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Scarborough Presbyterian Church, Briarcliff, New York | church website | Specification
J.H. & C.S.Odell Opus 327 (1894) | II/30 | Electropneumatic Key and Stop Action

Our Opus 327, as well as the church itself, was a gift from Mrs. Elliott Shepard as a memorial to her husband.

The architects of record for the church are Haydel and Shepard, a short-lived partnership of Stanford White's nephew, Haydel, and a nephew of Elliott Shepard. Their only other significant building, the Fabbri Mansion on Manhattan's 64th street, echoes the neo-classical style of both Woodlea and the Scarborough Church-- briefly called, "Shepard Memorial," but organized as Scarborough Presbyterian. A reprint of the dedication announcement from the May 12, 1895 edition of the New York Times may be seen here.

The instrument was originally conceived as two manuals and twenty-six ranks, with slider chests. It was among our first (if not the first) electric action instrument; the console was originally installed in the front of the church, but later moved to the gallery.

After years of planning, restoration work has finally been completed. During the first week of February, 2009, our crew, headed by shop Foreman John Williams, worked with Auer's Rigging on the dismantling and removal of the organ. After careful restoration at our facility, the organ was reinstalled one year later in January of 2010.

Our work included a thorough restoration of all pipes, both slider windchests, console and facade.  Several tonal and mechanical changes which had been made to the organ over the years were carefully reversed. The manual keyboard compass was returned to the original 58 notes. The winding system was entirely re-engineered, providing for several enhancements, especially in the organ's electro-pneumatic stop action system, which now has its own independent high-pressure reservoir. New facade casework and paneling were fabricated to better match existing architectural elements.

The final result closely resembles the 1894 specification, with certain concessions where we and Organist Kenneth Potter felt appropriate.  The organ will be featured in the March 2011 issue of The Diapason magazine.

To launch the gallery of photos, click on the image at right.

 

In Brief

 

In Detail

 

Our Facilities

 

Staff

 

Our 1898 Patent

 

Our Opus List

 

Past Directors

 

Our British Roots

 

Victorian Manhattan

 

After 1928

 

Our New Beginning

 

The Shop

 

The Mill

 

The Voicing Machine

 

The Bench

 

Edward Odell

 

John N. Williams

 

David Wason

 

Scotty Giffen

 

Richard Hamar

 

Stewart Skates

 

William H. Odell

 

Caleb H. Odell

 

George W. Odell

 

New Instruments

 

Projects

 

Historic Instruments

 

Available Instruments

 

UCC, Orange

 

St. Ann's, Nyack

 

UMC of Westport and Weston

 

St. Ann's, Bridgehampton

 

Scarborough Presbyterian

 

West Point

 

St. John's, Newport

 

Fair Street Church

 

Old South Haven Presbyterian

 

First Lutheran, Waterbury

 

St. Mark's, Glastonbury

 

St. Charles Borromeo

 

Troy Music Hall

 

Temple Emanu-El

 

Hyde Park, New York

 

Opus 80

 

Opus 378 (1901)

 

New Pipe Organs

 

Consoles

 

Restoration

 

Pipe Shop

 

Custom Fabrication

 

Pipe Organ Service

 

Consultation

 

CD: In Perfect Peace

 

CD: Opus 645

 

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