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Wm. Johnson & Son Opus 778 (1892)

Sacred Heart Roman Catholic Church
13 Wolcott Street
Waterbury, CT

OHS convention: 1994

Note: Not extant. Not playable. (in this location)


Images


1994 - Organ in rear gallery (Photograph from an archival source: 1994 OHS Handbook, William T. Van Pelt, submitted by Paul R. Marchesano/Paul R. Marchesano)

Consoles

Main


Notes

2004-10-30 - Status Note: There 1994 -Database Manager

2004-10-30 - Barker machine. Restored R. Hamar 1974-1982. Historic Organs Recital 18 Jun 1989. -Database Manager

2018-03-04 - Updated by Damian M. Schloming, who has heard or played the organ. I just know the Swell has a Dolcissimo. When I first submitted the stoplist, I included that stop. When I first saw it put up online, the stoplist was accurate. Now, it appears that the Dolcissimo has been taken out. -Database Manager

2024-03-30 - In 2019 a consolidation of RC churches in Waterbury closed five churches and the Sacred Heart congregation was merged with that of St. Anne's Basilica. The old church was allowed to remain open as a temporary sanctuary for use by the local Spanish congregation as a location for weddings, funerals, and festivals, pending the sale and transfer of the building. The building, large rectory, and attached school have been bought by the city of Waterbury for city offices, with closing and transfer of ownership by the end of April 2024. The Sacred Heart building is protected for 10 years, but not beyond, and the long-term future of this historic complex is in peril. The building recently closed to further religious activity and the process of salvaging the religious artifacts has begun. However, a new home for this large and imposing organ has not been identified and previous attempts to relocate it beginning in 2019 have not come to fruition. Consequently, under the direction of Cathedral organist Ezekiel Menendez, protection of the instrument has been a priority, and dismantling of the instrument began on March 18, 2024. It is being removed to a diocese storage facility along with the church's sacred artifacts and windows. The work of dismantling is being handled by the globally respected Grenzing company from Spain and will be completed by April 5, 2024. -Scot Huntington

2024-03-30 - The Barker machine was sub-contracted to Ira Bassett, who made pneumatic assistance machines for the trade. It is an inflate-to-play system--a technology that was considered old-fashioned in America by the time of the organ's construction in 1892. Following the Hook company's development of the exhaust-to-play system in the late 1870s-early 80s, their improved form of Barker technology quickly became the default system in the work of American builders thereafter, until the advent of non-mechanical action systems. -Scot Huntington

2024-03-30 - There has been some debate whether the Bellows Signal is original--it would have been superfluous on an instrument which had a water motor from the beginning and without the ability for hand pumping. It has long been connected to an electrical switch for turning on the first Spencer blower added in the teens or 20s, and may have been a control that was added for that purpose. The present blower is a 1950s Spencer with a sealed Allis motor, added second hand by Hamar in the late 1980s after the original blower failed. The large water motor is still installed in the basement and there are plans to salvage it along with the organ, but the feeder bellows were removed with the installation of the first blower. -Scot Huntington

2024-03-30 - The pitch as measured at disassembly was A438 at 72 degrees, the main reservoir pressure (static) feeding the pedal and Barker was 4" and the manual pressure was 3 1/4", slightly higher than Johnson's usual standard 3". There is a large arch behind the organ which separates the church gallery from the large tower space behind. The Choir division with a narrow windchest sits inside the thick masonry arch, while the Pedal division and main reservoir (originally with feeders) is in the large tower room behind, acoustically somewhat separated from the sanctuary and main organ. This could account for the higher than usual Pedal pressure and enormous scale of the Pedal Diapason. -Scot Huntington


Stoplist

Stoplist copied from Andover Organ Co. Records Source: Source not recorded Date not recorded

Waterbury, Connecticut
Sacred Heart Roman Catholic Church

Wm. Johnson & Son   Opus 778   1892   3 manuals, 32 stops, 36 ranks
___________________________________________________________________
 
Great
16'      Double Open Diapason         61 Pipes
8'       Open Diapason                61 Pipes
8'       Viola da Gamba               61 Pipes
8'       Doppel Flöte                 61 Pipes
4'       Octave                       61 Pipes
4'       Flauto Traverso              61 Pipes
2 2/3'   Twelfth                      61 Pipes
2'       Fifteenth                    61 Pipes
         Mixture IV                  244 Pipes
8'       Trumpet                      61 Pipes
 
Swell
16’      Lieblich Gedeckt Treble      49 Pipes
16’      Lieblich Gedeckt Bass        12 Pipes
8’       Open Diapason                61 Pipes
8’       Salicional                   61 Pipes
8'       Dolcissimo                   61 Pipes
8’       Stopped Diapason             61 Pipes
4’       Violin                       61 Pipes
4’       Flute Harmonique             61 Pipes
2’       Flautino                     61 Pipes
         Dolce Cornet III            183 Pipes
8’       Cornopean                    61 Pipes
8’       Oboe & Bassoon               61 Pipes
         Tremolo
 
Solo
8’       Geigen Principal             61 Pipes
8’       Melodia                      61 Pipes
8’       Dulciana                     61 Pipes
4’       Fugara                       61 Pipes
4’       Flute d’Amour                61 Pipes
8’       Clarinet & Fagotto           61 Pipes
         Tremolo

Pedale
16’      Double Open Diapason         30 Pipes
16’      Bourdon                      30 Pipes
8’       Violoncello                  30 Pipes
16’      Trombone                     30 Pipes

Couplers
Swell to Great • Solo to Great • Swell to Solo
Great to Pedale • Swell to Pedale • Solo to Pedal
 
Bellows Signal
Pedal Check

[Received from Damian M. Schloming  2016-02-08]

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