Wm. Johnson & Son
Opus 856, 1898

Trinity Episcopal Church

227 Sherman Street
Watertown, NY, US

Instrument ID: 22868 ● Builder ID: 3181 ● Location ID: 9759
⬆️ These are database IDs that may change. Don't use as academic reference.EXPLORE IMAGES

Something not quite correct?Suggest an Edit

Plenum Organ Company

🤝 Instrument entries in New York sponsored by:

We are grateful for the generous support of our sponsors, who make it possible for us to continue our mission of preserving and promoting the rich history of pipe organs across the globe.

IMAGES

Category:
Only show images in a specific category ☝️

Something missing or not quite correct?Add ImageorSuggest an Edit

STOPLISTS

No stoplist details are available. If you have stoplists, please consider sharing them with us.

Something missing?Add StoplistorSuggest an Edit

CONSOLES

Selected Item:
View additional console entries if they exist ☝️

Builder: Unknown
Position: Unknown
Design: Unknown
Pedalboard Type: Unknown
Features:
3 Manuals 30 Stops

Stop Layout: Unknown
Expression Type: Unknown
Combination Action: Unknown
Control System: Unknown or N/A

Something missing or not quite correct?Add ConsoleorSuggest an Edit

DETAILS

Switch between notes, documents, and blowers ☝️
This instrument is: Not Extant and Not Playable in this location

Database Manager on October 18th, 2016:
Updated through online information from William Dunklin. <br>From the church's website: <br>"In 1889 the cornerstone of the third, and present, church building was laid, and the church was consecrated in 1890. The E. & G.G. Hook organ was moved from the old church to the new church and it continued to serve until 1898, when a new three-manual organ by Johnson & Son of Westfield, Mass., was installed and first was used on Easter Sunday 1898. This instrument contained 30 stops and served Trinity Church until 1924, at which time Emma Flower Taylor presented the parish with a new three-manual organ of 40 stops built by the Skinner Organ Company of Boston, Massachusetts."

Database Manager on January 19th, 2006:
Identified through information adapted from <i>E. M. Skinner/Aeolian-Skinner Opus List</i>, by Sand Lawn and Allen Kinzey (Organ Historical Society, 1997), and included here through the kind permission of Sand Lawn: <br><i> Replaced by E. M. Skinner Opus 457 (1924).</i>

Something missing or not quite correct?Add NoteorAdd WebpageorAdd Cross ReferenceorSuggest an Edit

Pipe Organ Database

A project of the Organ Historical Society