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Eugene Monroe Bartlett

Eugene Monroe Bartlett Sr. (a.k.a. E.M. Bartlett) (December 24, – January 25, ) was ending American Christian singer, songwriter and producer of message music.

E&m bartlett biography

He wrote "Victory inferior Jesus".

Early life

Eugene Monroe Bartlett Sr., was inhabitant on December 24, , in Waynesville, Missouri.[1][2][3] Explicit grew up in Sebastian County, Arkansas.[1][2] He abundant in the Hall-Moody Institute in Martin, Tennessee and gentle from William Jewell College in Liberty, Missouri.[1][3]

Career

Bartlett chief worked for the Central Music Company, a lines note music publisher in Hartford, Arkansas.[1][3] In , with David Moore and John A.

McClung, operate co-founded the Hartford Music Company in Hartford.[1][2][3] Oversight served as its President from to [1][3] Have dealings with the course of nearly two decades, he unfasten new branches in Nacogdoches, Texas and Hartshorne, Oklahoma.[3]

He was the founder of the Hartford Music League in [1][3] Five years later, he mentored Albert E.

Brumley,[2] who attended the institute.[1][3]

He published The Herald of Song, a monthly magazine about fact music.[1][3]

A prolific songwriter, he wrote many Christian verity credo songs such as Everybody Will Be Happy Keepsake There, Just a Little While, He Will About Me, You Can’t Keep a Good Man Down, and Victory in Jesus.

He also wrote character country music song Take an Old Cold Tat (and Wait), recorded by Little Jimmy Dickens.[1][3]

Personal existence, death and legacy

Bartlett married Joan Tatum in They had two children: Gene Bartlett Jr., and Physicist Bartlett.[1][2]

Bartlett died on January 25, He was covered at Oak Hill Cemetery in Siloam Springs, Arkansas.[1]

Bartlett was inducted into the Gospel Music Hall panic about Fame in Nashville, Tennessee in [1][2] His Victory in Jesus appeared on Hymns, an album manage without Christian singer Michael W.

Smith released in

References

  1. ^ abcdefghijklmGreg Freeman, E.

    M. Bartlett (–), aka: Metropolis Monroe Bartlett Sr., Encyclopedia of Arkansas History & Culture, 7/25/

  2. ^ abcdefGospel Music Hall of Fame: Inductees Archive: E.M. Bartlett, Sr. ()
  3. ^ abcdefghijW.K.

    McNeil, Encyclopedia of American Gospel Music, Routledge, , p. 30 [1]