Something not quite correct?Suggest an Edit
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.
Something missing or not quite correct?Add ImageorSuggest an Edit
Something missing or not quite correct?Add StoplistorSuggest an Edit
Something missing or not quite correct?Add ConsoleorSuggest an Edit
Updated through online information from Don Daley. -- Instrument abandoned following the installation of the Flentrop at the West end of the cathedral; parted out in the late 1990s to Nelson Barden and Quimby.
Identified through online information from Jeff Scofield. -- The contract was for the rebuilding of Skinner Op. 140, which included a new four-manual console utilizing the Skinner shell, the addition of three new stops and chests in the Swell (upperwork) and the extension of the Pedal 16' Violone upwards by 24 pipes. "The Nave [division] consists of one rank, a very powerful, large-scale Tuba (pressure about 15 inches). It is located approximately under the narthex floor and speaks through an opening in the floor at the rear of the church. The opening is covered vertically by a glass enclosure about 8 ft. high to modify the blast for those sitting near it and to keep dirt out of the reeds below, although most of them to 4 ft. are mitered."
Related Instrument Entries: Ernest M. Skinner Company (Opus 140, 1906)
Something missing or not quite correct?Add NoteorAdd WebpageorAdd Cross ReferenceorSuggest an Edit