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Roberts' history of the church:
(1911) A choir organ was placed in a brick-lined vault specially created underneath the choir stalls; the sound rose through iron grates beneath the seats.
(1919) H.C. Haskell [sic] of William Haskell Co., a Philadelphia organ maker, removed many parts of the Standbridge organ for repairs. [The source of the problem was probably the choir organ in the vault beneath the choir stalls since water was seeping into the space after rainfall.]
Vestry Minutes (1921)
March 8: H.C. Haskell, the organ maker, has refused to return the organ pipes taken out for repair in 1919 due to a contract dispute.
Vestry minutes (1888)
June 12:
"double quartet" choir, which sings in the organ gallery, with a men and boys choir to sing on the ground floor near the chancel.
Vestry minutes (1892)
March 8:
Identified through information adapted from E. M. Skinner/Aeolian-Skinner Opus List, by Sand Lawn and Allen Kinzey (Organ Historical Society, 1997), and included here through the kind permission of Sand Lawn:
In Feyring case. Replaced by Skinner Opus 862 (1931).
Related Instrument Entries: A. [Aubrey] Thompson-Allen Co. (1989) , Unknown Builder (1974) , Austin Organs, Inc. (1970s) , Skinner Organ Co. (Opus 862, 1931) , John C. B. Standbridge (1856)
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