Spokane, Washington
St. Stephen's Episcopal Church

W.W. KIMBALL CO., K.P.O. 6921, ca. 1925
Harold B. Curryer, 1980's - Moving & Re-Installation, Tonal Changes & Additions


GREAT (Expressive *)                         COUPLERS
   8'     Open Diap.           (*)  73          Swell Unis. 8'           [to Pedal]
   8'     Spitz Principal           61          Swell Super 4'           [to Pedal]
   8'     Dulc.                (*)  73          Great Unis. 8'           [to Pedal]
   8'     Melodia             (Sw)  –-          Great Super 4'           [to Pedal]
   4'     Spitz Principal           12
   4'     Wald Flute          (Sw)  –-          Swell Sub  16'           [to Great]
          Spitz 12th                 7          Swell Unis. 8'           [to Great]
   2-2/3' Nazard              (Sw)  –-          Swell Super 4'           [to Great]
          Spitz 15th                 5
   2'     Flaut.              (Sw)  –-
          Chimes  (A22 – e41)      (20)      FINGER PISTONS
          Chimes Soft                           Swell & Pedal                 1 - 4
          Chimes Sust.                          Great & Pedal                 1 - 4

   Great Sub 16'
   Great Unis. On/Off                        FOOT LEVERS
   Great Super 4'                               Harp Sust.                    (h-d)


SWELL (Expressive)                           PEDAL MOVEMENTS
   16'    Melodia                   12          Expression                   (bal.)
   8'     Viola Diap.               73          Crescendo                    (bal.)
   8'     Clari. Flute              61
   8'     Echo Salicional           73
   8'     Voix Celeste        (tc)  61
   4'     Forest Flute              12
   2-2/3' Nazard                     7
   2'     Piccolo                    5
   1-3/5' Tierce                     4
   8'     Orch. Oboe        (Syn.)  –-
   8'     Trumpet                   73
   4'     Clarion                   12
          Tremolo
          Harp              [gone]  –-

   Swell Sub 16'
   Swell Unis. On/Off
   Swell Super 4'                            ACTION: E-P primary & unit

                                             VOICES: 8
PEDAL (Expressive)
   16'    Bourdon             (Sw)  –-       STOPS: 28; inc. chimes
   16'    Dulc.               (Gt)  12
   8'     Flute               (Sw)  –-       RANKS: 8
   8'     Trumpet             (Sw)  –-
   4'     Clarion             (Sw)  –-       PIPES: 636


NOTES
This organ was originally built for the Smith Co. Mortuary on Riverside in Spokane.
It served there until 19__ when the building was razed. The organ was moved and re-
installed at St. Stephen's Episcopal Church by Spokane resident Harold B. Curryer.
Several original stops were changed or deleted, and a new, exposed Spitz Principal
unit was added. The relocated organ was installed in the rear gallery of the church.
The harp is not present at the church, and was presumably removed at the time of the
organ's relocation.

Sadly, the organ has been poorly installed and sub-standard materials have been used.
The Swell Tremolo is not screwed to the floor. The main regulator has been crudely
re-leathered. A floating-top regulator was added to handle the Spitz Principal addi-
tion. It stands on its side – also not anchored to the floor – and the floating-top
is made from Naugahyde. The twelve 16' Dulciana pipes have damaged toes which have
been leaking, so the pipes have been anchored to the top of the chest with a thick
layer of silicon caulk. The relay is  rat's-nest of loose wires. Added stops have
such an amateur contact system that the Pedal 8' Trumpet and 4' Clarion can not be
used or they will stick-on. Wind lines have been made from thin-walled dryer hose.
The wind line feeding the console is only 2” in diameter, so the combination action
is slower than it should be. Access to the chamber is made by de-piping the bottom
5 diatonic Spitz Principal pipes at the sharp end, then unscrewing the chest from
the floor and moving it out of the way. The screws used to hold much of the organ
together are drywall/sheet rock screws and not wood screws.

Sources: Extant organ

 [Received from James R. Stettner 2016-09-23.]