Better Pipe Organ Database


James R. Baird (2009)

St. Luke's Anglican Catholic Church
65 Warrenton Road
Fredericksburg, VA

Consoles

Main


Notes

2004-10-30 - To Presbyterian, Leesburg, VA 1901 (Organ ID 4815). -Database Manager

2018-04-06 - Updated by James Baird, the builder. Pedalboard was added later, by unknown builder. It is a pull-down only, no pipes. Henry Erben Organ. This small organ was built by Henry Erben of New York City in 1851 for the Presbyterian Church in Kearneysville, Virginia. Kearneysville is now part of West Virginia. Erben founded a small factory in Baltimore in 1847 to build organs for the growing demand for his organs in the south. The Baltimore factory closed in 1863. This organ was built in the Baltimore factory, and is the only known extant organ that was built in Erben's shop in Baltimore. The silver nameplate reads: Henry Erben Baltimore 1851 The organ has a pine case, painted white with gold trim and a black crown. The one manual keyboard has 56 keys, from CC to g3 and a 13 note pull down pedalboard, which is believed to have been added later and may not be original to the organ. The size of the organ case is approximately 3 feet deep, 5'6" feet wide, and 8'8" tall. The disposition of the organ is as follows: Open Diapason 8' - 39 pipes Dulciana 8' - 39 pipes Stpd. Diapason (bass) - 17 pipes Principal 4' - 56 pipes Fifteenth - 39 pipes - New pipes from Stinkins, which replaced the original 4' Chimney Flute, ca. 1962 by Cleveland Fisher of Manassas. Extended 17 pipes in 2013 by Jim Baird for full compass of 56 pipes. The original hand pumped bellows (feeders) and reservoir had been replaced with a modern reservoir with poppet valve, ca 1962. The original hand pump is extant. A 1/4" HP motor/blower by Spencer presently supplies air for the organ. **History of the 1851 Erben** -Built for the Presbyterian Church in Kearneysville, Virginia, now West Virginia, 1851. -Moved to the Presbyterian Church in Leesburg, Virginia, 1901. -Moved to the Old Presbyterian Meeting House, Alexandria, Virginia by Lewis & Hitchcock, Inc., 1956, and placed in the front of the gallery. -Moved to Immanuel Presbyterian Church, McLean, Virginia by Cleveland Fisher, 1962. -Moved to the home of Ira (Ben) Faidley, McLean, Virginia by Jim Baird ca. 1980. -Moved to St. Luke's Anglican Catholic Church, Fredericksburg, Virginia, by Jim Baird and David Dutton, 2009. Please note: This organ is in the OHS Database as being built for Trinity Episcopal Church in Shepardstown, W.VA. in 1851. This is not that Erben organ. The town of Kearneysville, is written on the inside of the organ case for shipping. -Database Manager

2023-08-05 - Updated through online information from Fr. Truslow-Trudeau, OSB. -Jim Stettner


Stoplist

Source: Stoplist copied from submitted notes on this account, and the parish website

Fredericksburg, Virginia
St. Luke's Anglican Catholic Church

Henry Erben, 1851
James R. Baird, 2009


     MANUAL
[8’] Open Diapason               39 pipes
[8’] Dulciana                    39 pipes
[8’] Stpd Diapason Bass          17 pipes
[4’] Principal                   56 pipes
[2’] Fifteenth                   56 pipes

     NOTES
The 2' Fifteenth is non-original, having replaced a 4'
Chimney Flute. Pipes 1-17 were added in 2013-14.


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