IMAGES

Category:
Only show images in a specific category ☝️

No images are available. If you have pictures of this instrument, please consider sharing them with us.

Something missing?Add Image

STOPLISTS

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

Something missing?Add Stoplist

CONSOLES

Selected Item:
View additional console entries if they exist ☝️

Builder: Unknown
Position: Unknown
Design: Unknown
Pedalboard Type: Unknown
Features:
3 Manuals Electrical Key ActionElectrical Stop Action

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, audio, and blowers ☝️
This instrument is: Extant and Playable in this location

Scot Huntington on May 4th, 2021:

This organ was not a Hook. Johnson & Sons replaced the Hook with a totally new organ in 1891, Op. 765, retaining only the Hook case, moved to the front of the church and widened by Johnson. What became of the Hook is unknown. The Hall Organ Co. electrified the organ and installed a new Spencer blower in 1927-28, but without any other changes. The Johnson was sold to St. John's Episcopal in Niantic, Conn. when the church bought a new 3-manual Berkshire, reusing only the historic Hook case. The Johnson was moved to Niantic by Alan McNeely where it was installed without a case or renovation. The organ deteriorated to the point it was thoroughly unreliable and in 1983 the church commissioned a new C.B. Fisk organ. The Johnson was parted out in 1984 and replaced by the Fisk loaner organ, a two-manual Hinners, itself relocated when the Fisk was installed in 1988. It is not known if Johnson replaced the Hook facade pipes lowered in pitch, or replaced them with new. The old facade pipes were reused by Berkshire, but when consultant E.A. Kelley convinced the church they were too large in scale, he replaced them in 1980 with new, narrower-scaled zinc pipes. The church originally known as the Broadway Congregational Church merged with Second Congregational in 1918 and was renamed United Congregational.


Database Manager on October 30th, 2004:

The original builder was E. & G. G. Hook (1857, Opus215).


Database Manager on October 30th, 2004:

Provided withmodern console. Rebuilt by Berkshire Organ Co. 1970 on electric Slider chests, behind Hook Case.

Related Instrument Entries: E. & G. G. Hook (Opus 215, 1857)

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

Pipe Organ Database

A project of the Organ Historical Society