OHS convention: 1995
2005-01-08 - Information identifying this instrument from the Austin Organs, Inc. web site, accessed December 31, 2004: http://www.austinorgans.com/organ-research.htm. -Database Manager
2017-01-17 - Updated by William M. Worden, who has heard or played the organ. In addition William M. Worden gave this as a source of information: I once maintained this organ.. <br>Sweetest Heart of Mary, Detroit, has been confused with Sacred Heart of Mary. The error was--and remains--quite common. -Database Manager
2017-02-03 - [Manager's Note: Because the organ appears on the Austin Opus List, we will maintain this entry. We thank Mr. Worden for the details.]<br> Updated by William M. Worden <br>I think my previous attempt to clear up confusion added confusion. This "Austin" is one and the same with the organ listed elsewhere in the database as a Clough & Warren. For many years, organ buffs in and around Detroit assumed that this organ was an Austin, based on the windchests. Any nameplate was long-gone. After the convention of 1977--or maybe at the time of that convention-- some worthy of the OHS did the necessary research to determine that the Austin brothers took their skills and their windchest design to Clough & Warren of Detroit and built this organ there before founding their own firm. So the "Austin" at Sweetest Heart of Mary never really existed. Confusion was added by the past use of the name "Sacred Heart of Mary" for the church, especially by the press. To sum up, there was only one organ in one church and that's a Clough & Warren in Sweetest Heart of Mary. -Database Manager
2021-09-19 - The organ has been played since 2016 by Ronald Weiler. -Ed Bourke
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