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Buzard Pipe Organ Builders

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STOPLISTS

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CONSOLES

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Builder: Unknown
Position: Console in Fixed Position, Right
Design: Traditional With Roll Top
Pedalboard Type: Concave Radiating (Meeting AGO Standards)
Features:
3 Manuals (61 Notes)32 Note Pedal4 Divisions18 Stops36 RegistersElectrical Key ActionElectrical Stop Action✓ Crescendo✓ Combination Thumb Piston(s)✓ Coupler Toe Piston(s)

Stop Layout: Stop Keys on Angled Jambs
Expression Type: Balanced Expression Shoes/Pedals (Meeting AGO Standards)
Combination Action: Adjustable Combination Pistons
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

Jim Stettner on November 29th, 2024:

Updated through online information from Gary Rickert (October 28, 2024): I "lived with" this organ for many years while it was installed in Lyons Township High School in La Grange, Illinois and I can guarantee you it never had a "Thunder Effect" as installed in the school. While it did retain the "Concert Harp" there never was a Glockenspiel, but rather a Xylophone (look at the engraving). The photos of the "jambs" are of a extant display in the high school. As for the "low wind" Gedeckt, it never was installed and both tablets brought on the same Bourdon. While this was 2935, the regulator in the Great/Orchestral side was penciled 2395 New York City and the pedal relay was built with more stops than the organ required. Alas, it was removed in the late 70's. The pipes found their way into several church organs, the console was discarded by someone in Milwaukee, but I bought the "jambs" from him. This console had something I had never seen before. To set the pistons, you would press the numbered piston above the division's tablets. Someone would come along and press them wondering what they were for, and wipe out your combinations. As of 2021, despite the "mechanical room" with it's giant ventilators having been gutted, the 3 HP Kinetic blower I36, the rectifier and cabling was still in place.


Jeff Scofield on October 19th, 2023:

From cinematreasures.org: Opened December 11, 1920 with Jack Pickford in “Just Out of College”. The Portage Park Theatre (the former name is still inscribed over the Neo-Classical style facade), was the first theatre built specifically for movies (and not vaudeville shows) in the Portage Park neighborhood of Chicago. The theatre was built for the Ascher Brothers circuit and originally could seat nearly 2,000. By 1929 it was operated by Fox Chicago. The Portage Theatre remained a popular fixture of the neighborhood for decades, becoming a second-run movie house in the 1960’s. In the 1980’s, its auditorium was divided in two by putting a wall down the middle of the auditorium.

Oddly, after the box office stopped being used, tickets were then sold in the lobby off a table and folding chairs set up school bake sale style. The Portage Theatre was shuttered in 2001 after operating sporadically for the previous couple years. The theatre was restorated and renovated, and reopened in the spring of 2006 as a single-screen, 1,300-plus seat theatre featuring both silent and sound classic motion pictures and other events, both on-screen and live. It was closed on May 25, 2013, and reopened in June 2014. It was closed in February 2018.


Database Manager on December 18th, 2012:

Updated through online information from Gary Rickert. -- I maintained this organ from 1966 until 1973- it was replaced with an electronic about 1980. Had what may have been a one-of-a-kind combination action. The thumb pistons were duplicated above the stops for each division. The action was set by selecting the desired registration and then pressing the desired piston above the stops (mechanical connection to the combination action). This was very confusing for the uninitiated because pressing these pistons would reset the pistons. I have very clear pictures of the stop jambs as they now reside as part of a display at Lyons Township High School, where the organ resided from 1929-30 to about 1980 when it was broken up for parts - the chests were destroyed at that time.


Database Manager on September 24th, 2009:

Identified through information in List of More than 5200 Moller Pipe Organs (Hagerstown, Maryland. M. P. Möller, 1928).

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