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STOPLISTS

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CONSOLES

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Builder: Unknown
Position: Unknown
Design: Unknown
Pedalboard Type: Unknown
Features:
2 Manuals 3 DivisionsTubular Pneumatic (Unknown) Key ActionTubular Pneumatic (Unknown) Stop Action

Stop Layout: Unknown
Expression Type: Balanced Expression Shoes/Pedals (Details Unknown)
Combination Action: Unknown
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

Database Manager on June 10th, 2008:

Updated 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:
Replaced by Aeolian-Skinner Opus 1303 in 1955.


Database Manager on September 19th, 2007:

Identified through on-line information from James R. Stettner. -- According to the church website, this was a Hutchings rebuild of the 1888 Johnson & Son tracker (Op. 704) built for the previous edifice. A picture on the church website shows a large pipe facade in an arch at the front on the right side. This seems to have been retained from the Hutchings when the Aeolian-Skinner was installed in 1955. According to the Johnson opus list, the Johnson/Hutchings was said to have been moved to First Baptist in Holland, New York and later sold to Providence Lutheran in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, but was never set up. I saw the chassis of this organ in the Lee workshop in Knoxville, Tennessee during my years as a student at Maryville College (1982-85). Its subsequent disposition is unknown.

Related Instrument Entries: Wm. Johnson & Son (Opus 704, 1888)

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Pipe Organ Database

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