Better Pipe Organ Database


C. E. Morey Opus 276 (1911)

First Presbyterian
Cherry Valley, NY

Consoles

Main


Notes

2015-04-19 - Updated through online information from Scot Huntington. -- The Morey organ replaced the previous organ which had been moved from the 1828 building into the present 1878 building. A detailed history of the organs for this parish, a signed piece of wood from the previous organ upon which a repair history for both instruments is detailed, and care and use instructions from the builder, (including how to maintain the water motor), are framed and safeguarded near the instrument. <br>The organ case is a typical stock design of Morey, of oak with a pipe fence of façade basses and gold-painted dummies. The previous organ had been deemed "worn out," and Morey allowed $175 for the old instrument in trade, applied against the contract price of $2,200.00. The Session minutes reveal the organ was completed on Feb. 17, 1911 and was dedicated by Prof. Harry F. Vibbard of Syracuse University. The instrument was originally powered by a Ross Water Engine, since replaced with two electric blowers, most recently in 1982 when the organ was renovated for $3,369.00 by Darrell Helms, Malone, N.Y., and rededicated on Sunday, May 30, 1982. The bellows was original located in the basement with the Ross Engine, and the care and use instruments prescribe "in the spring when the basement bellows sweats, a fire should be built to dry them out." The builder further advises the swell shutters be left open during the winter, and closed in summer; and that when the couplers malfunction, the [global] key dip should be re-established at 5/8". This is so deep the sharps would disappear between the naturals, and is certainly a typo for the typical keydip of 3/8". Morey further advises that the organ should be seen by the organbuilder every two years. <br>Graffiti on the old piece of the previous organ's reservoir kept within this instrument states the Morey indicates it received "Readjustments to action and a general looking over on March 27 1928 By J.G. Benson and E. Smith working for E.C. Morey [sic]." Graffiti also states the organ was "repaired and adjusted August 1949." -Database Manager


Stoplist

Stoplist from console, April 2006 Source: Source not recorded Date not recorded

The Presbyterian Church
Cherry Valley, New York

Nameplate: C.E. Morey 
           Utica, New York

No. 276, 1911
Compass: 61/30
Metal pipework of spotted metal.
Stained oak casework with a gold-painted façade of speaking basses and dummies.
Stops listed in jamb order.

GREAT

Gr. Open Diapason   8'  1-17 façade
Gr. Dulciana        8'  
Gr. Melodia         8'  stopped wood bass, then open wood with inverted mouths
Gr. Octave          4'
Gr. Flute d'Amour   4'  bored stoppers, 24 open metal trebles
Gr. Fifteenth       2'

SWELL (enclosed behind vertical shutters)

Sw. Bourdon Treble  16'  t.c. wood
Sw. Bourdon Bass    16'  1-12 wood
Sw. Salicional       8'  1-12 Quintadena
Sw. Open Diapason    8'  1-12 stopped metal
Sw. Oboe             8'  Oboe Gamba, 1-12 Quintadena
Sw. Aeoline          8'  1-12 from S.D.
Sw. Stopped Diapason 8'  wood
Sw. Flute Harmonic   4'  harmonic from c25
Sw. Violina          4'
Tremolo

PEDAL

Ped. Bourdon        16' wood

COUPLERS (on-off pistons)
Sw. to Gr. 
Sw. to Gr. at Octaves (knob)
Gr. to Pedal
Sw. to Pedal

Bellows Signal
Wind Indicator

Pedal movements:
Great: Forte, Mezzo
Swell: Forte, Piano

 [Received from Scot Huntington 2015-04-19.]

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