Harry Benjamin Jepson

Harry Benjamin Jepson (August 16, 1870 August 23, 1952) was an American organist and composer and (starting in 1906) the first University Organist of Yale University.[1]

Harry Benjamin Jepson
BornAugust 16, 1870
DiedAugust 23, 1952(1952-08-23) (aged 82)
Education
Occupation(s)Organist and composer
SpouseIsabella James

Jepson was born August 16, 1870 in New Haven, Connecticut.[2] Jepson studied at Yale under Horatio Parker and Gustave Stoeckel, earning a B.A. in 1893 and a B.M. in 1894. He then studied in Paris under Charles Marie Widor and Louis Vierne. He was appointed instructor at Yale in 1895, eventually rising to a full professorship in 1907.[2][3] He also directed the Battell Chapel choir.[4] He retired in 1939; Charles Kullman was among the performers at the musical service in held for his retirement.[5]

Among his students were Edward Shippen Barnes, Seth Bingham, and Edwin Arthur Kraft.[3]

Jepson died August 23, 1952 in Noank, Connecticut.[2]

Yale's Harry B. Jepson Memorial Scholarship is named after him, and he oversaw the design and construction of the renowned Newberry Memorial Organ in Yale's Woolsey Hall.

Selected works

  • Ballade for organ (c. 1907), dedicated to Florence Annette Wells, New Haven area organist and 1900 Yale graduate.[6][7]
  • Veni, Sancte Spiritus, anthem for chorus and organ.[5]

References

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