and the interjacent seas and islands, returning after nine years. See " An Account of a Geo- graphical and Astronomical Expedition to the Northern Parts of Russia, performed by Commodore Joseph Billings," from the papers of Martin Sauer, secretary to the expedition (London, 1802).
BILLINGS, Josh. See Shaw, Henry Wheeler.
BILLINGS, William, composer, b. in Boston,
Mass., 7 Oct., 1746 : d. there, 26 Sept., 1800. He was
a tanner by trade, and afterward became a teacher.
He was the earliest of American composers, and in-
troduced in New England the lively and spirited
style of devotional music. This was already in vogue
in England; but, from the long popularity of Bill-
ings's compositions, it came to be called in derision
the Yankee style. Although deficient in technical
requirements, his compositions were superior in
melody to the airs of Tansur and other English com-
posers in the same style. The introduction of his
airs, which contained many fugues and melodious
phrasing in the bass and intermediate parts that
were often contrary to correct principles of harmony,
necessitated the cultivation of the art of singing,
which was entirely neglected so long as the music
sung in the congregations was confined to a few
slow, simple, old sacred melodies. Billings wrote
the words to many of his tunes. He was a zealous
patriot, and during the revolution produced a
number of patriotic pieces, including " Lamenta-
tion over Boston," " Retrospect," " Independence,"
and " Columbia," as well as verses set to the air of
" Chester," which were popular in the camps of the
revolutionary army. He published " The New
England Psalm-Singer, or American Chorister,
containing a Number of Psalm-Tunes, Anthems,
and Canons," in Boston, in 1770. The pieces con-
tained in it were deficient not only in harmony, but
in melody, and especially in accent. In 1778 he
issued " The Singing-Master's Assistant," professing
to be an abridgment of the former work, in which
the greater part of the tunes was omitted, and
those retained were improved in melody and ac-
cent. This collection grew to be very popular, and
was known as " Billings's Best." In 1779 he pub-
lished " Music in Miniature," containing thirty-two
tunes from his previous books, eleven old European
tunes, and thirty-one new and original composi-
tions. In 1781 appeared "The Psahn-Singer's
Amusement," which became exceedingly popular.
His subsequent publications were " The Suffolk
Harmony" (1786); "The Continental Harmony"
(1794); and anthems entitled "Except the Lord
build the House," "Mourn, Mourn, ye Saints,"
" The Lord is Risen from the Dead," and " Jesus
Christ is Risen from the Dead."
BILLOPP, Christopher, soldier, b. on Staten
Island, N. Y., in 1737; d. in St. John, New Bruns-
wick, in 1827. His name was originally Farmer ;
but he married the daughter of Capt. Christopher
Billopp, of the British navy, who had obtained a
patent for a large tract of land on Staten Island,
and when his wife inherited this estate he adopted
her father's name. He commanded a corps of
loyalist militia, recruited in the vicinity of New
York, during the American revolution, and, having
been taken prisoner, was confined in the jail at
Burlington, N. J. In 1782 he was superintendent
of police on Staten Island. Under the act of New
York his large property was confiscated, includ-
ing the Billopp house "(still standing, as shown
in the engraving), which he had erected, and at
which Lord Howe, as a commissioner for Great
Britain, met Franklin, John Adams, and Edward
Rutledge, a committee of congress, with the expectation of removing obstacles in the way of a return of the colonies to their allegiance. At the
close of the war Col. Billopp went to Nova Scotia,
and was one of the fifty-five petitioners for land in
that province in 1783. Soon afterward he removed
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to New Brunswick, and was a member of the house of assembly and of the provincial council there. He claimed the office of administrator of the gov- ernment in 1823, on the death of Gov. Smythe, but was unsuccessful.
BINGHAM, Hiram, missionary, b. in Bennington, Vt., in 1789 ; d. in New Haven, Conn., 11 Nov., 1869. He was graduated at Middlebury college in 1816, and at Andover seminary in 1819, being ordained as a Congregational minister the same year. Having a strong desire to carry the gospel to the
Sandwich islands, he ofl'ered his services to the American board and received an appointment in 1819. He was stationed on the island of Oahu at Honolulu, which soon became the permanent seat of government, and the chief resort of whaling and other ships of the North Pacific. His labors for
twenty years gave him a strong influence over the rulers of the islands. In 1841 he returned to the United States.
BINGHAM, John Armor, b. in Mercer, Pa.,
in 1815. He passed two years in a printing-office,
and then entered Franklin college, Ohio, but left,
on account of his health, before graduation. He
was admitted to the bar in 1840, was district
attorney for Tuscarawas co., Ohio, from 1846 till
1849, was elected to congress as a republican in
1854, and re-elected three times, sitting from 1855
till 1863. He prepared in the 34th congress the
report on the contested Illinois elections, and in
1862 was chairman of the managers of the house in
the impeachment of Judge Humphreys for high
treason. He failed of re-election in 1864, and was
appointed by President Lincoln judge-advocate in
the army, and later the same year solicitor of the
court of claims. He was special judge-advocate in
the trial of the assassins of President Lincoln. In
1865 he returned to congress, and sat until 1873,
serving on the committees on military affairs, freedmen,
and reconstruction, and in the 40th congress
as chairman of the committees on claims and
judiciary, and was one of the managers in the
impeachment trial of President Johnson. On 3 May,
1873, he received the appointment of minister to
Japan, which post he held until 1885, when he was
recalled by President
Cleveland.
BINGHAM, Judson David, soldier, b. at Massena Springs, St. Lawrence eo., N. Y., 16 May, 1831. He was appointed to West Point from Indiana, and graduated in 1854. He took part in the suppression of John Brown's raid at Harpers Ferry in 1859, and during: the civil war served in charge of trains