Edward Simms Explained

Edward Simms (10 February 1800 - 15 January 1893) was an English organist and composer.[1]

Background

He was the son of Edward Simms and born at Oldswinford, Worcestershire. He studied organ from an early age with his uncles at Stourbridge, and when ten assisted his uncle James Simms at Bromsgrove Parish Church. He went to London in 1810, and studied under Thomas Adams, and Friedrich Kalkbrenner.

In Coventry he established the Coventry Choral Society around 1836. He had many pupils of distinction, including the novelist George Eliot, and it is to him that reference is made in Middlemarch, as the teacher of Rosamond Vincy.[2] He composed numerous pieces, but published very little.

He died in Coventry on 15 January 1893.

Appointments

Compositions

He composed numerous pieces, but not many were published.

Notes and References

  1. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
  2. George Eliot. Mathilde Blind. Cambridge University Press, 2010