Herbert Huffman
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Herbert Brown Huffman (1905–1968) was a prominent American
choral director Conducting is the art of directing a musical performance, such as an orchestral or choral concert. It has been defined as "the art of directing the simultaneous performance of several players or singers by the use of gesture." The primary duti ...
during the mid 20th century who founded the Columbus Boychoir School, now the American Boychoir School. For over 75 years, this internationally acclaimed choral group has performed in venues across the United States and in overseas locations.


Early life

Huffman was born on January 27, 1905, in Plain City,
Union County, Ohio Union County is a county located in the U.S. state of Ohio. As of the 2020 census, the population was 62,784. Its county seat is Marysville. Its name is reflective of its origins, it being the union of portions of Franklin, Delaware, Madis ...
. Plain City, founded in 1818, is a town of modest size located on the western bank of Big Darby Creek. Huffman’s parents were Hamer Isaac Huffman (1868–1950) and Cora Louise Brown (1869–1917), both Ohio natives. Hamer Issac was a
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merchant by trade. Huffman was the youngest of three brothers. Older brothers, Isaac Lloyd and Isaac Boyd, were twins. They were 14 years old at the time of Huffman’s birth. Huffman’s mother died of uncertain cause when he was 11 years old. His father took a second wife, Ella Car, two years later. Huffman attended Westminster Choir College, and was a member of the first graduating class in 1929. This residential music college, founded in 1926, was originally located in
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. It then moved to Ithaca, New York, before permanently establishing itself at
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. Graduates of the Westminster Choir College, who are sometimes referred to as “Ministers of Music,” include a large number of notable composers, musical directors, and musicians.


Family

On February 4, 1929, at age 24, Huffman married Mary Christine Southard at the Westminster Choir College in
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. Southard, a native of Marysville, Ohio, was 23 years of age at the time. She was an
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,
pianist A pianist ( , ) is an individual musician who plays the piano. Since most forms of Western music can make use of the piano, pianists have a wide repertoire and a wide variety of styles to choose from, among them traditional classical music, ja ...
, and music teacher. The couple had three children, Richard, born on March 9, 1932, Mary Jane, born on December 13, 1934, and Robert, born on May 10, 1939. After arriving in Columbus, Ohio, the Huffmans occupied various rental addresses, before settling in a house in Bexley, just east of Columbus.


Career

As a choral director, Huffman's career spanned a relatively short 27 years. However, during that period, Huffman staged hundreds of performances that were well received by critics and he created musical ensembles which have endured to the present.


Early Involvement with Choral Music

In Columbus, Huffman was employed as a choir director for several churches, including the King Avenue Methodist Church. Under his direction, the choir of that church won first prize in 1930 and 1931 at the National
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, at
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. A choir directed by Huffman also competed successfully against 76 other choirs by winning the Talbot Cup at the annual festival of the Westminster Choirs at
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. In 1934, Huffman was hired as director of music at the Broad Street Presbyterian Church in Columbus. There, he founded the Broadstreet Choir, which is still in existence.


The Columbus Boychoir School

In 1937, Huffman began efforts to establish a choir for local boys. The organization was founded as a part-time singing group. Huffman conducted auditions with his wife, Mary Christine, who accompanied applicants on the piano. The choir began to enjoy considerable success on the local level and was invited to perform in neighboring towns. Huffman indicated that the mission of the Columbus Boychoir would be to build character in young boys, to provide exceptional training without regard to religious affiliation or financial circumstance, to provide incentive for academic achievement, and to enrich cultural life through a “musical organization that is recognized throughout the country as the finest of its kind.” By 1940, Huffman had transformed the Columbus Boychoir into a fully
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day school with overnight lodging, which served as the base for the traveling choir. The Columbus Boychoir School initially occupied a property owned by the Broad Street Presbyterian Church on East Broad Street in Columbus. As it toured, the choir, popularly known as “America’s Singing Boys,” began to receive recognition that transcended its status as a local organization. Radio performances provided considerable publicity. By the mid 1940s, in keeping with Huffman’s vision, the choir had become a national institution. Huffman directed the group’s musical performances on several
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made during the late 1940s and early 1950s. These included a 1947 production titled “Favorite Christmas Carols.” In 1950, Huffman directed the choir in its performance on the
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recording of “The Lord’s Prayer; O Holy Night.” In 1954, the Columbus Boychoir teamed with the
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on the
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production “Arrigo Boito Mephistofele ‘Prologue.’” The final recording in which Huffman acted as choir director was the
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record, “Festival of Song” in 1955. Huffman was also responsible for directing performances in the 1951
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telecast of
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. His work was featured in the RKO motion picture liner “America’s Singing Boys.” In September, 1950, Huffman cast the deciding vote when the board of directors of the boychoir school resolved to move its headquarters from
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, to
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. The Princeton area, centrally located among the major metropolitan areas of the east coast, meant that several prestigious venues were only a short bus ride away. According to one source regarding Princeton: :"Two local schools are renowned for music studies. The Westminster Choir was founded by John Finley Williamson in Dayton, Ohio, in 1926 and moved three years later to Ithaca, New York. It came to Princeton in 1932, added graduate course, and in 1939 became Westminster Choir College. (Today, it remains located in Princeton but is part of Lawrence Township-based Rider University.) Another leading music center came to the area when Williamson persuaded protégé Herbert Huffman to move Huffman’s boychoir school from Columbus, Ohio to Princeton. In 1950, the school acquired Albemarle, the Princeton estate of Gerald Lambert (manufacturer of Listerine-brand mouthwash), as its new home. Renamed the American Boychoir School in 1980, its student choir tours America and the World to great acclaim." At Princeton, the choir became affiliated with Huffman’s alma mater, the Westminster Choir College. Physicist
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and his wife attended rehearsals and concerts and sometimes interacted with the students. While on tour during this period, the boys traveled on a customized bus, outfitted with school desks and a piano. In 1956, Huffman stepped aside as director of the Columbus Boychoir in order to pursue business opportunities. He nevertheless remained closely associated with the organization for the remainder of his life.


Later Business Activities

In the late 1950s, Huffman established three
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restaurant
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in Columbus, Ohio. In 1965 or 1966, Huffman sold these operations and moved with his wife, children, and grandchildren to
Palm Beach Gardens, Florida Palm Beach Gardens is a city in Palm Beach County in the U.S. state of Florida, 77 miles north of downtown Miami. , the population was 59,182. Palm Beach Gardens is a principal city of the Miami metropolitan area, which was home to an estimated 6 ...
. There, he continued his endeavors in the
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business and invested in real estate.


Death

Herbert Huffman died suddenly on June 13, 1968, in Palm Beach County, Florida. His funeral was held in Marysville,
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. His widow, Mary Christine, continued to reside in
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, Florida, until her death on November 21, 2002, at 96 years of age.


Legacy

Huffman’s primary legacy, the Columbus Boychoir School continued to thrive in the period immediately following his resignation and through his date of death. In 1980, it was renamed the American Boychoir School. Following a period of financial difficulties and declining enrollment, the school closed in 2017.


Notes


References

*Chambers, Lori. Early History of the American Boychoir. (Reprinted from the Spring 2001 issue of "Notes, the Newsletter of the American Boychoir School") http://www.boychoirs.org/american/abs001.html *Columbus Boychoir to Sing Friday Night, Chronicle Express, Penn Yan, New York, March 29, 1951, page 7. *Cook, Justin P. Virtual Museum of the Columbus Boychoir “America’s Singing Boys.” http://columbusboychoir.weebly.com/index.html *Internationally Known Platform Artists to Perform for Lawrence College Artist Series, Appleton Post-Crescent, Appleton, Wisconsin, September 23, 1960, page A12. *Osborne, William. Music in Ohio. Kent State University Press, Kent, Ohio. (2004). {{DEFAULTSORT:Huffman, Herbert 1905 births 1968 deaths 20th-century classical musicians American male conductors (music) Choral conductors Musicians from Columbus, Ohio People from Palm Beach Gardens, Florida People from Princeton, New Jersey Westminster Choir College alumni 20th-century American conductors (music) People from Plain City, Ohio Classical musicians from Ohio 20th-century American male musicians