Elizabeth Scott (hymnwriter)

Elizabeth Scott Williams Smith
BornElizabeth Scott
1708 (1708)
Norwich, England
DiedJune 13, 1776(1776-06-13) (aged 67–68)
Wethersfield, Connecticut, U.S.
Resting placeVillage Cemetery, Wethersfield
OccupationPoet, hymnwriter
LanguageEnglish
NationalityBritish, American
GenreHymns
SubjectChristianity
Notable works"All hail, Incarnate God"; "Awake, our drowsy souls"
Spouse
(m. 1751; died 1755)
;
(m. 1761; died 1769)
RelativesThomas Scott and Joseph Nicol Scott (brothers); Daniel Scott (uncle)

Elizabeth Scott Williams Smith (née, Scott; after first marriage, Williams; after second marriage, Smith; 1708 – June 13, 1776) was an 18th-century British-born American poet and hymnwriter. Prior to 1750, she wrote many hymns with the largest of her known manuscript collections containing 90 of these. The first publication of her hymns was in The Christian's Magazine, edited by William Dodd, 1763. Nineteen of her hymns were given in John Ash and Caleb Evans' baptist Collection, Bristol, 1769, and twenty in John Dobell's New Selection, 1806. Of these, one of the best known is "All hail, Incarnate God".[1] Smith died in 1776.

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