebleness extreme – 1809
- Decay – Stephen Jenks – My days are as the grass – 1805
- Declaration – Jacob French – Sweet is the day of sacred rest – 1793
- Dedham – Jacob Kimball – To God I cried with mournful voice – 1800
- Dedham – William Billings – Rejoice, ye shining worlds on high – 1794
- Dedication – Abraham Wood – Where shall we go – 1793
- Dedication Anthem – Jacob French – Lift up your heads, O ye gates – 1789
- Dedication Anthem – Timothy Swan – The Lord reigneth, let the earth rejoice – 1801
- Dedicatory Anthem – Oliver Holden – Great is the Lord, and greatly to be praised – 1800
- Dedicatory Hymn – Oliver Holden – Let flowing numbers sweetly rise – 1800
- Deerfield – Samuel Holyoke – No more, my God, I boast no more – 1803
- Delaware – Samuel Babcock – In awful state the conquering God – 1795
- Delaware – William Billings – Remember, Lord, our mortal state – 1779
- Delay – Jeremiah Ingalls – Ah! whither shall I go – 1805
- Delight – Stephen Jenks – My Savior and my King – 1800
- Deliverance – Oliver Holden – Soon shall I quit this mortal shore – 1793
- Delley – Jacob French – Down headlong from their native skies – 1789
- Denbigh – Timothy Swan – God counts the sorrows of his saints – 1797
- Dependence – Oliver Holden – To keep the lamp alive – 1803
- Depravity – Daniel Read – By nature all have gone astray – 1793
- Derby – Daniel Read – Lord of the worlds above – 1785
- Derrick – William Walker – Hark, the glad sound, the Savior comes – 1847
- Derry – Ezra Goff – Welcome, sweet day of rest – 1806
- Desertion – Oliver Holden – Deep in a cold, a joyless cell – 18061806
- Desire of Nations – Oliver Holden – Ye heavenly gates, loose all your chains – 1800
- Despair – Barnabas McKyes – Out of the deeps of long distress – 1798
- Despair – Walter Janes – As on some lonely building's top – 1807
- Despondency – Walter Janes – Oft have I sat in secret sighs – 1807
- Detroit – William Bradshaw – Do I not love thee – 182018351844
- Devizes – James P. Carrell – With earnest longings of the mind – 1821
- Devotion – Alexander Johnson – Sweet is the day of sacred rest – 181818201913
- Devotion – Daniel Read – Sweet is the day of sacred rest – 1786
- Devotion – Jacob French – Awake, my soul, and with the sun – 1789
- Devotion New – Walter Janes – How pleased and blest was I – 1803
- Digby – Timothy Swan – God counts the sorrows of his saints – 1801
- Dismission – Elkanah Dare – Lord, dismiss us with thy blesssing – 18131820
- Dissolution – Daniel Belknap – And must my body faint and die – 1800
- Dissolution – Elisha West – Death may dissolve my body now – 1802
- Dissolution – Jacob French – And is the lovely shadow fled – 1802
- Dissolution – Oliver Holden – Death will dissolve the tenderest tie – 1800
- Dissolution – Philo Sherman – Behold, the Judge descends, his guards are nigh – 1808
- Dissolution – Samuel Babcock – Stoop down, my thoughts, that use to rise – 1795
- Dissolution – Walter Janes – Death, like an overflowing stream – 1803
- Divinity – Joseph Funk – Awake, awake the sacred song – 18351869
- Dix-Hills – Oliver Holden – Too many, Lord, abuse Thy grace – 1803
- Dominion – Daniel Read – Jesus shall reign where-e'er the sun – 18011806
- Dominion – Jeremiah Ingalls – Come, ye Christians, sing the praises – 1805
- Doomsday – Philo Sherman – No more shall atheists mock his long delay – 1808
- Dorchester – Samuel Babcock – My God, permit me not to be – 1795
- Dormant – Jacob French – Sleep! downy sleep! come close my eyes – 1802
- Dover – Amos Pilsbury – And let this feeble body fail – 1799182118441911
- Dover – Daniel Belknap – Naked as from the earth we came – 1802
- Dover – Daniel Read – O that the Lord would guide my ways – 1785
- Dover – Timothy Swan – My soul, thy great Creator praise – 1792
- Doxology – Daniel Read – To God the Father, God the Son – 1785
- Dresden – Oliver Brownson – How pleasant 'tis to see – 1783
- Dryden – Daniel Read – My soul, come meditate the day – 1807
- Dublin – William Billings – Like sheep we went astray – 1779
- Dudley – William Billings – How long, O Lord, shall I complain – 1779
- Dudley – William Walker – When I can read my title clear – 1840
- Dunlap's Creek – S. McFarland – Think, O my soul, the dreadful day – 18141816182018311832184818461854
- Dunstable – William Billings – With earnest longings of the mind – 1778
- Durham – Daniel Belknap – Think mighty God, on feebleman – 1802
- Duxborough – William Billings – In vain the wealthy mortals toil – 1770177817791780
- The Dying Penitent – James P. Carrell – As on the cross the Savior hung – 1831
- East Florida – Solomon Howe – A poisoned arrow is your tongue – 1804
- East Needham – Daniel Belknap – The little hills, on every side – 1800
- East Sudbury – William Billings – Ye tribes of Adam, join – 1794
- Eastborough – Samuel Holyoke – Far from my thoughts, vain world, begone – 1803
- Easter Anthem – William Billings – The Lord is risen indeed – 17871802
- Eastford – Jacob French – When marching to thy blest abode – 1789
- Eastham – Daniel Read – Tis with a mournful pleasure now – 1785
- Easton – Samuel Holyoke – When shall the sovereign grace – 1791
- Ebenezer – James P. Carrell – Come, thou fount of every blessing – 1831
- Ecstasy – Abijah Forbush – O that I could now adore him – 1806
- Eden – William Billings – Those glorious minds, how bright they shine – 1786
- Eden of Love – Joseph Funk – How sweet to reflect on these joys that await me – 183518541869
- Edenton – Daniel Read – Lord of the worlds above – 18011805
- Edenton – Oliver Holden – Life has a a soft and silver thread – 1800
- Edenvale – Samuel Holyoke – Too mean this little globe for me – 1791
- Edinburgh – Jacob Kimball – O tell me no more – 1793
- Edinburgh – Samuel Holyoke – Ye heavens, with sounds of triumph ring – 1791
- Edington – Stephen Jenks – Alas! and did my Savior bleed – 1803
- Edom – Elisha West – He sends his word, and melts the snow – 1797
- Edson – Amos Pilsbury – O Jesus, Savior of my soul – 1799
- Effingham – William Billings – Behold the lofty sky – 1784
- Egypt – Timothy Swan – He called for darkness, darkness came – 1790
- Egypt – William Billings – Come, see the wonders of our God – 1794
- Eighteenth Psalm – William Billings – We love Thee, Lord, and we adore – 1770
- Elden – Samuel Holyoke – O God of mercy, hear my call – 1791
- Election – William Billings – Thou art my blest portion, thou dear Nazarene – 1786
- Elevation – James P. Carrell – My God, the spring of all my joys – 1821
- Elevation – Samuel Babcock – Raise your triumphant songs – 1803
- Ellington – Truman Wetmore – This life's a dream, an empty show – 1807
- Elon – Jeremiah Ingalls – Who has believed thy word – 1805
- Embden – Hezekiah Moors – Not all the blood of beasts – 1809
- Emerald Gates – Ananias Davisson – Burst ye emerald gates and bring – 18201848
- Emulation – Oliver Holden – Now let us raise our cheerful strains – 1800
- Energy – Timothy Swan – Attend our armies to the fight – 1801
- Enfield – Daniel Belknap – The voice of my Beloved sounds – 1806
- Enfield – Daniel Read – Might I enjoy the meanest place – 1785
- The Enquirer – Jeremiah Ingalls – O! that some kind one would tell me – 1805
- Entreaty – Ezra Goff – I cry till all my voice be gone – 1809
- Ephesus – Oliver Holden – The uplifted eye, and bended knee – 1800
- Ephesus – Samuel Holyoke – Alas, the bitter clay – 1791
- Ephrathah – Samuel Babcock – While shepherds watched their flocks by night – 1803
- Erie – Oliver Holden – As lost in lonely grief I tread – 1800
- Essex – Oliver Holden – Go, worship at Immanuel's feet – 1797
- Eternal Wisdom – Oliver Holden – Eternal wisdom, thee we praise – 1800
- Euphrates – Oliver Holden – Think, mighty God, on feeble man – 1803
- Europe – William Billings – Let every mortal ear attend – 1770177917801804
- Evening Hymn – James P. Carrell – The day is past and gone – 1831
- Evening Hymn – Oliver Holden – Now may soft slumbers close my eyes – 1800
- Evening Shade – Stephen Jenks – The day is past and gone – 1805
- Exaltation – Walter Janes – Now shall my head be lifted high – 1807
- Exeter – William Billings – When I my inward guilt suppressedHark! from the tombs a doleful sound – 17741778
- Exhortation – Eliakim Doolittle – Now in the heat of youthful blood – 1800180318071821
- Exhortation – Jacob French – Ye nations round the earth, rejoice – 1789
- Exit – Philo Sherman – Death, like an overflowing stream – 1808
- Expectation – Solomon Howe – My soul, survey the important cause – 1799
- Experience – Jeremiah Ingalls – Come all ye saints and sinners near – 1805
- Experience – William Walker – Come, all ye people of my nation – 1866
- Extollation – Walter Janes – Loud Hallelujas to the Lord – 1803
- Exultation – Oliver Holden – He spake, and heaven's high arches rang – 1800
- Fading Nature – Stephen Jenks – So fades the lovely, blooming flower – 1807
- Fair Haven – Stephen Jenks – Come, sound his praise abroad – 1799
- Fairfield – William Billings – From lowest depths of woe – 1770
- Fairford – Jacob Kimball – Jesus, who died a world to save – 1793
- Fairhaven – Jacob French – There was an hour when Christ rejoiced – 1789
- Fairlee – Oliver Holden – Jesus shall reign where-e'er the sun – 1793
- Fairton – Elkanah Dare – O God of mercy, hear my call – 1813
- Faithful Soldier – Anonymous – O when shall I see Jesus – 18351848
- Falmouth – Abraham Maxim – Say, Live for ever, wondrous King – 1802
- Falmouth – Jeremiah Ingalls – Hallelujah through the nations – 1805
- Farewell – Jacob French – My friends, I am going a long and tedious journey – 1783
- Farewell Hymn – Jeremiah Ingalls – Give ear to me, ye sons of men – 1805
- Farmington – Alexander Gillet – Think, mighty God, on feeble man – 1779
- Farmington – Jacob French – Hence from my soul, my sins, depart – 1802
- Farnum – Jacob French – Sing to the Lord a new-made song – 1789
- Fayette – Samuel Wakefield – When I can read my title clear – 18321841
- Fayetteville – Samuel Holyoke – Sing to the great Jehovah's praise – 1791
- Fellowship – Jeremiah Ingalls – Come away to the skies – 1805
- Female Convict – Robert Boyd – O sleep not my babe, for the morn of tomorrow – 1822
- Fernay – Samuel Holyoke – Glory to God the Father's name – 1791
- Fidelity – Daniel Read – I wait for Thy salvation, Lord – 1785
- Firmament – Daniel Read – Great God, the heav'ns' well-ordered frame – 1793
- Fitchburg – William Billings – Deep in our hearts let us record – 1779
- Flanders – Samuel Babcock – Since I have placed my trust in God – 1795
- Flanders – Timothy Swan – Great God, whose universal sway – 1783
- Flora – Zalmon Peck – Behold, the sinner dies – 1808
- Florence – Samuel Babcock – Immense compassion reigns – 1803
- Florida – Oliver Shaw – And must this body die – 18081808
- Fluvanna – Abraham Maxim – Lord, in the morning thou shalt hear – 1805
- Fluvanna – Merit Woodruff – He rides upon the winged wind – 1800
- Fly Crick – Nathaniel Billings – When all thy mercies, O my God – 17951802
- Forerunner – Oliver Holden – Far, far beyond these lower skies – 1803
- Forster – Anonymous – Ye weary heavy laden souls – 181318201825
- Fount – Oliver Holden – Come, thou fount of every blessing – 18061806
- Framingham – Daniel Belknap – He dies! The friend of sinners dies – 1792
- Framingham – William Billings – Shall wisdom cry aloud – 1779
- Franklin – Amos Pilsbury – Jesus, great Redeemer, hear – 1799
- Franklin – Stephen Jenks – Sweet is the work, my God, my King – 1800
- Franklin – Timothy Swan – Hosanna to Jesus on high – 1801
- Franklin – William Billings – Lord, how secure and blest are they – 1779
- Free Grace – Jeremiah Ingalls – The voice of free grace cries 'scape to the mountains – 1805
- Freedom – Alexander Gillet – The Lord of glory reigns, he reigns on high – 1779
- Freedom – Elisha West – The Lord hath eyes to give the blind – 1802
- Freehold – Nehemiah Shumway – The God of Abraham praise – 1793
- Freetown – Daniel Read – Join all the glorious names – 1785
- French Broad – William Walker – High o'er the hills the mountains rise – 1847
- Friendly Meeting – Jeremiah Ingalls – Well met, dear friends, in Jesus' name – 1805
- Friendship – George Frideric Handel – Friendship to every willing mind – 179818131820
- Friendship – Anonymous – Ye simple souls, that stray – 1812181318321835
- Friendship – Daniel Read – How pleasant 'tis to see – 17931805
- Friendship – Jeremiah Ingalls – The reason why we love friendship – 1805
- Fruition – Truman Wetmore – Like fruitful showers of rain – 1805
- Funeral – James P. Carrell – Rejoice for a brother deceased – 1821
- Funeral – Samuel Wakefield – Stoop down, my thoughts, that use to rise – 18321841
- Funeral Anthem – William Billings – I heard a great voice – 1778ca. 1790
- Funeral Dirge – Hezekiah Moors – Hark! She bids all her friends adieu – 1809
- Funeral Dirge – Samuel Holyoke – Farewell! A sad, a long farewell – 1791
- Funeral Hymn (1800) – Oliver Holden – Up to Thy throne, almighty King – 1800
- Funeral Hymn – Jacob French – I in the burying place may see – 1789
- Funeral Hymn – James P. Carrell – Rejoice for a brother deceased – 1831
- Funeral Hymn – Oliver Holden – Why do we mourn departing friends – 1792
- Funeral Hymn – Walter Janes – Life is a span, a fleeting hour – 1807
- Galatia – Hezekiah Moors – God is my everlasting aid – 1809
- Gallatin – Andrew Johnson – Alas! and did my Savior bleed – 1847
- Gardiner – Daniel Read – Come, let our voices join to raise – 1805
- Gardner – Daniel Belknap – When I survey the wondrous cross – 1806
- The General Doom – Jeremiah Ingalls – Behold! with awful pomp – 1805
- Geneva – James P. Carrell – Come, my friends, and taste with me – 1821
- Genius – Stephen Jenks – Now be still, ye boisterous passions – 1799
- Genoe – Ephraim Reed – Sing, all ye nations, to the Lord – 1817
- Georgia (1770) – William Billings – Now to the Lord, that makes us know – 1770
- Georgia (1779) – William Billings – Show pity, Lord, O Lord, forgive – 1779
- Germantown – William Billings – Why do we mourn departing friends – 1780ca. 1790
- Germany – Samuel Holyoke – Ye that delight to serve the Lord – 17911803
- Gethsemane – Abraham Wood – Great High Priest, we view thee stooping – 1789
- Gift – Oliver Holden – Of all the gifts Thine hand bestows – 1803
- Gilead – Oliver Holden – My soul, now arise, My passions, take wing – 1806
- Glad Tidings – Stephen Jenks – Fear not, said he, for mighty dread – 1807
- Glasgow – Elkanah Dare – This life's a dream, an empty show – 18131816
- Gloucester – Jacob Kimball – Give to the Lord immortal praise – 1793
- Gloucester – William Billings – Jesus, Thy name we praise – 1786
- God Will Provide for Me – Charles Albert Tindley – Here I may be weak and poor – 19091916
- Golden Streets – Jeremiah Ingalls – Come, we that love the Lord – 1805
- Golgotha – William Billings – Hark! From the tombs a doleful sound – 1781
- The Good Old Way – William Walker – Lift up your hearts, Immanuel's friends – 1835
- Good Physician – Oliver Holden – How lost was my condition – 1806
- The Good Physician – – How lost was my condition – 18351867
- Goshen – Daniel Belknap – He comes, the royal Conqueror comes – 1800
- Goshen – Stephen Jenks – O wash my soul from every sin – 1804
- Gospel Armor – Oliver Holden – Stand up, my soul, shake off thy fears – 1803
- Gospel Trumpet – James P. Carrell – Hark, how the gospel trumpet sounds – 1821
- Gospel Voice – Oliver Holden – Ye dying sons of men – 18061806
- Government – Timothy Swan – The Lord Jehovah reigns – 1801
- Granby – Alexander Gillet – Come, sound his praise abroad – 1794
- Granville – Ezra Goff – Lord, what a feeble piece – 1806
- Granville – Truman Wetmore – Thy words the raging winds control – 1798
- Grateful Notes – Martin Madan – Grateful notes and numbers bring – 17751808
- Gratitude – Alexander Gillet – What shall I render to my God – 1795
- Gratitude – Daniel Read – Bless, O my soul, the living God – 1807
- Gratitude – Jacob French – What shall I render to my God – 1802
- Gratitude – Samuel Babcock – What shall I render to my God – 18031806
- Gratitude – William Billings – I love the Lord because He hath heard – 1778
- The Great Physician – Jeremiah Ingalls – How lost was my condition – 1805
- Great-Plain – William Billings – Ye slumb'ring saints, a heav'nly host – 1794
- Greenfield – Lewis Edson – God is our refuge in distress – 1782
- Greensville – Reubin Monday – How tedious and tasteless the hours – 18251825
- Greenwich – Daniel Read – Lord, what a thoughtless wretch was I – 1786
- Greenwood – Joseph Funk – Savior, visit thy plantation – 183218351869
- Guildford – Oliver Brownson – Far as thy name is known – 1783
- Guilford – Anonymous – Astonished and distressed – 1799
- Guilford – William Tansur – Have mercy on us, Lord, and grant to us Thy grace – 1767
- Hackers Hall – William Billings – Ye people all, with one accord – 1780
- Hadley – Amos Pilsbury – The chief concern of lost mankind – 1799
- Hadley – Joseph Stone – That awful day will surely come – 1786
- Hague – Samuel Holyoke – Stoop down, my thoughts, that use to rise – 1791
- Halifax – William Billings – Not to our names, Thou only just and true – 1778
- Hallelujah – Amos Bull – Loud hallelujahs to the Lord – 1795
- Hallelujah – Anonymous – Come, thou fount of every blessing – 1813181818201830183218351851
- Hallelujah – William Walker – And let this feeble body fail – 18351913
- Hallelujah Hymn – Jeremiah Ingalls – That name to me sounds ever sweet – 1805
- Hallowell – Barnabas McKyes – My Savior, my almighty friend – 1832
- Hamburg – Samuel Babcock – Rise, says the Prince of mercy, rise – 1795
- Hamburgh – Amos Pilsbury – My present help in trouble – 1799
- Hamburgh – Philo Sherman – The living know that they must die – 1808
- Hamilton – Daniel Read – Like fruitful showers of rain – 1794
- Hampshire (1779) – William Billings – Return, O God of love, return – 1779
- Hampton – Daniel Belknap – Dearest of all the names above – 1800
- Hampton – Ebenezer Child – Praise ye the Lord, my heart shall join – 1804
- Hampton – Samuel Holyoke – Thus saith the Ruler of the skies – 1803
- Hampton – Stephen Jenks – The Lord my Shepherd is – 1818
- Hamshire – Daniel Read – He dies! The heavenly lover dies – 1795
- Hamton – William Billings – Let mortal tongues attempt to sing – 1770
- Hancock – Daniel Belknap – Hark from the skies! A dreadful sound – 1797
- Hanley – Abraham Wood – How long wilt thou conceal thy face – 1793
- Hanley Green – Oliver Holden – There is a land of pure delight – 1806
- Hanover – James P. Carrell – O tell me no more – 1821
- Happiness – Abijah Forbush – Lord, how secure and blest are they – 1806
- Happiness – Anonymous – O how happy are they Who their Savior obey – 1813183118321869
- Happy Choice – Jeremiah Ingalls – O love divine, how sweet thou art – 1805
- Happy City – Daniel Read – Happy the city, where their sons – 1785
- Happy Retribution – Jeremiah Ingalls – Brief life is here our portion – 1805
- Harlem – Jacob Kimball – Ye nations round the world, rejoice – 1793
- Harmony (1807) – Elisha West – That awful day will surely come – 1807
- Harmony – Elisha West – Say, mighty love, and teach my song – 1793
- Harmony – Jeremiah Ingalls – Come, brethren and sisters that love my dear Lord – 1805
- Harmony – Stephen Jenks – How pleasant 'tis to see – 1800
- Harmony – William Walker – Away, my doubts, begone, my fears – 1835
- Harpersfield – Zalmon Peck – God is our refuge in distress – 1808
- Harpeth – Alexander Johnson – How tedious and tasteless the hours – 1818
- Hartfield – Samuel Holyoke – Shall we go on to sin – 1804
- Hartford – Amos Bull – Hail the day that saw Him rise – 1795
- Hartford – William Billings – Glorious Jesus, Thy dear name to praise – 17811786
- Hartsfield – Solomon Howe – Jesus beheld the anxious throng – 1804
- Harvest Hymn – Jeremiah Ingalls – The fields are all white, the harvest is near – 1805
- Hatfield – Alexander Gillet – This is the day the Lord hath made – 1794
- Havanna – Oliver Holden – Praise to God, immortal praise – 1800
- Haverhill – Amos Pilsbury – Bear me to the sacred scene – 1799
- Haverhill – Elisha West – Alas, the bitter clay – 17931802
- Haverhill – William Billings – Through all the changing scenes of life – 1770
- Havre – Oliver Holden – O bless the Lord, my soul – 1796
- He'll Take You Through – Charles Albert Tindley – Lifetime is like a single day – 19191934
- Head of the Church – Jeremiah Ingalls – Head of the church triumphant – 1805
- Healing Mercy – Oliver Holden – At the pool we long have been – 1806
- Heath – William Billings – Awake my soul, awake my eyes – 1778
- Heavenly Armor – William Walker – And if you meet with troubles – 1835
- The Heavenly Contention – Jeremiah Ingalls – In heavenly choirs a question rose – 1805
- The Heavenly Courtier – Jeremiah Ingalls – Let Christ the glorious lover – 1805
- The Heavenly March – William Walker – On Jordan's stormy banks I stand – 1840
- The Heavenly Ode – Jeremiah Ingalls – Jerusalem, my happy home – 1805
- Heavenly Theme – Oliver Holden – Begin, my tongue, some heavenly theme – 1800
- The Heavenly Vision – Jacob French – I beheld and lo! a great multitude – 1786
- Hebron – William Billings – My God, my life, my love – 1778
- Here Am I, Send Me – Charles Albert Tindley – If the Savior wants somebody – 19111916
- Hermon – James P. Carrell – Awake, Jerusalem, awake – 1821
- Hicks' Farewell – Berryman Hicks – The time is swiftly rolling on – 1835
- Hillsborough – Samuel Holyoke – Death, like an overflowing stream – 1803
- Hingham – William Billings – Shall we go on to sin – 1770
- Hinsdale – Samuel Holyoke – Thou wilt reveal the paths of life – 1791
- Holborn – Aaron Williams – Soldiers of Christ, arise – 1763
- Holden – William Billings – I'll praise my maker with my breath – 1770
- The Song of the Three Holy Children – Israel Holdroyd – O all ye works of God the Lord – 1722
- Holland – Daniel Read – Say, mighty love, and teach my song – 1785
- Holland – Timothy Swan – Uncertain life, how soon it flies – 1801
- Hollis – Oliver Holden – My soul, come meditate the day – 1788
- Hollis Street – William Billings – Let angels above and saints here below (1770) – 1770
- Holliston – Anonymous – Ye tribes of Adam, join – 1780
- Holliston – Daniel Belknap – Your harps, ye trembling saints – 1797
- Holliston – Hezekiah Moors – Hosanna to the Son – 1809
- Hollowall – Jacob French – And can this mighty King – 1789
- Holon – Hezekiah Moors – May we have grace and peace from God – 1809
- Holy Manna – William Moore – Brethren, we have met to worship – 1825183518441848
- Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty – Asahel Benham – Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty – 1783
- The Home of the Soul – Charles Albert Tindley – I hear of a city, a heavenly home – 19191934
- Honor to the Hills – Jeremiah Ingalls – Through all this world below – 1805
- Hope – Jeremiah Ingalls – O glorious hope of perfect love – 1805
- Hope – Oliver Holden – O, the delights, the heavenly joys – 1793
- Hopkinton – Daniel Belknap – Hark! from the tombs a doleful sound – 1797
- Hopkinton – Oliver Holden – Now to Thy altar, O my God – 1796
- Horeb – Samuel Babcock – Hearts of stone, relent, relent – 1795
- Hosanna – James P. Carrell – Let every saint above – 1821
- Hosanna – Walter Janes – This is the glorious day – 1803
- Hull – William Billings – We celebrate the praise today – 1786
- Human Frailty – Daniel Read – Thee we adore, eternal name – 1785
- Humility – Alexander Gillet – My soul lies cleaving to the dust – 1807
- Humility – Jeremiah Ingalls – The man that views his guilt and sin – 1805
- Humility – Oliver Shaw – Beneath the stern, unyielding power – 1808
- Humility – Samuel Babcock – God of my life, look gently down – 1803
- Hundred and Forty-Fifth Psalm – Oliver Holden – My God, my King, Thy various praise – 1796
- Hundred and Nineteenth Psalm – Oliver Holden – My soul lies cleaving to the dust – 1796
- Huntington – Justin Morgan – Lord, what a thoughtless wretch was I – 179018351844
- Hymn for Whitsunday – Benjamin Carr – Veni, Creator SpiritusSpirit, Creator of mankind – 1803
- Hymn to St. Augustine – Benjamin Carr – Magne Pater AugustineGreat Jehovah, God of glory – 1803
- I am the resurrection – Israel Holdroyd – I am the resurrection and the life – 1724
- I Will Go, if My Father Holds My Hand – Charles Albert Tindley – When the pathway of duty – 190719091916
- I'll Be Satisfied – Charles Albert Tindley – What if all the world was offered unto me – 19191934
- I'll Overcome Some Day – Charles Albert Tindley – The world is one great battlefield – 1901190519091916
- I'm Going There – Charles Albert Tindley – Since I began to serve the Lord – 190719091916
- Iceland – Oliver Holden – Winter has a joy for me – 1806
- Idumea – Ananias Davisson – My God, my life, my love – 181618251835184418481867
- Idumea – Oliver Holden – What mighty man, or mighty God – 1793
- Illinois – Andrew Johnson – O for a glance of heavenly day – 1847
- Imandra – Ananias Davisson – I love thee, my Savior, I love thee, my Lord – 1820
- Immanuel – Oliver Holden – Hosanna to the Prince of light – 1796
- Imminence – Abijah Forbush – O God, to whom revenge belongs – 18031806
- Immortality – Amos Bull – I'll praise my maker with my breath – 1795
- The Impartial Song – Jeremiah Ingalls – The great God of love has shown us the way – 1805
- In Me – Charles Albert Tindley – Thou, O Christ, my Lord and King – 19231934
- In That Morning – William Walker – Jesus, my all to heaven is gone – 1846
- The Incarnation – James P. Carrell – Long had the voice of prophecy foretold – 1821
- Incense – Oliver Holden – Nature, with all her powers, shall sing – 1796
- Independence – William Billings – The states, O Lord, with songs of praise – 1778
- Indian's Farewell – William Walker – When shall we all meet again – 1835
- Infant Time – Oliver Holden – God of eternity, from Thee – 1800
- Infant-Savior – William Knapp – O sight of anguish! View it near – 1753
- Innocent Sounds – Jeremiah Ingalls – Enlisted in the cause of sin – 1805
- Inspiration – Jacob French – Twas by an order from the Lord – 1789
- Intercession – James P. Carrell – Lamb of God for sinners slain – 1831
- Intercession – Samuel Babcock – Pardon and grace and boundless love – 1795
- Interposition – Oliver Holden – It cost him cries and tears – 1800
- Interrogation – Ebenezer Child – Shall we go on to sin – 1804
- Invitation – Elisha West – Let every mortal ear attend – 1802
- Invitation – Jacob Kimball – Come, my Beloved, haste awayHark! the Redeemer from on high – 17841848
- Invitation – James P. Carrell – Come ye sinners, poor and needy – 1821
- Invitation – Jeremiah Ingalls – Come ye sinners, poor and wretched – 1805
- Invitation – Oliver Brownson – Come, ye sinners, poor and wretched – 1783
- Invitation – Philo Sherman – Come, ye sinners, poor and needy – 1808
- Invitation – William Walker – Come, ye sinners, poor and needyCome, ye sinners, poor and wretched – 1835
- Invocation – William Billings – Majestic God, our muse inspire – 1794
- Invocation for Thanksgiving – Walter Janes – Ye sons of men, with joy record – 1803
- It May Be the Best for Me – Charles Albert Tindley – I often wonder why it is – 190519091916
- Italy – Jacob French – Teach us, O Lord, how frail is man – 1789
- Jackson – William Moore – The spacious firmament on high – 1825
- Jamaica – William Billings – Joy to the world! the Lord is come – 17791804
- Jefferson – Alexander Johnson – Glorious things of thee are spoken – 1818
- Jefferson – Eliakim Doolittle – I'll search the land, and raise the just – 1800
- Jehovah Reigns – Oliver Holden – Jehovah reigns! Let every nation fear – 1800
- Jerusalem – Jacob French – God's temple crowns the holy mount – 1789
- Jerusalem – James C. Lowry – Jerusalem, my happy home – 1820
- Jerusalem – Jeremiah Ingalls – From the third heaven, where God resides – 1796
- Jerusalem – William Billings – All is hush, the battle's o'er – 1786
- Jerusalem – – Jesus, my all, to heaven is gone – 1835
- Jewin Street – James P. Carrell – Teach me some melodious sonnet – 1821183518671911
- Jordan – William Billings – There is a land of pure delight – 1786
- Joy – Philo Sherman – How did my heart rejoice to hear – 1808
- Joy Was Our Song – Oliver Holden – When God restored our captive state – 1800
- Joyful Tidings – Oliver Holden – When first the God of boundless might – 1800
- Joyous Anticipation – Charles Albert Tindley – I'm on my way to heaven above – 19131916
- Jubilate Deo – Israel Holdroyd – O be joyful in the Lord, all ye lands – 1724
- Jubilee – James P. Carrell – Blow ye the trumpet, blow – 1831
- Jubilee – Jeremiah Ingalls – Jerusalem, my happy home – 1805
- Jubilee – Oliver Brownson – Blow ye the trumpet, blow – 1779
- Judea – Amos Pilsbury – Rejoice, the Lord is King – 1799
- Judgment – Alexander Gillet – That awful day will surely come – 1779
- Judgment – Daniel Read – Behold, the Judge descends, his guards are nigh – 1785
- Judgment – Elisha West – No more shall atheists mock his long delay – 1793
- Judgment – James P. Carrell – Lo, he comes with clouds descending – 1821
- Judgment – Nehemiah Shumway – The Lord, the Judge, before His throne – 1793
- Judgment – Robert Boyd – My God, what inward grief I feel – 1813
- Judgment – Timothy Swan – The God of glory sends his summons forth – 1801
- Judgment Hymn – Jeremiah Ingalls – The great tremendous day's approaching – 1805
- Just Today – Charles Albert Tindley – I have found the peace of heaven – 19231934
- Justice – Ezra Goff – He reigns! the Lord, the Savior reigns – 1805
- Justification – Merit Woodruff – I shall behold the face – 1800
- Kamalia – Oliver Holden – Eternal wisdom has prepared – 1800
- Kedron – Amos Pilsbury – Thou man of griefs, remember me – 17991813181618171818183518441848186718781913
- Keene – Daniel Belknap – Since I have placed my trust in God – 1800
- Kellyvale – Hezekiah Moors – In vain the sons of earth or hell – 1809
- Kingston – Amos Pilsbury – Agonizing in the garden – 179918051820
- Kingston – Daniel Belknap – Along the banks where Babel's current flows – 1800
- Kingston – Daniel Read – The law by Moses came – 1785
- Kingston – Jacob Kimball – Infinte grief! amazing woe – 1793
- Kittery – William Billings – Our Father who in heaven art – 17831786ca. 1790
- Knowledge of Jesus – Jeremiah Ingalls – Vain, delusive world, adieu – 1805
- Knoxville – Abraham Maxim – O for a shout of sacred joy – 1802
- Knoxville – Reubin Monday – Rejoice, my friends, the Lord is King – 1820
- Laindon – Samuel Holyoke – No songs of triumph now be sung – 1791
- Lamberton – Nehemiah Shumway – The Lord my shepherd is – 1793
- Lamentation – Jacob French – O, if my soul were formed for woe – 1789
- Lamentation – Oliver Holden – Earth has detained me prisoner long – 1792
- Lamentation – Philo Sherman – Along the banks where Babel's current flows – 1808
- Lamentation – Walter Janes – When we, our wearied limbs to rest – 1803
- Lamentation for Jerusalem – Jacob French – Why dost thou sit solitary – 1789
- Lancaster – Abraham Wood – Yet, gracious God – 1793
- Lancaster – Nehemiah Shumway – The Lord, how fearful is His name – 1793
- Landsgrove – Hezekiah Moors – How did thy word my heart engage – 1809
- Langdon – Hezekiah Moors – When I with pleasing wonder stand – 1809
- Lansingburgh – Ebenezer Child – Lord, thou wilt hear me when I pray – 1804
- Lark – Elisha West – Hovering among the leaves there stands – 1802
- The Lark – William Billings – Look up and see the unwearied sun – 1790
- Leander – Alexander Johnson – My soul forsakes her vain delight – 1818
- Leave It There – Charles Albert Tindley – If the world from you withhold – 1916
- Lebanon – James P. Carrell – From all that's mortal, all that's vain – 18211831
- Lebanon – William Billings – Death, with his warrant in his hand – 177017781779
- Lebanon – William Moore – Drooping souls, no longer grieve – 1825
- Leghorn – Timothy Swan – Deep in our hearts let us record – 1801
- Leicester – Jacob Kimball – Not from the dust affliction grows – 1793
- Leicester – Samuel Holyoke – Blest are the souls that hear and know – 1803
- Lena – Daniel Belknap – See the Lord of glory dying – 1794
- Lenox – Lewis Edson – Ye tribes of Adam, join – 1782
- Leominster – Daniel Belknap – I'm not ashamed to own my Lord – 1806
- Let the shrill trumpet's warlike voice – James Lyon – Let the shrill trumpet's warlike voice – 1761
- Leverett Street – Isaac Lane – When all Thy mercies, O my God – 1793
- Lewis-Town – William Billings – How vast must their advantage be – 1794
- Lewisburgh – Nehemiah Shumway – Sweet is the day of sacred rest – 1793
- Lexington – Abraham Wood – Hold not thy peace, O Lord our God – 1793
- Lexington – James P. Carrell – The Lord my pasture shall prepare – 1831
- Lexington – Samuel Babcock – Indulgent God! with pitying eye – 18031806
- Lexington – Solomon Howe – The Prince of Peace, whose gentle sway – 1804
- Lexington – William Billings – My righteous judge, my gracious God – 1770
- Liberty – Stephen Jenks – No more beneath the oppressive hand – 1800
- Liberty Hall – Lucius Chapin – Alas! And did my Savior bleed – 181018141816182518321848
- Lift up your heads, O ye gates – Israel Holdroyd – Lift up your heads, O ye gates – 1724
- Lily – Jeremiah Ingalls – Shall we go on to sin – 1805
- Lima – Samuel Babcock – To God the only wise – 180318031806
- Lincoln – Abraham Wood – Join all the glorious names – 1793
- Lincoln – Oliver Holden – Arise, my soul, my joyful powers – 1792
- Lisbon – Daniel Read – Welcome, sweet day of rest – 1785
- Lisbon – Timothy Swan – My Savior and my King – 1783
- Litchfield – Oliver Brownson – Twas from thy hand, my God, I came – 1783
- Lodi – Oliver Holden – Happy the church, thou sacred place – 1800
- London – Timothy Swan – Methinks I hear the heavens resound – 1801
- Longevity – Abijah Forbush – Our term of life is seventy years – 1806
- The Lord descended from above – William Billings – The Lord descended from above – 1770
- The Lord Will Provide – Jeremiah Ingalls – Though troubles assail – 1805
- Lord's Day – Oliver Holden – This is the glorious day – 1796
- Lord, thou hast been our dwelling place – Samuel Babcock – Lord, thou hast been our dwelling place – 1795
- Loudon – Samuel Holyoke – And can this mighty King – 1797
- Louisiana – Oliver Holden – How full of anguish is the thought – 1796
- Louisiana – William Walker – Come, little children, now we may – 1835
- Love Divine – Jeremiah Ingalls – To him who did salvation bring – 1805
- Love to Jesus – Jeremiah Ingalls – O when shall I see Jesus – 1805
- Lovest Thou Me (1846) – William Walker – Hark, my soul! It is the Lord – 1846
- Lower Falls – Daniel Belknap – Now let our mournful songs record – 1797
- Lubec – Samuel Babcock – Let all our tongues be one – 1803
- Luneville – Oliver Holden – As pants the hart for cooling streams – 1803
- Lutestring – Timothy Swan – O God, my heart is fully bent – 1801
- Lyme – Daniel Read – Soon as I heard my Father say – 1785
- Lyme – Timothy Swan – Ye tribes of Adam, join – 1801
- Lynn – Abijah Forbush – The voice of my Beloved sounds – 18031806
- Lynn – Daniel Belknap – Loud to the Prince of heaven – 1797
- Lynn – Oliver Holden – I'm not ashamed to own my Lord – 1793
- Lynn – William Billings – Sweet is the memory of Thy grace – 1770
- Lynnfield – Jeremiah Ingalls – How vain are all things here below – 1805
- Lynnfield – Oliver Holden – My God, permit me not to be – 1793
- Macedonia – Oliver Holden – Not from the dust afflictions grow – 1796
- Machias – Abraham Maxim – How pleasant 'tis to see – 1802
- Machias – James Lyon – When overwhelmed with grief – 1774
- Madison – Amos Pilsbury – How long shall I repine – 1799
- Madison – Daniel Read – Great Shepherd of thine Israel – 1807
- Madrid – William Billings – How charmingly sounds the word of the Lord – 177917811786
- Magdala – Oliver Holden – I'll praise my Maker with my breath – 1796
- Magnificat – Israel Holdroyd – My soul doth magnify the Lord – 1724
- Maitland – Anonymous – Must Jesus bear the cross alone – 1855
- Majesty – Stephen Jenks – When God, our leader, shines in arms – 1799
- Majesty – Timothy Swan – He framed the globe, He built the sky – 1783
- Majesty – Walter Janes – The Lord Jehovah reigns – 1807
- Make a joyful noise – Hezekiah Moors – Make a joyful noise unto the Lord – 1809
- Malabar – Samuel Holyoke – O! the delights, the heavenly joys – 1803
- Malden – Daniel Belknap – Sing to the Lord, ye heavenly hosts – 1797
- Malden – William Billings – To God, the great, the ever-blessed – 1770
- Manchester – William Billings – Let the shrill trumpet's warlike voice – 17791781
- Mansfield – William Billings – Think, mighty God, on feeble man – 17791804
- Mantua – Oliver Holden – A blooming paradise of joy – 1800
- Marblehead – Jacob Kimball – Indulgent God! with pitying eyes – 1793
- Marlborough – Abraham Wood – O for a shout of sacred joy – 1793
- Maroneck – Samuel Holyoke – God of my mercy and my praise – 1803
- Marshfield – William Billings – When we, our wearied limbs to rest – 1770
- Mary's Tears – Oliver Shaw – Were not the sinful Mary's tears – 1817
- Maryland – William Billings – And must this body die – 1778
- Massachusetts – Amos Pilsbury – Let differing nations join – 1799
- Massachusetts – Jacob French – Had not the Lord, may Israel say – 1789
- Massachusetts – William Billings – Great is the Lord God, the thunder's His voice – 1770
- Maxwell – Anonymous – Cause us to hear with joy – 1780
- Mecklenburg – Anonymous – Bright scenes of glory strike my sense – 1820182018251848
- Medfield – William Billings – When I my various blessings see – 1770
- Medford – Hezekiah Moors – Sing to the Lord aloud – 1809
- Medford – Samuel Babcock – Hosanna to the King – 1803
- Medford – Samuel Holyoke – My sorrows, like a flood – 1804
- Medford – William Billings – At Thy command, our dearest Lord – 1770
- Medina – Oliver Holden – My God, my life, my love – 17961806
- Meditation – Elisha West – Come then, O my soul, meditate on that day – 1807
- Meditation – Samuel Wakefield – My soul, come meditate the day – 18321841
- Meditation – Stephen Jenks – In all my vast concerns with thee – 1800
- Medway – William Billings – Sing to the Lord Jehovah's name – 1778
- Meeting Street – Oliver Shaw – What various hindrances we meet – 1815
- Melodious Sonnet – Jeremiah Ingalls – Come, thou fount of every blessing – 1805
- Mendom – William Billings – My Redeemer, let me be – 17811786
- Mendon – Daniel Belknap – Thee we adore, eternal name – 1802
- Menotomy – Samuel Babcock – To Jesus, our exalted Lord – 1803
- Mentz – Samuel Holyoke – Thy pardoning love, so free, so sweet – 1797
- Mercy Seat – Oliver Holden – Jesus, where-e'er Thy people meet – 1803
- Merrifield – Jacob French – No sleep nor slumber to his eyes – 1789
- Messiah (1813) – Anonymous – The Son of man they did betray – 1813
- Messiah – Alexander Gillet – Go, worship at Immanuel's feet – 1795
- Messiah – Jacob French – Sun, moon and stars convey thy praise – 1802
- Messiah – James P. Carrell – He comes! he comes! to judge the world – 1821
- Messiah – Oliver Holden – Ye nymphs of Solima – 1793
- Messiah – Samuel Wakefield – Who is this who comes from far – 1825183118321835186718691911
- Methuen – Abraham Wood – The moment a sinner believes – 1789
- Miami – Oliver Holden – Great Father of mankind – 1803
- Middlebury – Anonymous – Come away to the skies – 18201825183518441848
- Middlesex – Amos Pilsbury – Lord, my light and my salvation – 1799
- Middlesex – Jacob French – Death! 'Tis a melancholy day – 1802
- Middlesex – Oliver Holden – The Lord of glory reigns, he reigns on high – 1793
- Middleton – Jacob Kimball – When overwhelmed with grief – 1793
- Middletown – Amos Bull – Hail the day that saw him rise – 1779
- Middletown – William Billings – Let sinners take their course – 1770
- Midsummer – William Walker – How tedious and tasteless the hours – 1835
- Mifflin – Daniel Read – Life, like a vain amusement, flies – 1807
- Milbury – Samuel Holyoke – Have mercy, Lord, on me – 1791
- Milinda – Robert Boyd – In vain the wealthy mortals toil – 1816
- Millennium – Alexander Gillet – Let all the earth their voices raise – 1795
- Millennium – Jeremiah Ingalls – That glorious day is drawing near – 1805
- Millennium – William Walker – The time is soon coming by the prophets foretold – 1835
- Millville – Elkanah Dare – We praise thee, Lord, who heard our cries – 1813
- Milton – Abijah Forbush – How far our highest praises fall – 1803
- Milton – Daniel Belknap – Our moments fly apace – 1800
- Milton – Elisha West – The shining worlds above – 1802
- Milton – Samuel Babcock – My flesh shall slumber in the ground – 1795
- Milton – Timothy Olmsted – With earnest longings of the mind – 1805
- Minden – Jacob French – Ye sons of Adam, vain and young – 1802
- Minorca – Samuel Babcock – Almighty King of heaven above – 1803
- The Moldering Vine – James P. Carrell – Hail, ye sighing sons of sorrow – 1821
- Moment's Thought – Amos Pilsbury – Jesus, my truth, my way – 1799
- Monmouth – Jacob French – Why do we mourn departing friends – 1793
- Monson – Daniel Belknap – Thus saith the high and lofty one – 1806
- Montague – Timothy Swan – Ye sons of men with joy record – 17831801
- Montfort – Samuel Holyoke – Give thanks to God most high – 1791
- Montgomery – Justin Morgan – Early, my God, without delay – 1790
- Monticello – Daniel Read – The world's foundations by His hand – 18051806
- Montreal – Hezekiah Moors – Ye that delight to serve the Lord – 1809
- Montville – Merit Woodruff – O, the sharp pangs of smarting pain – 1800
- Moravia – William Billings – O love! What a secret to mortals thou art – 1786
- Moreen – Timothy Swan – Oft I am told the muse will prove – 1801
- Morgan – William Smith of Hopewell – With songs and honors sounding loud – 1803
- Moriah – William Billings – All over lovely is my Lord and God – 1786
- Moriston – Susanna Heath – Man has a soul of vast desires – 1780
- Morning – Amos Pilsbury – He dies! the friend of sinners dies – 1799
- Morning – Daniel Read – Lord, in the morning thou shalt hear – 1793
- Morning – Oliver Holden – Once more, my soul, the rising day – 1800
- Morning Hymn – Elisha West – With reverence let the saints appear – 1802
- Morning Hymn – Samuel Babcock – Once more, my soul, the rising day – 1800
- Morning Song – Nathaniel Billings – God of the morning, at whose voice – 1802
- Morning Star – Alexander Gillet – Ye worlds of light, that roll so near – 1807
- Morning Star – James C. Lowry – How splendid shines the morning star – 1820
- Morning Star – James P. Carrell – Ye worlds of light, that roll so near – 1821
- Morpheus – Elisha West – Death, with his warrant in his hand – 1793
- Morpheus – William Billings – Awake my soul, awake mine eyes – 17791780
- Morris – Daniel Read – God, my supporter and my hope – 1807
- Mortality – Daniel Belknap – It is the Lord, our Maker's hand – 1806
- Mortality – Daniel Read – Death, like an overflowing stream – 17851806
- Mortality – Hezekiah Moors – Life is a span, a fleeting hour – 1809
- Mortality – Philo Sherman – Time, like an ever-rolling stream – 1808
- Mount Calvary – Amos Pilsbury – Behold, behold the bleeding God – 1799
- Mount Calvary – – The Son of Man they did betray – 181318161835
- Mount Calvary – Stephen Jenks – Hearts of stone, relent, relent – 1803
- Mount Carmel – Oliver Holden – I am the Savior, the Almighty God – 1803
- Mount Holly – Hezekiah Moors – Above what we can ask or hope – 1809
- Mount Hope – Elkanah Dare – Hark! hark, a Savior's voice – 1813
- Mount Moriah – Amos Pilsbury – Behold the Lamb of God – 1799
- Mount Olivet – Stephen Jenks – O come let us join – 1805
- Mount Tabor – Oliver Holden – As Jesus stood on Tabor's mound – 1792
- Mount Vernon – Hezekiah Moors – Come saints, adore Jehovah's name – 1809
- Mount Vernon – Jacob French – What if the saint must die – 1802
- Mount Zion – John Cole – God's temple crowns the holy mount – 1803
- Mountain – Oliver Holden – When some kind shepherd from his fold – 1803
- Mountain Top Dwelling – Charles A. Tindley, Jr. – I can see down yonder – 1916
- Mourner – James P. Carrell – Still out of the deepest abyss – 1821
- Mournful Song – Elisha West – Twas on that dark and doleful night – 1802
- Musical Captive – Abraham Wood – Music, descending on a silent cloud – 1793
- Mutual Love – William Walker – O when shall I see Jesus – 1835
- My Dove – Jeremiah Ingalls – Arise my dear love – 1805
- My Secret of Joy – Charles Albert Tindley – You ask me where I get the joys – 19091916
- Mysterious Grace – Oliver Holden – With pleasing grief and mournful joy – 1800
- Nantucket – William Billings – How beauteous are their feet – 1770
- Naples – Daniel Read – Shall the vile race of flesh and blood – 1785
- Nativity – Hezekiah Moors – Glory to God on high – 1809
- Nativity – Samuel Babcock – Thus Gabriel sang, and straight around – 1803
- Nazareth – Solomon Howe – Hark! Jesus prays, the charming sound – 1804
- Nazareth – William Billings – My God, how many are my fears – 1779
- Needham – Samuel Babcock – O tell me no more of this world's vain store – 1795
- Neglected Harp – Oliver Holden – Take down thy long neglected harp – 1803
- New Boston – William Billings – Ye boundless realms of joy – 1770
- New Canaan – Oliver Holden – The Lord Jehovah reigns – 1792
- New Concord – Oliver Holden – Dearest of all the names above – 1796
- New Dedham – Stephen Jenks – Since God is all my trust – 1805
- New England – Alexander Gillet – My thoughts on aweful subjects roll – 1781
- New Greenfield – Stephen Jenks – Hark! from the tombs a doleful sound – 1807
- New Hartford – Stephen Jenks – From all that dwell below the skies – 1803
- New Haven – Stephen Jenks – How pleased and blest was I – 1807
- New Hope – Ananias Davisson – Come, ye that love the Lord – 1820
- New Jerusalem – Alexander Johnson – My gracious redeemer I'll love – 1818
- New Jerusalem – James P. Carrell – This life's a dream, an empty show – 1821
- New Jordan – Nehemiah Shumway – On Jordan's stormy banks I stand – 18151820
- New Kittery – Anonymous – While shepherds watched their flocks by night – 1780
- New Lebanon – Philo Sherman – Great God, the heavens' well-ordered frame – 1808182018351844
- New Monmouth – Lucius Chapin – Come thou fount of every blessing – 181318161818182018321848
- New North – William Billings – O praise the Lord with one consent – 17701778
- New Orleans – Robert Boyd – Why do we mourn departing friends – 1817
- New Salem – Oliver Holden – Now shall my inward joys arise – 1793
- New South – William Billings – To bless Thy chosen race – 177017781779
- New Springfield – Nathaniel Billings – Come, let us join our cheerful songs – 1793
- New Stratford – Alexander Gillet – Out of the deeps of long distress – 1786
- New Suffield – Stephen Jenks – My sorrows, like a flood – 1805
- The New Union – Jeremiah Ingalls – Attend ye saints and hear me tell – 1805
- New Year – James P. Carrell – Come, let us anew Our journey pursue – 18311832
- New-England – Daniel Read – Let tyrants shake their iron rod – 1785
- New-Hingham – William Billings – Death, O the awful sound – 1770
- New-Jersey – Nehemiah Shumway – Erect your heads, eternal gates – 1793
- New-Jerusalem – Oliver Holden – Hark! the herald angels sing – 1793
- New-Union – Oliver Holden – Attend, ye saints, and hear me tell – 18031806
- Newark – Daniel Read – Now begin the heavenly theme – 1785
- Newburyport – Stephen Jenks – In every land begin the song – 1804
- Newington – Samuel Holyoke – Let God the Father live – 1803
- Newington – Stephen Jenks – The God of glory sends his summons forth – 1805
- Newmark – Daniel Belknap – Throned on a cloud our God shall come – 1797
- Newport – Daniel Belknap – Life is a span, a fleeting hour – 1800
- Newport – Daniel Read – I send the joys of earth away – 1785
- Newport – Oliver Brownson – O God, to whom revenge belongs – 1783
- Newport – William Billings – Awake, our souls; away, our fears – 1770
- Newton – Samuel Babcock – My Savior God, no voice but thine – 1795
- Night Thought – Jeremiah Ingalls – How can I sleep, when angels sing – 1805
- Ninety-Fifth – Lucius Chapin – When I can read my title clear – 18131816
- Ninety-Fifth – Oliver Brownson – Come, let our voices join to raise – 1783
- Ninety-Third – Jeremiah Ingalls – Grace! 'tis a charming sound – 1805181418351844
- Nixington – Nehemiah Shumway – Day of judgment, day of wonders – 1793
- No. 45 – William Billings – To him who chose us first – 1770
- Norfolk – Alexander Gillet – What a mournful life is mine – 1792
- Norfolk – Oliver Brownson – Alas, the brittle clay – 1782
- Norfolk – Samuel Babcock – Now for a tune of lofty praise – 1800
- Norfolk – Samuel Holyoke – The God of mercy be adored – 1791
- Norfolk – William Billings – Let the old heathen tune their song – 1794
- Norham – Samuel Holyoke – Thy wonted goodness, Lord, repeat – 1791
- North Bolton – Jacob French – When God revealed his gracious name – 1802
- North Kingston – Samuel Babcock – Sing to the Lord Jehovah's name – 1803
- North Providence – William Billings – Come, let us join our cheerful songs – 1778
- North Salem – Stephen Jenks – My soul, come meditate the day – 1799
- Northampton – Jacob French – Rejoice, ye shining worlds on high – 1802
- Northborough – Daniel Belknap – Why do we mourn departing friends – 1800
- Northborough – William Billings – Behold the splendor, hear the shout – 1786
- Northfield – Bartholomew Brown – Life is a span, a fleeting hour – 1804
- Norton – Daniel Read – Mine eyes and my desire – 1785
- Norwalk – Daniel Read – O all ye nations, praise the Lord – 1785
- Norwalk – Stephen Jenks – O God to whom revenge belongs – 1804
- Norway – Hezekiah Moors – The day is past and gone – 1809
- Norway – Oliver Shaw – Our sorrows and our tears we pour – 1815
- Norway – Simeon Jocelin – Death, like an overflowing stream – 1818
- Norwich – Oliver Brownson – My sorrows, like a flood – 1779
- Nothing Between – Charles Albert Tindley – Nothing between my soul and the Savior – 19051909
- Number Four – Daniel Belknap – Mankind must all return to dust – 1797
- O come let us sing unto the Lord – Samuel Babcock – O come let us sing unto the Lord – 1795
- O praise the Lord, O my soul – Daniel Read – O praise the Lord, O my soul – 1785
- O the depth of the riches – Hezekiah Moors – O the depth of the riches – 1809
- Oak's Creek – Nathaniel Billings – Bless, O my soul, the living God – 17951803
- Oakhampton – Jacob French – God in the great assembly stands – 1789
- Obedience – Oliver Holden – Come, all ye lovers of the Lamb – 1803
- Ode on the Dissolution of Time – M. Belknap – Gabriel, the herald of the skies – 1803
- Ode to Harmony – Oliver Holden – Hail, hail music – 1793
- Ode to Music – Oliver Holden – Tis thine, sweet power – 1792
- Ohio – Elisha West – My feet shall never slide – 1802
- Ohio – Jacob French – Some trust in horses trained for war – 1789
- Ohio – Samuel Holyoke – I'll praise my Maker with my breath – 1791
- Ohio – Stephen Jenks – Revive our drooping faith – 1818
- Olivet – William Smith of Hopewell – On the cold ground methinks I see – 1803
- Olney – Alexander Johnson – Come, thou fount of every blessing – 1818
- Olney – Oliver Holden – Dear fountain of delight unknown – 1803
- Omega – Oliver Holden – My Savior, my almighty friend – 1793
- Omicron – Samuel Babcock – Let us love, and sing, and wonder – 1795
- Ontario – Oliver Brownson – Ye that delight to serve the Lord – 1797
- Opening Heavens – Oliver Holden – The opening heavens around me shine – 1800
- Oracle – Oliver Holden – Father of mercies! In Thy word – 1800
- Orange – Hezekiah Moors – Remember, Lord, our mortal state – 1809
- Orange – Stephen Jenks – Early, my God, without delay – 1803
- Orange – Timothy Swan – Ye birds of lofty wing – 1797
- Orangeburgh – Amos Pilsbury – My God! my God! why leavest thou me – 1799
- Ordination Hymn – Oliver Holden – O what a happy, happy day – 1803
- Orland – Daniel Belknap – Shall the vile race of flesh and blood – 1808
- Orleans – Samuel Holyoke – Eternal power! whose high abode – 1791
- Orringford – Samuel Holyoke – Alas, how fast our moments fly – 1807
- Otsego – Nathaniel Billings – Behold God's works in various ways – 17951802
- Ouse – Daniel Belknap – Let all the earth-born race – 1797
- Oxford – William Billings – O happy nation, where the Lord – 1779
- Palermo – Samuel Holyoke – O all ye nations, praise the Lord – 1803
- Palestine – James P. Carrell – O tell me no more – 1831
- Palmer – Samuel Babcock – I'll lift my hands, I'll raise my voice – 1803
- Paradise – Ezra Goff – And can this mighty King – 1806
- Paradise – Jeremiah Ingalls – Come, Lord, and help me to rejoice – 1805
- Paradise – John Cole – My thoughts surmount these lower skies – 1803
- Paradise – Oliver Holden – Now to the shining realms above – 1796
- Pardoning Grace – Alexander Gillet – From deep distress and troubled thoughts – 1795
- Pardoning Love – William Walker – In evil long I took delight – 1847
- Paria – William Billings – Ye boundless realms of joy – 1784
- Paris – William Billings – Praise ye the Lord, 'tis good to raise – 1779
- Parma – Samuel Holyoke – Behold the glories of the Lamb – 1803
- Parting Hand – – My Christian friends in bonds of love – 18051835
- Passover – James P. Carrell – Twas on that dark, that doleful night – 1821
- Patmos – Timothy Swan – Think, mighty God, on feeble man – 1801
- Pawtuxet – Jacob French – Our days, alas! our mortal days – 1789
- Peckersfield – Jeremiah Ingalls – Sing to the Lord, ye distant lands – 1805
- Pembrook – Daniel Read – Arise, arise, my gracious God – 1785
- Penbury – Aaron Williams – Salvation! O the joyful sound – 1763
- Penetration – Oliver Holden – Father divine, before Thy view – 1800
- Pennsylvania – Jacob Kimball – Rejoice, ye shining worlds on high – 1793
- Pennsylvania – Jeremiah Ingalls – The God of glory sends his summons forth – 1796
- Pennsylvania – Nehemiah Shumway – When shall Thy lovely face be seen? – 1793
- Penobscot – Daniel Belknap – Teach me the measure of my days – 1806
- Pepperell – Abraham Wood – As pants the hart for cooling streams – 1786
- Persepolis – Jacob French – O come, loud anthems let us sing – 1789
- Perseverance – James P. Carrell – Come, O thou traveler unknown – 1831
- Persia – Jacob French – How pleasant 'tis to see – 1789
- Persia – Oliver Holden – Now to the Lord, who makes us know – 1800
- Petersburgh – William Billings – Thus saith the high and lofty one – 1786
- Petition – Anonymous – Why not now, my God, my God – 1799
- Phalia – Merit Woodruff – In pleasure's flowery path to stray – 1800
- Phenomena – Oliver Holden – See the noon-day clothed in darkness – 18061806
- Philadelphia – Francis Hopkinson – Our God, our help in ages past – 180618161817
- Philadelphia – William Billings – Let differing nations join – 1778
- Philadelphia New – Jacob French – Let every creature join – 1789
- Philanthropy – William Billings – Jesus, the Savior from above – 1786
- Philippi – Oliver Holden – Out of the deeps of long distress – 1796
- Phoebus – William Billings – Lord, in the morning Thou shalt hear – 1778
- Piedmont – Samuel Holyoke – Now let our lips with holy fear – 1803
- Pilgrim's Farewell – Jacob French – Fare you well, my friends – 179318021805181318321835184418481855
- Pilgrim's Rest – Elijah Griswold – Rise, my soul, and stretch thy wings – 1803
- The Pilgrim's Song – James P. Carrell – Rise, my soul, and stretch thy wings – 1831
- The Pilgrim's Song – Jeremiah Ingalls – Children of the heavenly King – 1805
- Pilgrim's Song – Oliver Holden – Now let our voices join – 1796
- Pinckney Street – Amos Pilsbury – Who hath our report believed – 1799
- Pine-Hill – Daniel Belknap – In the full choir a broken string – 1797
- Pisgah – James C. Lowry – When I can read my title clear – 1817
- Pitt – William Billings – Behold what wondrous grace – 1770
- Pittsford – Daniel Belknap – God! the eternal, awful name – 1802
- Pittsford – Hezekiah Moors – In humble notes our faith adores – 1809
- Pittsgrove – Nehemiah Shumway – Bless, O Lord, the opening year – 1793
- Pittston – Supply Belcher – Now may my head be lifted high – 1797
- Placentia – Samuel Babcock – How tedious and tasteless the hours – 1803
- Plainfield – Alexander Gillet – Show pity, Lord, O Lord, forgive – 1796
- Plainfield – Hezekiah Moors – Life, like a vain amusement, flies – 1809
- Pleading Savior – Anonymous – Now the Savior stands a pleading – 183118461913
- Pleasant Hill – William Nicholson – And let this feeble body fail – 1813182018351844
- Pleasant Street – William Billings – No more, my God, I boast no more – 1770
- Pleasant Valley – Justin Morgan – My soul lies cleaving to the dust – 1790
- Pleasant Valley – Stephen Jenks – Lord of the worlds above – 1800
- Pleasure – Stephen Jenks – Descend from heaven, immortal Dove – 1818
- Plymouth New – William Billings – Erect your heads, eternal gates – 17801802
- Poland – Abraham Maxim – Shall we go on to sin – 1806
- Poland – Timothy Swan – God of my life, look gently down – 1785
- Pomfret – Merit Woodruff – Think, mighty God, on feeble man – 1800
- Pomfret – Samuel Babcock – Let everlasting glories crown – 1795
- Pomfret – William Billings – How good and pleasant must it be – 1770
- Portland – Abraham Wood – Jesus, Lord of life and peace – 1789
- Portland – Amos Pilsbury – When we, our wearied limbs to rest – 1799
- Portland – Timothy Swan – Sweet is the work, my God, my King – 1801
- Potomac – Amos Pilsbury – Jehovah reigns, let all – 1799
- Poundridge – Stephen Jenks – To our Almighty Maker, God – 1800
- Pownal – Timothy Swan – Sure there's a righteous God – 1801
- Praise – James P. Carrell – I'll praise my maker with my breath – 1831
- Praise To God – Oliver Holden – Praise to God, the great Creator – 1800
- Praise to the Redeemer – Walter Janes – Mighty God, while angels bless thee – 1803
- Precept – Elisha West – The watchmen join their voice – 1793
- Precept – Walter Janes – Now in the heat of youthful blood – 1807
- Preparation – Barnabas McKyes – Awake, arise, behold thou hast – 1798
- Preparation – Jacob French – Be merciful, O God, to me – 1789
- President Street – Oliver Shaw – Jesus, I love thy charming name – 1815
- Princetown – William Billings – Lord, hear the voice of my complaint – 1770
- Proclamation – Jacob French – He reigns! the Lord, the Savior reigns – 1802
- Prodigal – Elisha West – A day of feasting I ordain – 1802
- Promise – Oliver Holden – Lo, I am with you, saith the Lord – 1803
- The promised land – Matilda T. Durham – On Jordan's stormy banks I stand – 183518441848
- Protection – Abijah Forbush – Why did the nations join to slay – 18031806
- Protection – James P. Carrell – Tis Jesus protects me, my fears now remove – 1821
- Protection – Joseph Funk – How firm a foundation, ye saints of the Lord – 1832
- Protection – Oliver Holden – My God, the steps of pious men – 1793
- Protection – Philo Sherman – God, my supporter and my hope – 1808
- Providence – Daniel Read – Deep in our hearts let us record – 1787
- Providence – Jacob French – Give thanks aloud to God – 1802
- Providence – William Billings – Who shall the Lord's elect condemn – 1770
- Prussia – Stephen Jenks – Let every creature join – 1818
- Psalm 1 – Israel Holdroyd – The man is blest that hath not lent – 1724
- Psalm 15 – Israel Holdroyd – Lord, who's the happy man that may – 1722
- Psalm 18 – Israel Holdroyd – No change of times shall ever shock – 1724
- Psalm 33 – Israel Holdroyd – Ye righteous in the Lord, rejoice – 1722
- Psalm 34 – Israel Holdroyd – I will give laud and honor both – 1722
- Psalm 39 – Israel Holdroyd – I said, I will look to my ways – 1724
- Psalm 42 – Israel Holdroyd – As pants the hart for cooling streams – 1722
- Psalm 47 – Israel Holdroyd – Ye people all with one accord – 1722
- Psalm 50 – Israel Holdroyd – The mighty God, the eternal, has thus spoke – 1722
- Psalm 90 – Israel Holdroyd – Thou, Lord, hast been our sure defense – 1722
- Psalm 92 – Israel Holdroyd – It is a thing both good and meet – 1724
- Psalm 100 – Israel Holdroyd – All people that on earth do dwell – 1722
- Psalm 100 New – John Tufts – Not to condemn the sons of menAll people that on earth do dwell – 172317441761
- Psalm 104 – Israel Holdroyd – O praise ye the Lord, prepare your glad voice – 1722
- Psalm 104 – James Lyon – My soul, thy great creator praise – 1761
- Psalm 112 – Anonymous – Weary of wandering from my God – 1799
- Psalm 113 – Israel Holdroyd – Ye children which do serve the Lord – 1724
- Psalm 124 – Israel Holdroyd – Now Israel may say, and that truly – 1722
- Psalm 126 – Israel Holdroyd – When that the Lord again his Zion had forth brought – 1722
- Psalm 131 – Israel Holdroyd – Is there ambition in my heart – 1722
- Psalm 134 – Israel Holdroyd – Behold and have regard – 1722
- Psalm 136 – Israel Holdroyd – Praise ye the Lord, for he is good – 1722
- Psalm 137 – Israel Holdroyd – When we did sit in Babylon – 1722
- Psalm 146 – Simeon Jocelin – I'll praise my Maker with my breath – 1788
- Psalm 148 – Oliver Holden – Begin, my soul, th' exalted lay – 1800
- Psalm 21 – Amos Bull – The states, O Lord, with songs of praise – 1779
- Psalm 23 – Francis Hopkinson – The Lord himself, the mighty Lord – 1761
- Psalm 23 – James Lyon – The Lord Himself, the mighty Lord – 1761
- Psalm 25 – Alexander Gillet – I lift my soul to God – 1779
- Psalm 8 – Amos Bull – O Lord, our heavenly King – 1795
- Psalm 8 – James Lyon – O Thou, to whom all creatures bow – 1761
- Psalm 89 – Simeon Jocelin – Think, mighty God, on feeble man – 1782
- Psalm 95 – James Lyon – Come, sound His praise abroad – 1761
- Psalm Before Evening Prayer – Louis Bourgeois – Behold, now give heed, such as be – 1621
- Psalm for Thanksgiving Day – Oliver Holden – Let every creature join – 1803
- Pumpily – William Billings – Ye boundless realms of joy – 1770
- Purchase Street (1779) – William Billings – Thus far the Lord has led me on – 1779
- Quebeck – Hezekiah Moors – How jarring and how low – 1809
- Queen Street – William Billings – O clap your hands and shout for joy – 1770
- Queensborough – Jacob French – Not to our names, thou only just and true – 1789
- Quincy – Timothy Swan – Awake, my soul, to sound his praise – 1801
- Radiant Seraph – Oliver Holden – Say, radiant seraph, throned in light – 1800
- Rainbow – Timothy Swan – Tis by thy strength the mountains stand – 1785
- Rama – Samuel Babcock – Dost thou my earthly comforts slay – 1803
- Randolph – Daniel Belknap – Thou refuge of my weary soul – 1806
- Rapture – Oliver Holden – Sweet is the work, my God, my King – 1793
- Raynham – Daniel Belknap – The spirits of the just – 1797
- Rebellion – Jacob French – Hear, O heavens – 1797
- Reception – Jacob French – Well, the Redeemer's gone – 1802
- Redeeming Grace – Anonymous – Come all that love my Lord and Master – 181318471848
- Redeeming Love – Jeremiah Ingalls – O now begin the heavenly theme – 1805
- Redemption – Jeremiah Ingalls – Come friends and relations, let's join heart and hand – 1805182018201835
- Redemption – Joseph Stephenson – Hark, hark, glad tidings charm our ears – 1798
- Redemption – Hezekiah Moors – When the first parents of our race – 1809
- Redemption – Stephen Jenks – Alas, the cruel spear – 1803
- Redemption Hymn – Jeremiah Ingalls – Come friends and relations, let's join heart and hand – 1805
- Reflection – Anonymous – No sleep or slumber to his eyes – 181318161848
- Reformation – Hezekiah Moors – When God revealed his gracious name – 1809
- Refuge – Daniel Read – My refuge is the God of love – 1793
- Refuge – James P. Carrell – Jesus, lover of my soul – 1831
- Rehoboth – Hezekiah Moors – Kingdoms and thrones to God belong – 1809
- Rejoice in Thy Youth – Jeremiah Ingalls – Young man, indulge thy passion – 1805
- Religion – Daniel Read – My God, permit my tongue – 1793
- Religion – Stephen Jenks – Some walk in honor's gaudy show – 1804
- Relley – Jacob French – Lo! what a glorious sight appears – 1789
- Remember now, remember thy Creator – Samuel Babcock – Remember now, remember thy Creator – 1803
- Renown – Jeremiah Ingalls – All glory to the Father be – 1805
- Repentance – James P. Carrell – Jesus, let thy pitying eye – 1831
- Repentance – Philo Sherman – O, if my soul were formed for woe – 1808
- Repentance – Samuel Wakefield – Come, humble sinner, in whose breast – 18321837
- Repentance – Walter Janes – Show pity, Lord, O Lord, forgive – 1807
- Repentant Song – Oliver Holden – God of mercy, God of love – 1800
- Repose – Stephen Jenks – Our sins, alas! how strong they be – 1804
- Request – Barnabas McKyes – Return, O God of love, return – 1790
- Resignation – Joseph Funk – My Shepherd will supply my need – 1832
- Resignation – Samuel Babcock – Behold the Savior of mankind – 1795
- Resignation – William Billings – Thus saith the Ruler of the skies – 1781
- Resignation – Anonymous – My shepherd will supply my need – 1828183218461850
- Resolution – Jacob French – Let those who bear the Christian name – 1789
- Resolution – Oliver Holden – Great King in Zion, Lord of all – 18031806
- Resolution – Samuel Babcock – Let sinners take their course – 1803
- Rest – Oliver Holden – Descend, Holy Spirit, the Dove – 18031806
- Restoration – Anonymous – Ye captives restored and saints of the Lord – 18131848
- Restoration – Hezekiah Moors – Ye heavens rejoice in Jesus' grace – 1809
- Restoration – William Billings – Greatly beloved, of God approved – 1786
- Resurrection – Barnabas McKyes – My flesh shall slumber in the ground – 1798
- Resurrection – Daniel Read – The God of glory sends His summons forth – 1785
- Resurrection – Jacob French – The joyful day is coming on – 1802
- Resurrection – William Billings – Jesus Christ is risen today – 1787
- Retirement – Oliver Holden – Far from the world, O Lord, I flee – 1803
- Retrospect – William Billings – Was not the day dark and gloomy – 1778
- Revelation – William Billings – Let all the heathen writers join – 1779
- Review – Oliver Holden – When with my mind devoutly pressed – 18061806
- Reviving Hope – Oliver Holden – The Savior calls, let every ear – 18001806
- Rhode Island – Amos Pilsbury – Thou great mysterious God unknown – 1799
- Rhone – Samuel Holyoke – Jesus, with all thy saints above – 1803
- The Rich Man – Jeremiah Ingalls – Come, all ye poor sinners that from Adam came – 1805
- Rich Provision – Jeremiah Ingalls – Jesus, thy blessings are not few – 1805
- Richmond – Alexander Gillet – Ere god had built the mountains – 1792
- Richmond – Daniel Belknap – Sing to the Lord, ye distant lands – 1806
- Richmond – Oliver Holden – Keep silence, all created things – 1803
- Richmond – William Billings – My beloved haste away – 17781786
- Ringe – Daniel Belknap – Jehovah reigns, his throne is high – 1797
- Ringe – Samuel Holyoke – My thoughts surmount these lower skies – 1791
- Ripton – Alexander Gillet – Shall the vile race of flesh and blood – 1795
- Ripton – Daniel Read – That man is blest, who stands in awe – 1785
- Rising Dawn – Oliver Holden – Behold the rising dawn appear – 1800
- Road's Town – Elkanah Dare – Blessed are the sons of God – 18131848
- Rochester – Israel Holdroyd – Come, children, learn to fear the Lord – 17221816
- The Rock – Oliver Holden – We've found the rock, the travelers cried – 1804
- Rockbridge – Lucius Chapin – Sweet is the work, my God, my King – 181318161820183218461848
- Rockingham – Amos Pilsbury – Lamb of God, for whom we languish – 1799
- Rocky-Nook – William Billings – Those glorious minds, how bright they shine – 1794
- Rome – Hezekiah Moors – Good is the Lord, the heavenly King – 1809
- Rome – Timothy Swan – Wandering pilgrims, mourning Christians – 1801
- Romelia – Oliver Holden – How sweet and aweful is the place – 1803
- Ronda – Timothy Swan – Return, O God of love, return – 1801
- The Rose Tree – Ananias Davisson – There is a land of pleasure – 181318201835
- Rosedale – Samuel Holyoke – How shall the young secure their hearts – 1803
- Roslin Castle – Elisha West – Behold the rose of Sharon here – 1802
- Ross – Timothy Swan – As pants the hart for cooling streams – 1801
- Rowland – Merit Woodruff – Lord, we have heard thy works of old – 1800
- Rowley – Daniel Belknap – How long wilt thou forget me, Lord? – 1797
- Rowley – Jacob Kimball – The saints shall flourish in his days – 1793
- Roxbury (1778) – William Billings – O praise ye the Lord, prepare your glad voice – 1778
- Roxbury (1802) – Daniel Belknap – My sorrows, like a flood – 1802
- Royalston – Abraham Wood – With cheerful voice I sing – 1779
- Russell – Jacob French – My lot is fallen in that blest land – 1789
- Russell – Timothy Swan – Our days are as the grass – 1801
- Russia – Daniel Read – False are the men of high degree – 1786
- Rutland – William Billings – My flesh shall slumber in the ground – 1781
- Ryall – William Tansur – O what a happy thing it is – 1767
- Ryegate – Samuel Holyoke – In vain we lavish out our lives – 1803
- Sabbath – Daniel Read – Sweet is the work, my God and King – 1785
- The Sabbath – Jacob French – Welcome, sweet day of rest – 1789
- Sabbath – Samuel Babcock – Lord of the Sabbath, hear our vows – 1803
- Sabbath Morn – Oliver Holden – Another six days' work is done – 1803
- Saco – Daniel Belknap – The Lord hath eyes to give the blind – 1806
- Salem (1803) – Oliver Holden – King of Salem, bless my soul – 1803
- Salem – Abijah Forbush – Lord, what a feeble piece – 18031806
- Salem – Amos Pilsbury – Lord, we come before thee now – 1799
- Salem – Daniel Belknap – Dear Lord! behold our sore distress – 1802
- Salem – Jacob Kimball – And must this body die – 1793
- Salem – Oliver Holden – Some seraph, lend your heavenly tongue – 17931800
- Salem – Philo Sherman – See the vain race of mortals move – 1808
- Salem – Stephen Jenks – Let every creature join – 1799
- Salem – William Moore – How sweet the name of Jesus sounds – 182618351848
- Salisbury – Oliver Brownson – God of my salvation, hear – 1782
- Salvation – Elisha West – Shepherds, rejoice! lift up your eyes – 1802
- Salvation – Robert Boyd – Come, humble sinner, in whose breast – 1816
- Samanthra – R. D. Humphreys – O thou, in whose presence my soul takes delight – 1822
- Sanbornton – Anonymous – Now in the heat of youthful blood – 179317951813
- Sandusky – Samuel Holyoke – Lo, he comes, in clouds descending – 1795
- Sandy River – Daniel Belknap – Descend, ye hosts of angels bright – 1802
- Sardis – Ezra Goff – This life's a dream, an empty show – 18051806
- Savannah – William Billings – Ah! Lovely appearance of death – 1778
- Saved and Satisfied – Frederick J. Tindley – I am thinking of the danger – 1923
- The Savior's Merits – Jeremiah Ingalls – Savior, I do feel thy merit – 1805
- Savoy – Samuel Holyoke – The Lord Jehovah reigns – 1803
- Saybrook – Daniel Belknap – There is a house not made with hands – 1797
- Saybrook – William Billings – My God, what inward grief I feel – 1779ca. 1790
- Schenectady – Nehemiah Shumway – From all that dwell below the skies – 1805
- Scotland – Nehemiah Shumway – Awake, our souls, away, our fears – 1793
- Scotland – Timothy Swan – The Lord my Shepherd is – 1801
- The Seasons – Timothy Swan – Eternal source of every joy – 1801
- Seclusion – Oliver Holden – Man has a soul of vast desires – 1803
- See He Rises – Oliver Holden – Angels, roll the rock away – 1803
- Separation – Alexander Johnson – Why do we mourn departing friends – 1818
- Separation – Jeremiah Ingalls – Come ye that love the Lord indeed – 1805
- Serepta – Oliver Holden – I hear the voice of woe – 1800
- Severn – Jacob Kimball – Is this the kind return – 1793
- Sharon – Abijah Forbush – Behold the Rose of Sharon here – 18031806
- Sharon – Elisha West – How pleased and blest was I – 1793
- Sharon – James P. Carrell – From all that dwell below the skies – 18211831
- Sharon – Oliver Brownson – My Savior and my King – 1790
- Sharon – William Billings – How glorious is our heavenly King – 1778
- Sheldon – Hezekiah Moors – Great God! how infinite art thou – 1809
- Sherburne – Daniel Read – While shepherds watched their flocks by night – 1785
- Sherburne – William Billings – How pleasant 'tis to see – 1778
- Shestopsalmie – Sergei Rachmaninoff – Слава в вышних Богу (Glory to God in the highest) – 1915
- Shiloh – Oliver Holden – Fair as a blooming, tender flower – 1803
- Shiloh – William Billings – Methinks I see a heavenly host – 1786
- Shirley – Daniel Belknap – Our moments fly apace – 1806
- Shirley – Hezekiah Moors – Shepherds, rejoice! lift up your eyes – 1809
- Shoreham – Daniel Belknap – There is a land of pure delight – 1797
- Shouting Hymn – Jeremiah Ingalls – God's power and wisdom is displayed – 1805
- Shrewsbury – Abraham Wood – Now in the heat of youthful blood – 1793
- Shrewsbury – Daniel Belknap – Saved from the ocean and tempestuous skies – 1800
- Sicily – Oliver Holden – In the soft season of thy youth – 1800
- Silver Spring – Asahel Benham – Were I in heaven without my God – 1790
- Sinai – William Billings – All you who make the law your choice – 1786
- Sincerity – Merit Woodruff – My never-ceasing song shall show – 1798
- Sincerity – Oliver Holden – Tis a point I long to know – 17931806
- Sinful Youth – Jeremiah Ingalls – Remember, sinful youth – 1805
- Sing unto God, ye kingdoms – Hezekiah Moors – Sing unto God, ye kingdoms of the earth – 1809
- The Sinner's Warning – Jeremiah Ingalls – When pity prompts me to look round – 1805
- Slavoslovie velikoe – Sergei Rachmaninoff – Slava v vuishnikh Bogu (Glory to God in the highest) – 1915
- Slow Traveler – Jeremiah Ingalls – O happy souls, how fast you go – 1805
- Smithfield – Daniel Read – This life's a dream, an empty show – 17941805
- Smyrna – Oliver Holden – Why should the children of a King – 1796
- Smyrna – Samuel Babcock – Now let the Lord my Savior smile – 1803
- Soldier of the Cross – Jeremiah Ingalls – Am I a soldier of the cross – 1805
- Solemn Song – Elisha West – Here is a song, which doth belong – 1802
- Solemn Thought – James P. Carrell – Remember, sinful youth, you must die – 1821
- Solemnity – Ananias Davisson – Twas on that dark, that doleful night – 1817
- Solemnity – Eliakim Doolittle – How short and hasty is our life – 1798
- Solemnity – Oliver Holden – Death, 'tis a melancholy day – 1800
- Solicitude – Alexander Johnson – O how I have longed for the coming of God – 1818
- Solicitude – Anonymous – O thou, in whose presence my soul takes delight – 18131831
- Solicitude – Oliver Holden – Around the bloody tree – 1796
- Solid Pleasures – Oliver Holden – Descend from heaven, immortal Dove – 1800
- Solitude – Barnabas McKyes – Come lead me to some lonely shade – 1813
- Solitude – Elisha West – My refuge is the God of love – 1798
- Solitude – Walter Janes – As on some lonely building's top – 1803
- Solitude in the Grove – Ananias Davisson – O were I like a feathered dove – 1817
- Solomon's Song – Timothy Swan – The voice of my beloved sounds – 1797
- Solon – Daniel Belknap – Indulgent God, with pitying eyes – 1806
- Some Day – Charles Albert Tindley – Beams of heaven, as I go – 19051909
- Someone is Waiting for Me – Charles Albert Tindley – It may be a brother with whom I did play – 1909
- Somers – Stephen Jenks – Our moments fly apace – 1800
- Somerset – Samuel Wakefield – Broad is the road that leads to death – 1832
- Song of Moses – Jeremiah Ingalls – Almighty love inspires my heart with sacred fire – 1805
- Sorrow's Tear – Stephen Jenks – Sweet spirit, if thy airy sleep – 1805
- Sounding Joy – Justin Morgan – Come, sound his praise abroad – 17901816184818601911
- South Boston – William Billings – Join all the glorious names – 1794
- South Carolina – Amos Pilsbury – Come, my soul, before the Lamb – 1799
- Southborough – Abraham Wood – Now let our lips with holy fear – 1793
- Southborough – Daniel Belknap – See where he languished on the cross – 1797
- Southwell New – Thomas Walter – Behold, and have regard – 1721
- Sovereignty – Philo Sherman – The Lord Jehovah reigns, and royal – 1808
- Spain – William Billings – How pleased and blest was I – 1778
- Sparta – Oliver Holden – Sing to the Lord a new-made song – 1800
- Spiritual Babylon – Solomon Howe – Why should this earth delight us so – 1804
- Spiritual Springtime – Charles Albert Tindley – Like the action of the ground – 19191934
- Spring – Daniel Belknap – He send his word, and melts the snow – 1797
- Spring – Jacob French – Mark how it snows! How fast the valley fills – 1789
- Spring Street – Daniel Belknap – Not to condemn the sons of men – 1802
- Springfield – Daniel Belknap – Lord, I am vile, conceived in sin – 1802
- Springfield – Lemuel Babcock – Jesus drinks the bitter cup – 1779
- St Elisha's – William Billings – Who shall the Lord's elect condemn? – 1770
- St. Alban's – Oliver Holden – My God, when-e'er my longing heart – 1803
- St. Albans – Walter Janes – Come, Holy Spirit, heavenly Dove – 1808
- St. Anne's – William Croft – As pants the hart for cooling streams – 1708
- St. Enoch – William Billings – Sing to the Lord a new-made song – 1794
- St. John's – Eliakim Doolittle – Thrice happy man who fears the Lord – 1800
- St. John's – William Billings – Where are the mourners, saith the Lord – 1794
- St. Johns – James P. Carrell – O glorious hope of perfect love – 1821
- St. Marc – Oliver Holden – Come, dearest Lord, descend and dwell – 1803
- St. Mary – Oliver Holden – Father, I bless Thy gentle hand – 1800
- St. Thomas – William Billings – Methinks I see my Savior dear – 17791794
- Stafford – Daniel Read – See what a living stone – 1782
- Stafford – Oliver Brownson – Return, O God of love, return – 1783
- Stand By Me – Charles Albert Tindley – When the storms of life are raging – 190519091916
- Star in the East – – Hail the blest morn, see the great mediator – 1831183518481867
- Staunton – Ananias Davisson – Awake, our souls, and bless his name – 1820
- Staunton – James P. Carrell – Weary souls, who wander wide – 1831
- Sterling – Samuel Holyoke – Great Shepherd of thine Israel – 1803
- Still River – Abraham Wood – From my youth up, may Israel say – 1793
- Stockbridge – William Billings – From all that dwell below the skies – 1778
- Stone Chapel – Oliver Holden – O praise ye the Lord, prepare a new song – 1800
- Stoneham – Daniel Belknap – Now to the Lord a noble song – 1806
- Stonington – Daniel Read – Let a broad stream with golden sands – 1786
- Stoughton – William Billings – My Savior, my almighty Friend – 1770
- Stowe – Samuel Babcock – The birds without barn – 1795
- Stratfield – Ezra Goff – Through every age, eternal God – 1786
- Stratton – Samuel Babcock – O magnify the Lord with me – 1803
- Strong Hope – Stephen Jenks – Jesus, my all, to heaven is gone – 1818
- Sturbridge – Samuel Holyoke – Indulgent God, with pitying eye – 1791
- Sturbridge – William Billings – Jehovah reigns, his throne is high – 1779
- Sublimity – William Billings – The heavens declare the glory of God – 1794
- Submission – Oliver Holden – God of my life, look gently down – 1793
- Submission – Samuel Holyoke – Naked as from the earth we came – 1803
- Sudbury (1770) – William Billings – Blest be the everlasting God – 1770
- Sudbury (1794) – William Billings – What if the saint must die – 1794
- Sudbury – Daniel Read – Think, mighty God, on feeble man – 1785
- Suffering Savior – Alexander Gillet – Alas, and did my Savior bleed – 17951803
- Suffolk – William Billings – Bright King of glory, dreadful God – 1770
- Sullivan – William Billings – Let mortal tongues attempt to sing – 1778
- Summer – Daniel Belknap – How soon, alas! must summer's sweets decay – 1797
- Summer Street – William Billings – Death cannot make our souls afraid – 1770
- Sun – Oliver Holden – Fairest of all the lights above – 1800
- Sunbury – James P. Carrell – O thou, in whose presence my soul takes delight – 1821
- Sunbury – Samuel Holyoke – Hard heart of mine, O that the Lord – 1791
- Sunday – Oliver Brownson – Hail that happy morn, so glorious – 1783
- Sunday – Samuel Babcock – This day is God's, let all the land – 1800
- Sunday – William Billings – Majestic God, when I descry – 1778
- Sunderland – Jacob French – Jesus is gone above the skies – 1789
- Sunderland – Stephen Jenks – Let every creature join – 1800
- Supplication – Barnabas McKyes – Spare us, O Lord, aloud we pray – 1832
- Supplication – Daniel Read – O wash my soul from every sin – 1793
- Supplication – Jacob French – Show pity, Lord, O Lord, forgive – 1789
- Surety – Oliver Holden – To this dear Surety's hand – 1800
- Surprise – Barnabas McKyes – Our life contains a thousand springs – 1798
- Suspension – Oliver Holden – My harp untuned, and laid aside – 1800
- Sussex – James P. Carrell – With glorious clouds encompassed round – 1831
- Sutton – Ezra Goff – Save me, O God, the swelling flood – 1793
- Sutton – Joseph Stone – Am I a soldier of the cross – 1793
- Sutton – Oliver Brownson – Come sound his praise abroad – 1783
- Sweden – Samuel Holyoke – Jesus the Lord forever reigns – 1791
- Sweet Complaint – Oliver Holden – While of Thy absence we complain – 1803
- Sweet Farewell – Stephen Jenks – Lord, dismiss us with thy blessing – 1805
- Sweet Harmony – William Walker – O tell me no more of this world's vain store – 1835
- Sweet Prospect – Stephen Jenks – How tedious and tasteless the hours – 1805
- Sweet Prospect – – On Jordan's stormy banks I stand – 183518441867
- Sweet Rivers – William Moore – Sweet rivers of redeeming love – 18251835184418481867
- Sweet Surprise – Oliver Holden – Angels are lost in sweet surprise – 1800
- The Swiftness of Time – Jeremiah Ingalls – My days, my weeks, my months, my years – 1805
- Syena – Jacob French – O Jesus my hope – 1789
- Sylvestes – James P. Carrell – God of my salvation, hear – 1821
- Sylvia – Truman Wetmore – Let music roll in mournful strains – 1805
- Sympathy – James P. Carrell – Come, my soul, and let us try – 1821
- Sympathy – William Read – Blest is the man whose bowels move – 1793
- Syracuse – Samuel Holyoke – What is our God, or what his name – 1804
- Syria – Daniel Belknap – The spreading billows know their bound – 1797
- Take Me As I Am – Ira David Sankey – Jesus, my Lord, to thee I cry – 1860
- Taunton – Oliver Shaw – Almighty Maker, God – 1808
- The Tedious Hour – Jeremiah Ingalls – How tedious and tasteless the hours – 1805
- Temple – Oliver Holden – Send comforts down from Thy right hand – 1800
- Tender Thought – Ananias Davisson – Arise, my tenderest thoughts, arise – 1816
- Tender Thoughts – Oliver Holden – Arise, my tender thoughts, arise – 1800
- Tennessee – Abijah Forbush – How shall affrighted mortals dare – 1806
- Tennessee – Oliver Holden – Give me the wings of faith to rise – 1796
- Terror – Jacob French – Silent I waited with long-suffering love – 1802
- Thanksgiving – Timothy Swan – Meet and right it is to sing – 1801
- The Band of Love – Edward Miller – Our souls by love together knit – 1800180518101813181818201835
- The Lord Will Make the Way – Charles Albert Tindley – The hills of life which you must climb – 190119091916
- The Storm is Passing Over – Charles Albert Tindley – Courage my soul and let us journey on – 190519091916
- Thetford – Hezekiah Moors – The Lord Jehovah reigns – 1809
- Thirtieth – Amzi Chapin – And am I born to die – 1813181618181844
- Thomas-Town – William Billings – Great God, how frail a thing is man – ca. 17901794
- Thornhill – Samuel Holyoke – Lord, thou hast seen my soul sincere – 1803
- Thorny Desert – William Walker – Dark and thorny is the desert – 1835
- Tis Finished – Oliver Holden – I sing my Savior's wondrous death – 1800
- Today – Charles Albert Tindley – I've wandered in the darkness long enough – 190519091916
- Tolland – Merit Woodruff – Teach me the measure of my days – 1800
- Tolland – Stephen Jenks – I'll praise my maker with my breath – 1803
- Topsfield – Alexander Gillet – Sweet is the work, my God, my King – 1795
- Topsfield – Jacob Kimball – Lo! what an entertaining sight – 1793
- Topsham – Supply Belcher – Dearest of all the names above – 1797
- Torringford – Alexander Gillet – Joy to the world! The Lord is come – 1795
- Torrington – Alexander Gillet – Here at thy cross, my dying God – 1807
- Townshend – Ezra Goff – Joy to the world! The Lord is come – 1806
- Tranquility – Jeremiah Ingalls – Away, my doubts, be gone, my fears – 1805
- Tranquility – Reubin Monday – My God, the spring of all my joys – 1816
- Transition – Oliver Holden – When God revealed His gracious name – 1796
- Translation – Hezekiah Moors – Thanks be to God, whose faithful love – 1809
- Transport – Anonymous – Ye children of Jesus, who're bound for the kingdom – 18131820182518351848
- Treasure – Oliver Holden – How doth Thy word my heart engage – 1796
- Trenton – Amos Pilsbury – How long shall I repine – 1799
- Trenton – Daniel Belknap – Save me, O God, the swelling floods – 1806
- Tribulation – Walter Janes – Our moments fly apace – 1801
- The Tribunal – Jeremiah Ingalls – And must I be to judgment brought – 1805
- Trinity – Stephen Jenks – Come, thou almighty King – 1803
- Trinity – Timothy Swan – Come, thou almighty King – 1801
- Trinity New – William Billings – O all ye nations, praise the Lord – 1779
- Triumph – Amos Pilsbury – Come, let us ascend – 1799
- Triumph – Anonymous – Tis done! Lo, they come! bright celestials descend – 1813
- Triumph – Daniel Read – Who shall the Lord's elect condemn – 1793
- Triumph – James P. Carrell – My soul, triumphant in the Lord – 1821
- Triumph – Stephen Jenks – Behold, the Judge descends, his guards are nigh – 1803
- True Devotion – Oliver Holden – I am confined to earth no more – 1792
- True Happiness – Anonymous – Oh! how happy are they – 18351867
- Trumbull – Asahel Benham – Forever blessed be the Lord – 1783
- Trumpet – Oliver Brownson – My flesh shall slumber in the ground – 1790
- The Trumpeters – – Hark! listen to the trumpeters – 1847
- Truro – Samuel Babcock – O praise ye the Lord, prepare your glad voice – 1803
- Trust – Oliver Holden – Jesus, my Savior and my Lord – 1803
- Tunbridge – Anonymous – All ye that pass by – 1778178317901794
- Tunbridge – Jacob Kimball – Our sins, alas! how strong they be – 179318021848
- Tuneful Harp – Stephen Jenks – Before the rosy dawn of day – 1806
- Tunis – Samuel Holyoke – All-glorious God, what hymns of praise – 1791
- Turkey Hills – Alexander Gillet – How short and hasty is our life – 1781
- Twenty-Fourth – Amzi Chapin – Salvation! O the joyful sound – 18131813181418351844
- Ulham – Hezekiah Moors – Blest Jesus, what delicious fare – 1809
- Union (1786) – William Billings – Behold, how good and joyful a thing – 1786
- Union – Alexander Gillet – Once more, my soul, the rising day – 1781
- Union – William Billings – I lift my soul to God – 17701786
- Unitia – Lucius Chapin – O tell me no more – 1813
- Unity – Daniel Read – Lo, what an entertaining sight – 1786
- Unity – Jeremiah Ingalls – Let strife forever cease – 1805
- Unity – William Billings – Tis by the faith of joys to come – 1770
- Upton – Timothy Swan – All honor and praise – 1801
- Ur – Oliver Holden – I love Thy habitation, Lord – 1800
- Urania – Solomon Howe – To my almighty Savior's hand – 1804
- Utica – Hezekiah Moors – O let my soul absorbed be – 1809
- Uxbridge – William Billings – Our Father who in heaven art – 1770
- Valediction – Daniel Belknap – Farewell, my friends, I must be gone – 1800
- Vanity – Jacob French – Teach me the measure of my days – 1802
- Variety – Stephen Jenks – How shall I praise the eternal God – 1799
- Various Praise – Oliver Holden – My God, my King, Thy various praise – 1800
- Venice – Jacob French – Often I seek my Lord by night – 1789
- Venus – Elijah Griswold – Let every creature join – 1793
- Venus – Elisha West – Behold, the lofty sky – 1793
- Vergennes – Oliver Holden – My heart and soul cry out for Thee – 1800
- Vermont – Timothy Swan – Come, let us join our cheerful songs – 1801
- Vermont – William Billings – In vain we lavish out our lives – 1778
- Vernal Day – Oliver Holden – When verdure clothes the fertile vale – 1803
- Vernon – Jeremiah Ingalls – Lord, what a heaven of saving grace – 18051813181818251835
- Verona – Oliver Holden – Lord of the worlds above – 1796
- Verona – Timothy Swan – From all that dwell below the skies – 1799
- Versailles – Alexander Johnson – Thy mercy, my God, is the theme of my song – 1818
- Victors – Samuel Holyoke – Sing the triumphs of your conquering – 1791
- Victory – Daniel Read – Now shall my head be lifted high – 1785
- Victory – Hezekiah Moors – Hosannah to our conquering King – 1809
- Victory – Oliver Brownson – Hosanna to the Prince of light – 1790
- Victory – Walter Janes – Angels, roll the rock away – 1807
- Victory – William Billings – To thine almighty arm we oweYe sons of men, a feeble race – 17801794
- Vienna – Daniel Read – My soul lies cleaving to the dust – 1785
- Vienna – Elisha West – How heavy is the night – 1802
- Vienna – Samuel Babcock – Ye boundless realms of joy – 1803
- Vienna – Samuel Holyoke – O how distressing was the scene – 1791
- Vine – Oliver Holden – Behold the rose of Sharon here – 1803
- Virginia – Oliver Brownson – Thy words the raging wind control – 1782
- Walbridge – Samuel Holyoke – My trust is in my heavenly Friend – 1803
- Wallace – – Soldiers of the cross, arise / Lo, your Captain – 1830183218351835184418481867
- Wallbrook – Aaron Williams – With thanks approach His awful sight – 1763
- Wallingsford – Asahel Benham – O praise ye the Lord, prepare a new song – 1790
- Wallingsford – Hezekiah Moors – Jesus the righteous! Lo, he dies – 1809
- Walpole – Abraham Wood – O, if my soul was formed for woe – 1786
- Waltham – Samuel Babcock – Now to the power of God supreme – 1803
- The Wandering Pilgrim – Jeremiah Ingalls – Wandering pilgrims, mourning Christians – 1805
- Wantage – James P. Carrell – Come on, my partners in distress – 1821
- Warebridge – Oliver Shaw – The praises of my God and King – 18081808
- Wareham – William Billings – My God, my life, my love – 17791781
- Warren – Daniel Read – Stoop down, my thoughts, that use to rise – 1785
- Warren – Lemuel Babcock – Sleep! downy sleep! come close my eyes – 1793
- Washington – Anonymous – Ye sons of men, with joy record – 1784
- Washington – Reubin Monday – Dismiss us with thy blessing, Lord – 18181820
- Washington – Stephen Jenks – When men grow bold in wicked ways – 1800
- Washington – William Billings – Lord, when thou didst ascend on high – 17781781
- Washington-Street – William Billings – Now shall my inward joys arise – 1794
- Watchman – James P. Carrell – Lo! he cometh, countless trumpets – 1821
- The Watchman's Call – William Walker – The watchmen blow the trumpet round – 1835
- Waterfield – Samuel Holyoke – This spacious earth is all the Lord's – 1803
- Waterford – Jacob Kimball – To bless thy chosen race – 1793
- Watertown – Merit Woodruff – Let earth and ocean know – 1798
- Watertown – Samuel Babcock – Jesus! my shepherd and my friend – 1803
- We'll Understand It Better By and By – Charles Albert Tindley – We are tossed and driven – 190519091916
- Weary Pilgrim – Daniel Belknap – Come, said Jesus' sacred voice – 1800
- Weary Pilgrim – Oliver Holden – Come, said Jesus' sacred voice – 1800
- The Weary Traveler – – Come all you weary travelers – 1820
- The Weary Traveler – Jeremiah Ingalls – Come all ye weary travelers – 1805
- Weeping Mary – Jeremiah Ingalls – Come all ye mourning pilgrims now – 1805
- Weeping Nature – Stephen Jenks – Nature, she shows her weeping eyes – 1805
- Weeping Sinner – Oliver Holden – Weeping sinner, dry your tears – 1806
- Welcome – Oliver Holden – Come, ye sinners, poor and wretched – 18061806
- Welcome Morn – Oliver Holden – Again the Lord of life and light – 1800
- Wellfleet – Samuel Holyoke – Praise ye the Lord; our God to praise – 1791
- Wellington – Samuel Holyoke – Lord, if thou dost not soon appear – 1803
- Wenham – Samuel Holyoke – Lord, hear the voice of my complaint – 1791
- Wesley – William Moore – With inward pain my heart-strings sound – 1810
- West Boston – William Billings – Come ye lovers of the Lamb – 1786
- West End – Oliver Holden – Awake, our souls; away, our fears – 1793
- West-Sudbury – William Billings – Here is a song, which doth belong – 1794
- Westborough – Daniel Belknap – A span is all that we can boast – 1802
- Westborough – Lemuel Babcock – Sing to the Lord, ye heavenly hosts – 1793
- Westbury – James P. Carrell – When thou my righteous Judge shall come – 1831
- Western – Samuel Holyoke – Behold, the friend of sinners dies – 1791
- Westfield (1797) – Oliver Brownson – Awake, my soul, to sound his praise – 1797
- Westfield – Elias Mann – Now shall my inward joys arise – 1792
- Westfield – Oliver Brownson – Mine eyes and my desire – 1783
- Westfield – William Billings – Not to condemn the sons of men – 1770
- Westford – Daniel Read – Far from my thoughts, vain world, begone – 1785
- Westford – Hezekiah Moors – Alas, the night! the autumnal eve – 1809
- Westminster – Nehemiah Shumway – Thou great and sovereign Lord of all – 1793
- Weston – Samuel Babcock – Jesus, the Savior stands – 1795
- Wethersfield – Justin Morgan – Ye tribes of Adam, join – 1790
- Wethersfield – Timothy Olmsted – Give to our God immortal praise – 1794
- Weybossett Street – Oliver Shaw – Joy to the world! The Lord is come – 1808
- Weymouth – William Billings – Shall we go on to sin – 1780ca. 17901794
- Whale Rock – Daniel Belknap – Death, 'tis a melancholy day – 1797
- What Are They Doing in Heaven? – Charles Albert Tindley – I am thinking of friends – 190119091916
- Wheelers Point (1770) – William Billings – On Thee who dwells above the skies – 1770
- Whitfield – Merit Woodruff – Come, thou almighty King – 1800
- Why weepest thou? – Oliver Holden – Why, O my soul, why weepest thou – 1800
- Wilks – William Billings – Almighty God, eternal King – 1770
- Will You Be There? – Charles Albert Tindley – There is a land that is free from tears – 19131916
- Williamsburgh – William Billings – Almighty God, whose boundless sway – 1770
- Williamstown – Daniel Belknap – Almighty King of heaven above – 1802
- Willington – Elisha West – Far be thine honor spread – 1793
- Wilmington – Elkanah Dare – Hark! the herald angels sing – 1813
- Wilmington – Samuel Babcock – Tis god that lifts our comforts high – 1803
- Wilton – Abraham Wood – Our days, alas! our mortal days – 1793
- Wilton – Stephen Jenks – He formed the deeps unknown – 1799
- Windham – Daniel Read – Broad is the road that leads to death – 178518411913
- Windham – Oliver Brownson – Death! 'Tis a melancholy day – 1784
- Windsor – Daniel Read – He gives the grazing ox his meat – 1793
- Windsor – Elisha West – Wide as the world is thy command – 1802
- Windsor New – Stephen Jenks – How pleased and blest was I – 1803
- Winsor – Daniel Read – Sing to the Lord, ye distant lands – 1786
- Winter – Daniel Belknap – Now clouds the wintry skies deform – 1800
- Winter – Daniel Read – His hoary frost, His fleecy snow – 17851806
- Winter-Street – Oliver Holden – The saints should never be dismayed – 1803
- Winthrop – Jacob French – Whom then in heaven, but thee alone – 1802
- Winthrop – Samuel Holyoke – Dear Lord! behold our sore distress – 1803
- Wintonbury – Stephen Jenks – Alas, the brittle clay – 1803
- Wisdom – Jeremiah Ingalls – Now in a song of grateful praise – 1805
- Woburn – Jacob Kimball – Firm was my health, my day was bright – 1793
- Wondrous Love – Anonymous – What wondrous love is this – 1840
- Woodbridge – Stephen Jenks – My soul lies cleaving to the dust – 1799
- Woodford – Hezekiah Moors – Not from the dust afflictions grow – 1809
- Woodrow – Samuel Holyoke – Praise ye the Lord, our God to praise – 1797
- Woodstock – Hezekiah Moors – To the haven of thy breast – 1809
- Worcester – Abraham Wood – How beauteous are their feet – 1778
- Worcester – William Billings – How short and hasty are our lives – 1778
- Worship – Anonymous – Thus far the Lord has led me on – 1788
- Worship – Philo Sherman – O praise ye the Lord, prepare a new song – 1808
- Wrentham – Lemuel Babcock – Methinks I hear the heavens resound – 1793
- Wrentham – William Billings – The God of glory sends His summons forth – 1778
- Yarmouth – Asahel Benham – As on some lonely building's top – 1783
- Yarmouth – Hezekiah Moors – Soon shall I quit this mortal shore – 1809
- Yarmouth – Jacob Kimball – My soul, repeat his praise – 1793
- Yarmouth – Samuel Holyoke – Adieu to earth with all your joy – 1791
- York – Oliver Brownson – The God of glory sends his summons forth – 1783
- Zaara – Hezekiah Moors – O tell me no more – 1809
- Zina – Hezekiah Moors – To God the mighty Lord – 1809
- Zion – Daniel Read – How did my heart rejoice to hear – 1793
- Zion – Hezekiah Moors – Praise waits in Zion, Lord, for thee – 1809
- Zion – Oliver Holden – Lo, what an entertaining sight – 1792
- Zion – Oliver Shaw – The hill of Zion yields – 1808
- Zoar – Daniel Read – Far as Thy name is known – 1785