Submitted by justneedausernamepls t3_zsvvcp in philadelphia
I was watching a documentary about Christmas carols last night from the very good historian Lucy Worsley and she mentioned that a priest at a church in Philadelphia wrote "O Little Town of Bethlehem" in the 1800s. From https://www.crosswalk.com/special-coverage/christmas-and-advent/o-little-town-of-bethlehem-1457973.html:
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>Phillips Brooks, the composer of this famous Christmas carol, was the minister of Holy Trinity Church in Philadelphia and had visited Bethlehem in December of 1865. Phillips Brooks traveled to the Holy Land. The itinerary included a horseback ride from Jerusalem to Bethlehem on Christmas Eve. Back then it truly was a small village, far removed from the bustling city it would later become. By nightfall he was in the field where, according to tradition, the shepherds heard the angelic announcement. Then he attended the Christmas Eve service at the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem.
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>Something about the beauty and simplicity of that visit stayed with Phillips Brooks when he returned to America. Several years later, when he wanted a new song of Christmas for the children to sing at his church, he reached back in memory for inspiration from his Holy Land visit. The poem he wrote painted in words the sights and sounds of that little town of Bethlehem he had visited.
urbantravelsPHL t1_j1b0x7u wrote
Yep, checks out with the "History" section of the church's website - Church of the Holy Trinity (Episcopal) on Rittenhouse Square.
https://htrit.org/history/