Allen Dickenson Carden

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Allen Dickenson Carden

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Botetourt County, Virginia
Death: March 21, 1859 (66)
Franklin, Williamson Co., Tennessee
Place of Burial: Rest Haven Cemetery Franklin Williamson County Tennessee
Immediate Family:

Son of Joseph W. Carden and Mary Carden
Husband of Maria Carden
Father of Martha Ann Bosley; Elizabeth Ann Black; Captain Henry Hyde Carden (CSA); Mary Ann Carden and Eliza Ann Carden
Brother of Robert dePriest Carden; Rachel Cook; Isaac Carden; Jane Walker; Elizabeth Wray and 3 others

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Allen Dickenson Carden

http://www.lightpatch.com/genealogy/josephcarden001.html

Allen Dickerson2 CARDEN [581], born 13 Oct 1792 in Botetourt County, Virginia; died 21 Mar 1859 in Franklin, Williamson Co., Tennessee; buried 21 Mar 1859 in Rest Haven Cemetery, Franklin. He married Maria W. (HYDE) Carden

http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=42798091&ref=wvr



https://tennesseeencyclopedia.net/entries/allen-dickenson-carden/

Allen D. Carden was a singing-school teacher and compiler of tunebooks using four-shape notation. He compiled and published The Missouri Harmony (St. Louis, 1820, though printed in Cincinnati), probably the most widely used tunebook in the southern and western United States until William Walker published The Southern Harmony and Musical Companion in 1835. Although Carden had no further connection with The Missouri Harmony, nine later editions with numerous reprints were published by others through 1857.

Shortly after the publication of The Missouri Harmony Carden returned to Nashville, where he taught singing schools and published and printed two other tunebooks, The Western Harmony (1824 with S. J. Rogers, F. Moore, and J. Green) and United States Harmony (1829). Neither of these books achieved the success of his earlier effort. There is no record of a second edition for either book. However, all of Carden's tunebooks are significant because of his stated purpose to provide music for church services. Tunebooks of this period were typically not used in regular church services but were intended for use in singing societies or schools. The Western Harmony also is uniquely significant in that it was the first music published with a Nashville imprint.

During the last twenty-five years of his life Carden acquired substantial landholdings in several counties in Middle and West Tennessee, but whether he maintained his involvement in musical matters after the publication of his final tunebook is unknown.

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Allen Dickenson Carden's Timeline

1792
October 13, 1792
Botetourt County, Virginia
1827
1827
1829
1829
1831
November 9, 1831
TN, United States
1859
March 21, 1859
Age 66
Franklin, Williamson Co., Tennessee
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Rest Haven Cemetery Franklin Williamson County Tennessee