Harvey Bartlett Gaul
Harvey Bartlett Gaul (b. 12 Apr 1881, Brooklyn; d. 1 December 1945, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) was an American composer, organist, choirmaster, lecturer, music critic, and writer from Pittsburgh. He is memorialized by an annual award — the Harvey Gaul Memorial Composition Contest (aka The Harvey Gaul Prize) — bestowed to composers for outstanding work.
He was an organist for 35 years (1910–1945) at Calvary Episcopal Church, Pittsburgh. He is well known as a composer of church music.
Harvey Gaul Prize winners
Harvey Gaul Award of the State Federation of Music Clubs (established while he was alive)
- 1942 — Catherine Latta
1946: Friends of Harvey Gaul, Inc., contest administrator and sponsor
- 1947 — Joseph W. Grant, Albuquerque, Scherzo for organ
- 1947 — Robert Elmore, Wayne, Pennsylvania, The Lord Will Come, for mixed voice anthem
- 1947 — Francis McCollin, Philadelphia, O Little Town of Bethlehem,, for small choir anthem
- 1954 — Clifford Taylor
1960: Friends of Harvey Gaul, Inc., and the Carnegie Institute of Technology Department of Music, contest co-administrators and cosponsors
- 1961 — Richard C. Moffatt (1927–1983)
- 1962 — Merrill Ellis
- 1969 — Marles Nole Smith (Hon. Mention), Two Movements for Violin and Organ
- 19?? — Fisher Tull
- 1972 — Jan Bach (tie), Three Sonnette on Woman, for tenor voice and harpsichord
- 1972 — Wesley Ward (tie), University of Pittsburgh
- 1975 — Robert E. Jager
- 1975 — Tom Wirtel (2nd place), Violin and Piano Sonata[1]
1980: The Pittsburgh New Music Ensemble, contest administrator and sponsor
- 1983 — Robert D. Morris
- 1989 — C. Bryan Rulon
- 1991 — David Cleary
- 1997 — Derek Bermel
- 1999 — Brett Dietz (Hon. Mention)
- 2001 — Matthew Fields (Hon. Mention)
- 2001 — Pierre D. Jalbert
- 2003 — Daniel Kellogg
- 2005 — David T. Little
- 2007 — Stacy Garrop
- 2007 — Robert Paterson (Hon. Mention)
- 2007 — Wang Jie (Hon. Mention)
- 2009 — Ned McGowan
- 2009 — D. J. Sparr (Hon. Mention)
- 2009 — Clint Needham (Hon. Mention)
- 2011 — Ted Hearne
- 2011 — Dan Visconti (Hon. Mention)
- 2011 — Sean Friar (Hon. Mention)
- 2013 — Dan Visconti
- 2013 — Amy Beth Kirsten (Hon. Mention)
- 2013 — Kyle Duffee (Hon. Mention)
- 2013 — Viet Cuong (Hon. Mention)
Notable students
Family
Harvey Bartlett Gaul married Harriette Lester Avery (b. 1886, Youngstown, Ohio) June 13, 1908, in Cleveland, Ohio. They had a two children: a son and a daughter.
The son, James Harvey Gaul, had been an archeologist (Harvard class of 1932, PhD Harvard 1940). During World War II, as a U.S. Naval Reservist Lieutenant, he died by German firing squad in late January 1945 at the Mauthausen Concentration Camp near Linz, Austria. Having worked with the Office of Naval Intelligence, in 1944, he had been transferred to the Office of Strategic Services. He had been captured by the Germans during a combat mission in Czecho-Slovakia, a country where he had worked as an archeologist.[2] The President of the United States presented him with the Distinguished Service Cross (Posthumously).
The daughter, Ione Gaul Walker (1914–1987), a painter, had been married to Hudson Dean Walker (1907–1976), an art dealer.[3]
Death
Harvey Gaul died December 1, 1945, of injuries from an auto accident.[4]
References
Inline citations
- ↑ Wirtel Wins 2nd in Music Contest, The Dallas Morning News, March 7, 1965
- ↑ Archeological News and Discussions, American Journal of Archeology, pg. 582, October–December 1945
- ↑ Obituary: Ione Gaul Walker, a Painter, Art Dealer and Patron, Dies, The New York Times, October 10, 1987
- ↑ News Roundup: Pittsburgh, Stars and Stripes, Middle Pacific Issue, col. 3, pg. 6 (stateside page)
General citations
- The New Grove Dictionary of American Music, four volumes, edited by H. Wiley Hitchcock and Stanley Sadie, Macmillan Press, London (1986)
- Obituaries on File, two volumes, compiled by Felice Levy, Facts on File, New York (1979)
- Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians, ninth edition, edited by Laura Kuhn, Schirmer Books, New York (2001)
- Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Twentieth-Century Classical Musicians, by Nicolas Slonimsky, Schirmer Books, New York (1997)
External links
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