Better Pipe Organ Database


Moline Organ Co. (1883)

St. Mary's Roman Catholic Church
516 Fillmore Street
Davenport, IA

OHS convention: 1986


Images


1967 - Organ description from the 1967 Centennial Celebration of St. Mary Catholic Parish written by William Smith (Photograph from an archival source: William Smith, submitted by Lars Anderson/Lars Anderson)

1986 - Console (Photograph from an archival source: 1986 OHS Handbook, submitted by Paul R. Marchesano/Paul R. Marchesano)

1986 - Organ in rear gallery (Photograph from an archival source: 1986 OHS Handbook, submitted by Paul R. Marchesano/Paul R. Marchesano)

Consoles

Main


Notes

2013-10-28 - Updated through online information from Richard C Greene. -Database Manager

2014-03-31 - Updated through online information from Lindsay Steele. -Database Manager

2021-09-04 - A 2020 Television video mentions that St. Mary's Church is now closed, and that they were seeking a new home for the organ. The [video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rTCLbx7FdMQ) includes sounds of the organ. -John Igoe

2022-11-18 - St. Mary's Catholic Church was closed and sold to Humility Homes, a local organization, who turned St. Mary's into a second hand resale store. However, they opted to keep the organ in the loft, and it is still maintained and used for public events. -Riley Sindt

2023-09-18 - St. Mary Catholic Church in Davenport, Iowa was decomisioned in 2020 and sold to the homeless housing program, Humility Homes and Services created by the Sisters of the Humility of Mary. The pipe organ is serviced and played for fund raising concerts. The pipe organ remains in very good condition and retains her warm, full and romantic period voice. -Lars Anderson

2025-04-21 - Updated through online information from Jayson Engquist (April 18, 2025): This is an excerpt from a story in the local paper (Davenport, IA) about the organ in St. Mary's Catholic church that is closing. In addition to planning ceremonies, locals have taken up the cause of finding a new home for the church’s organ, believed to be the oldest playing pipe organ in the Mississippi River Valley. It is the organ for which Anderson feels the most affinity. That’s partly because he grew up with it and partly because it is a uniquely magnificent musical instrument. “I sang with her as a child,” Anderson said. “As a working class kid in a family of five, I didn’t know of the Quad-City Symphony Orchestra, but I did know the majesty of sound of a real organ.” The organ was built by the Moline Pipe Organ Co., founded by two men from London. It contains 1,000 pipes, ranging from 16 feet tall that have the lowest “voice” to about two feet tall that have the highest. One not familiar with organs can easily get lost as Anderson extols, with growing excitement and detail, all the features of the “voice of St. Mary’s.” There are the double keyboard, the pedals and the mechanisms that can change the sound to that of a trumpet, flute, violin or bass and that can allow the player to sound four octaves simultaneously. Because it is impossible to describe in words how magnificent the organ sounds, a concert has been scheduled for 1 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 10, on the grounds so that people can hear for themselves. The concert’s goal of finding a new home for the instrument. And because not every musician is capable of playing an organ to its full potential, Anderson has hired Chris Nelson, organist and music director at St. Paul’s Lutheran Church, Davenport, to perform the concert. Nelson, who also is on the music faculty at Augustana College, Rock Island, is expected to “play the socks off her,” Anderson said. The concert “will awaken our sleeping beauty,” he continued. “They (the audience) will be shocked when they hear her.” In order for people to hear from their outside seats, the windows of the church will be open and a speaker system will be set up. Following the concert, there will be ‘open bench’ opportunity in which organists who would like to play the historic organ can do so for 10-minute intervals. “This is a church organ and this is a church, but this is not a church service,” Anderson said. Musicians can play the Beatles and Queen if they want. “We welcome them to come and surprise us.” Because the organ is such a treasure, the group is hoping to save it by raising $50,000 to have an organ specialist “take it apart, fix what needs fixing and move her” to an entity that will use it, Anderson said. “A pipe organ is a living and breathing thing,” he explained. If it is not cared for and played, “it will just die and get to the point where it won’t be affordable to fix. “All we need is a new home for her.” -Jim Stettner


Stoplist

OHS Convention Handbook, 1986, p. 30 Source: Source not recorded June 1986

Davenport, Iowa
St. Mary's R. C. Church

Moline Organ Co. 
GREAT 58

16' Sub Bass         58w
8' Open Diapason     58m
8' Dulciana          58m
8' Melodia           58w
4' Principal         58m
4' Flute d' Amour    58w&m
2 2/3' Twelfth       58m
2' Fifteenth         58m
8' Trumpet           58m

SWELL 58

8' Open Diapason     58w&m
8' Salicional        51m (1-7 St. Diap.)
8' Stopped Diapason  58w
8' Quintadena        58m
4' Fugara            58m
2' Violini (sic.)    58m
8' Oboe TC           46m
8' Bassoon           12m
   Tremolo (original label missing)

PEDALE 27

16' Grand Open Diapason  27w
16' Lieblich Bourdon     27w
    Pedale Check  

COUPLERS

Great to Pedale
Swell to Pedale
Swell to Great

COMPOSITION PEDALS

Gr. Piano
Gr. Forte
Sw. Piano
Sw. Forte
Great to Pedale (reversible)

Balanced Swell Pedal
Mechanical Action
 

 [Received from John Speller 2012-07-06.]

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