William Howard Doane (born in
Preston, Connecticut on February 3, 1832; died in
South Orange, New Jersey on December 23, 1915) was an industrialist and a prolific composer of Christian
hymn tunes. He held patents on wood-working machinery and in 1861 became President of
J. A. Fay and Company. In religious work he headed the
Ohio Baptist Convention Ministers Aid Society for the Midwest. In 1875 he received his doctorate in music from
Denison University, which subsequently named it's library in memory of him. In his musical career he edited forty-three collections of hymns and composed an estimated 2,300 works, including hundreds of original hymns and hymn settings. He is best known as a longtime collaborator of
Fanny Crosby, having written music for an estimated 1,500 of Crosby's poems. As well as hymns, Doane composed secular instrumental, vocal, and choral works, including two cantatas on the legend of
Santa Claus.