Note: Not extant. Not playable. (in this location)
2016-01-10 - A new installation, identified through information in an article on Standbridge by Eugene M. McCracken in *The Tracker*, Volume 3 Number 4. No further information has been reported to the Database, and the author does not identify the source of his information. -Database Manager
2020-11-19 - "The Corrie organ survived until 1856 when John C.B. Standbridge built a replacement. Standbridge's organ underwent two major overhauls -- the first in 1886 by Hilborne Roosevelt, the second in 1892 by H.C. Haskell -- before finally being retired by the Skinner organ in 1931." - Information from OLD ST. PETER'S PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL CHURCH, PHILADELPHIA: AN ARCHITECTURAL HISTORY AND INVENTORY (1758-1991), a thesis [MS] in The Graduate Program in Historic Preservation at the University of Pennsylvania, Frederick Lee Richards Jr. [son of the Rev. F. Lee Richards, Rector of st. Peter's Church (1970-1985)], pp 100-101. Vestry Minutes (1856) August: John C.B. Standbridge paid the first installment ($250) toward the new $2,100 organ he is making for St. Peter's -- inaugurated into service on Jan. 28, 1857. F.L.R. (Private) church notes (1886) Hilborne Roosevelt rebuilt and enlarged the Standbridge organ, adding another manual to the console. -Paul R. Marchesano
2024-08-19 - The Standbridge organ was incorporated into the (extant and still playable) E.M. Skinner organ in 1931. The facade remains unchanged according to tour guides associated with St. Peter's church. -Susanna Faust
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