Katherine Hankey
Arabella Katherine Hankey (12 January 1834 – 9 May 1911)[1] was an English missionary and nurse who is best known for being the author of the poem The Old, Old Story, from which the hymns "Tell me the old, old story" and "I Love to Tell the Story" were derived.[2][3]
Biography
Hankey was born in 1834, the daughter of a prosperous banker in London. Her family were devout Anglicans and members of the Clapham Sect. She was inspired by the Methodist revival of John Wesley and organised and taught in Sunday schools in London. She then did missionary work as a nurse in South Africa, assisting her brother.[2]
In 1866, she had a serious illness and was bedridden for a long convalescence.[3] During this time, Hankey wrote her long poem, entitled The Old, Old Story,[4] with 100 verses in two parts: The Story Wanted and The Story Told.[2]
She recovered from the illness and lived to the age of 77, dying in 1911.[citation needed]
See also
- English women hymnwriters (18th to 19th-century)
References
- ^ Arabella Katherine Hankey, CyberHymnal.org
- ^ a b c Warren Shiver (9 November 2007), Stories Behind The Hymns, The Gaffney Ledger
- ^ a b "Arabella Katherine Hankey". Archived from the original on 30 January 2012. Retrieved 27 February 2009.
- ^ Tell Me the Old, Old Story, retrieved 2 June 2015
External links
- Works related to Katherine Hankey at Wikisource
- 1834 births
- 1911 deaths
- English Anglican missionaries
- Evangelical Anglicans
- Christian hymnwriters
- English hymnwriters
- Christianity in London
- English women poets
- 19th-century English poets
- 19th-century English women writers
- 19th-century English musicians
- Anglican missionaries in South Africa
- Anglican poets
- British women hymnwriters
- 19th-century women musicians
- British expatriates in South Africa