Everything about Ira D Sankey totally explained
Ira D. Sankey (
August 28,
1840 -
August 13,
1908), known as
The Sweet Singer of Methodism, was an American
gospel singer and composer associated with evangelist
Dwight L. Moody.
Ira David Sankey, son of
David Sankey, known as the father of
Lawrence County, and Mary Leeper Sankey, was born
August 28,
1840, in
Edinburg, on the outskirts of
New Castle, Pennsylvania.
At age 16 he was converted at a revival meeting at the King's Chapel Church, about three miles from his home.
As a young man, Sankey served in the
Civil War as a soldier for the Union. After the war, he joined the IRS, and also worked with the
YMCA. He became well known as a Gospel singer, and eventually came to the attention of evangelist Dwight L. Moody. The two men met at a YMCA convention in
Indianapolis, Indiana, in June, 1870. Some months later, Sankey attended his first evangelistic meeting with Moody, and resigned from government service shortly thereafter.
Sankey married Fanny V. Edwards, one of his choir members, in September, 1863. They had three sons.
In October 1871, Sankey and Moody were in the middle of a revival meeting when the
Great Chicago Fire broke out. The two men barely escaped the conflagration with their lives. Sankey ended up watching the city burn from a rowboat far out on
Lake Michigan.
In 1883, Sankey and Moody visited the
UK. Sankey's hymns were promoted by the famous London Baptist preacher,
Charles Spurgeon, long afterwards. While in Edinburgh, they raised £10,000 for the purpose of building a new home for the
Carrubbers Close Mission. During their time in Edinburgh, the foundation stone was laid and the building remains one of the few on the
Royal Mile which today serves the same purpose for which it was built.
Sankey composed about 1,200 songs in his lifetime. From 1895 to 1908, he was president of the Biglow and Main publishing company. He was blind from
glaucoma the last five years of his life, and no doubt found a kindred spirit in his friend and music making partner, blind hymnist
Fanny Crosby.
Ira D. Sankey died
August 13,
1908 in Brooklyn.
In 1979-80, the
Gospel Music Association recognized Sankey's prodigious contributions to gospel music by listing him in the
Gospel Music Hall of Fame.
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