Anna Gardner Goodwin

Anna Gardner Goodwin, in a 1902 publication.

Anna Gardner Goodwin (October 1874 — 1959) was an American composer, mainly of religious music and marches.

Early life

Anna Gardner was born in Augusta, Georgia. [1]

Career

Goodwin wrote and taught music for much of her adult life. She assisted her husband in playing and leading music at Morehouse College, and accompanying the school's glee club.[2] Her published compositions included "I Will Follow Jesus" (1906), "Do Not Touch the Wine Cup" (1906), "Jesus Don't Pass Me By" (1906), "Praise the Lord" (1906), "Tell the Story Everywhere" (1906), "Willing Workers" (1906), "Adalene" (1909), and "I'm Lonely Just for You" (1934).[3] Her last composition, "Freedom to All March", was written to commemorate the 1951 race riot in Cicero, Illinois.[1] Goodwin's "Cuba Libre March" (1898) was included in Black Women Composers: A Century of Piano Music, 1893-1990 (1992).[4]

Goodwin was assistant house director of the Chicago YWCA in the 1930s.[5]

Personal life

Anna Gardner married the Rev. George A. Goodwin, a professor of theology at Morehouse College, in 1895. They had a son, George Jr., and daughters Janie, Anna, and Eunice. She was widowed when George died in 1914. In widowhood she lived with her widowed sister Janie Gardner Burruss in Chicago.[6] Anna Gardner Goodwin died in 1959, aged 85 years.

Her papers are archived at the Center for Black Music Research, Columbia College Chicago. Her great-grandsons David E. Robinson III and Rick Robinson both became professional musicians and composers.[7][8][1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Anna Gardner Goodwin Papers, Center for Black Music Research, Columbia College Chicago.
  2. Benjamin Griffith Brawley, History of Morehouse College (Morehouse College 1917): 96.
  3. Catalog of Copyright Entries, 1906 Musical Compositions (Library of Congress 1906).
  4. Helen Walker-Hill, ed., Black Women Composers: A Century of Piano Music, 1893-1990 (Hildegard 1992).
  5. Untitled brief news item, New York Age (July 19, 1930): 2. via Newspapers.com
  6. "Miss Janie B. Goodwin Weds C. A. Alexander" New York Age (May 8, 1926): 2. via Newspapers.com
  7. David E. Robinson III, Founder and Artistic Director, Sinfo-Nia Orchestra of Metropolitan Atlanta.
  8. Rick Robinson, Classical Matters website.
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