Draft:Walter Kirkpatrick Brice

Merge to New York Community Chorus?[1][2]

Or perhaps community chorus movement? [3] from about 193 / 194

Arthur Farwell, Peter William Dykema, Walter Kirkpatrick Brice, John Christian Freund, and Harry Horner Barnhart in 1917 at the community chorus luncheon in Manhattan

Walter Kirkpatrick Brice (died March 13, 1926)[4] was a lawyer in New York City. He had lived in Ohio.[5] He served as treasurer of the New York Community Chorus.[6]

He was part of Harvard's class of 1895 and served as president of the Hasty Pudding Club.[7] He was a member of the Harvard Lampoon[8] and delivered the Ivy Oration on Class Day.[9] Brice was submitted as an administrator for Calvin Brice.[10]

The Boston Globe published a photo of him.[11]

References

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  1. ^ "Come and Sing With the Soldiers and Sailors at the New York Community Chorus ... - New York Community Chorus. (New York.)". Google Arts & Culture.
  2. ^ "THE COMMUNITY CHORUS". The New York Times. December 9, 1917 – via NYTimes.com.
  3. ^ Stoner, Thomas (1991). ""The New Gospel of Music": Arthur Farwell's Vision of Democratic Music in America". American Music. 9 (2): 183–208. doi:10.2307/3051816. JSTOR 3051816 – via JSTOR.
  4. ^ (Organization), Players (1928). "The Players".
  5. ^ Congress, United States (1898). "Congressional Record: Proceedings and Debates of the ... Congress".
  6. ^ Bragdon, Claude (November 2006). More Lives Than One. Cosimo. ISBN 9781596053595.
  7. ^ Club, Hasty Pudding (1902). "Catalogue of the Members and Library of the Hasty Pudding Club in Harvard University".
  8. ^ Moe, Alfred Keane (1896). "A History of Harvard".
  9. ^ "The Harvard Advocate". 1895.
  10. ^ "The New York Supplement". 1903.
  11. ^ "Walter Kirkpatrick Brice circa 1920 in the Boston Globe on September 12, 1921". The Boston Globe. September 12, 1921. p. 3 – via newspapers.com.


Category:Harvard Law School alumni Category:1926 deaths

This draft is in progress as of October 10, 2023.