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Musician Squire Parsons Jr. (April 4, 1948 - May 5, 2025) gained national renown in gospel music as a singer and songwriter. Born in Newton, Roane County, he attended Spencer High School and was a 1970 graduate of West Virginia Institute of Technology, where he earned a degree in music. In 1975, he became the baritone singer for the Kingsmen Quartet, thus launching his public singing career. In 1981, Parsons, no longer with the Kingsmen, wrote his best known song, "Sweet Beulah Land," which was voted favorite song of the year by Singing News, a gospel music publication. He wrote numerous other modern classics, including "Master of the Sea," "The Broken Rose," "Oh, What a Moment," and "He Came to Me." All told, Parsons wrote more than 600 gospel songs. He was voted Favorite Baritone two years, and Favorite Gospel Songwriter five years, in the Singing News annual competition.
According to an article in the 2016 St. Augustine Record, the inspiration for “Sweet Beulah Land” came from his childhood church in Newton. He remembered his father leading the congregation in singing “Is Not This the Land of Beulah?” He recalled, “One morning, years later, as I was driving to my high school teaching job, my mind drifted back to a service in our little church. As I drove along, I was humming the old song about ‘Beulah Land,’ which I had learned from the hymnal years earlier. As I topped one of the beautiful West Virginia mountains, I faced a brilliant sun in all of its glory. My thoughts continued to be about the singing in our little Newton church, but this time it was a different song—one that I had never heard or sung before.”
He retired from touring in 2019 for health reasons and died of a heart attack at age 77 in 2025.
— Authored by Skip Johnson
Sources
"Story behind the song: 'Sweet Beulah Land.'" St. Augustine Record, March 3, 2016.
Cite This Article
Johnson, Skip. "Squire Parsons." e-WV: The West Virginia Encyclopedia. 06 May 2025. Web. Accessed: 10 May 2025.
06 May 2025