Better Pipe Organ Database


David E. Wallace (2000)

Diamond Hill United Methodist Church
521 E Putnam Ave
Greenwich: Cos Cob, CT

Images


2013-10-20 - Sanctuary Interior, Chancel, and Organ Case (Photograph by Edward Odell/Database Manager)

2013-10-20 - Chancel and Organ Case (Photograph by Edward Odell/Database Manager)

Consoles

Main


Notes

2013-12-20 - This entry describes an original installation of a new pipe organ. Identified by James R. Stettner, based on information from a photograph posted by Edward Odell on his Facebook page.. -- -Database Manager

2015-04-18 - Updated through online information from scot huntington. -- Originally built for the Presbyterian Church in Marion, N.Y., it was sold ca. 1992 to the Good Shepherd Episcopal Church in Webster, N.Y., and replaced with a new instrument with the construction of a new sanctuary, then sold through the Organ Clearing House to Cos Cob in 2000, replacing a failing 1959 electronic. <br>The first organ in the Cos Cob church was a ca. 1882 two-manual Reuben Midmer--very similar tonally, in size and appearance to the Morey--and lasting until replacement by the electronic. <br>At the time of the instrument's installation in Cos Cob, the front of the church was rebuilt to accommodate it, and it is installed on the main floor of the church, essentially in a pit below the raised chancel platform. Purchased and installed on a limited budget, in 2015 the instrument is tonally unaltered, the windchests retabled and the reservoir and feeders releathered; but it remains in need of a thorough mechanical restoration. -Database Manager

2016-01-02 - Updated through online information from Scot Huntington. <br>An unsuccessful attempt at a mechanical restoration in 2010 resulted in the instrument being unplayable for over half the year, and the church was seriously considering replacing the instrument with another electronic imitation. Ultimately, S.L. Huntington & Co. of Stonington, CT, re-restored the organ both tonally and mechanically between May and October, 2015.<br><br>The previous 2010 work replaced all the original action material except the Swell and Pedal squares. The two sets of original wooden Swell squares had deteriorated beyond reuse, and were replaced with replica squares in 2015. All non-original action components were replaced with replicas of the originals, using Morey No. 248 (1908), St. John's Lutheran Church, Lyons, New York, as the reference model.<br><br>At some point prior to the move to Cos Cob, the original Swell Oboe Gamba 8' was replaced from tenor-c with a recycled set of Oboe pipes, retaining the original Quintadena basses 1-12 and top octave of gamba pipes. At the time of the organ's installation in Cos Cob, the Spencer Orgo-blo originally provided for the former Midmer organ was retained, but replaced two years later with a new Laukhuff blower by David Wallace. The church is notable as having been the wedding site for Tom Thumb in 1945, and attended by many luminaries of the show-business world. -Database Manager

2016-01-24 - Updated through online information from Scot Huntington. -Database Manager


Stoplist

stoplist from console, April 27, 2015 Source: Source not recorded Date not recorded

Cos Cob, Connecticut
Diamond Hill United Methodist Church

C.E. Morey, No. 287, 1912

Compass: 61/27 (flat pedalboard has radiating sharps)
Pitch: A435
Pressure: 75 mm (3")

GREAT
Gr. Open Diapason    8' 1-20 facade
Gr. Melodia          8' 1-12 stopped wood; arched upper lips
Gr. Dulciana         8'
Gr. Octave           4'
Gr. Fifteenth        2'

SWELL (enclosed, vertical shutters)
Sw. Violin Diapason  8' 1-12 Quintadena basses
Sw. Stopped Diapason 8' bored stoppers #38-61; arched upper lips 
Sw. Aeoline          8' 1-12 common with St. Diap.; box beards
Sw. Vox Celeste      8' 49 pipes from t.c. identical to Aeoline, tuned sharp
Sw. Flute d'Amour    4' wood, bored stoppers and arched upper lips; #38-61 open metal
Sw. Oboe             8' 1-12 Quintadena basses (original); rank was originally an Oboe Gamba,
                        present reed pipes of unknown provenance and date, 
                        top octave original Gamba pipes; new rackboard
PEDAL
Ped. Bourdon        16' divided bottom octave and treble, at sides of instrument
                        bottom octave narrow scale, becoming progressively deeper as scale descends,
                        arched upper lips

COUPLERS by on-off pistons below their respective keyboards
Sw. - Gr.
Gr. - Pedal
Sw. - Pedal

MECHANICALS
Tremolo (beater type, affects Swell)
Bellows Signal (unlabeled knob under Gr. keyboard, now controls blower switch)
Four unlabeled combination pedals:
  Great: Forte, Piano
  Swell: Forte, Piano
Balanced mechanical Swell expression pedal, positioned centrally

Double-rise reservoir with inverted fold and two feeders: operational
New Ventus blower 2002; old Spencer from former organ originally reused, still in cellar 2015, derelict
Oblique stopknobs
Organ originally cone tuned, pipes recently trimmed and fitted with new slide tuners
The original ivory naturals have recently been recovered with a synthetic resin
 

 [Received from scot huntington 2015-04-16.]

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