IMAGES

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STOPLISTS

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CONSOLES

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Builder: Unknown
Position: Unknown
Design: Traditional With Roll Top
Pedalboard Type: Concave Radiating (Meeting AGO Standards)
Features:
3 Manuals (61 Notes)32 Note Pedal4 Divisions25 Stops43 RegistersElectrical Key ActionElectrical Stop Action✓ Crescendo✓ Combination Thumb Piston(s)✓ Combination Toe Piston(s)✓ Coupler Thumb Piston(s)✓ Coupler Toe Piston(s)✓ Sforzando Thumb Piston(s)✓ Sforzando Toe Piston(s)

Stop Layout: Drawknobs in Vertical Rows on Angled Jambs
Expression Type: Balanced Expression Shoes/Pedals (Meeting AGO Standards)
Combination Action: Remote Pneumatic/Mechanical Capture
Control System: Unknown or N/A

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DETAILS

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This instrument is: Not Extant and Not Playable in this location

John Fredland on July 9th, 2020:

See Capital 10/11/1946 p. 1


Database Manager on May 21st, 2017:

Updated by James R. Stettner, listing this website as a source of information: http://www.faithworkshere.com/_documents/40%20Years%20of%20Faith%20history.pdf.

According to the online history of Faith United Methodist Church in Rockville, Maryland, "...when St. Anne's Episcopal Church in Annapolis announced it was replacing its pipe organ, Faith bought it."


Database Manager on August 7th, 2012:

Updated through online information from Ronald Ray, Jr. -- I currently own the console of this organ. The organ was dismantled and stored in a barn in the mid 1980's. The rest of the organ was parted out or perished in the climate of the barn and was then burnt. The console is a 3 manual Moller. I currently have it disassembled for storage purposes.


Database Manager on March 7th, 2008:

Identified from factory documents and publications courtesy of Stephen Schnurr. Replaced Möller opus 686. Initial plans by Richard O. Whitelegg; later consultant was Homer Blanchard, upon the death of Whitelegg. Installed in the summer of 1945 and finished by John Schleigh. Great was expressive in Choir box; Pedal in Choir and Swell boxes. There was one preparation on each of the Great, Swell, and Choir, plus a prepared Antiphonal of 11 stops with an Antiphonal Pedal of seven additional prepared stops. (The American Organist, February 1946, pages 40-41.) Organ, installed in a chamber to the side of the chancel of the church, is gone, and church now has a mechanical action organ in the rear balcony.

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Pipe Organ Database

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