Aeolian-Skinner
Æolian-Skinner Organ Company, Inc. of Boston, Massachusetts was an American builder of a large number of pipe organs from its inception as the Skinner Organ Company in 1901 until its closure in 1972. Key figures were Ernest M. Skinner, Arthur Hudson Marks, Joseph Silver Whiteford, and G. Donald Harrison. The company was formed from the merger of the Skinner Organ Company and the pipe organ division of the Æolian Company in 1932.
Skinner period
The Skinner & Cole Company was formed in 1902 as a partnership of Ernest Skinner and Cole, another former Hutchings-Votey employee. By 1904 the partnership had dissolved, and the "Ernest M. Skinner & Company" purchased the Skinner and Cole assets, in the form of the contract for the Evangelical Lutheran Church of the Holy Trinity in New York City from the former company for $1.Between 1904 and 1910, the firm produced approximately 30 instruments, including several new instruments of Skinner's design, in the 60- to 80-stop size range.
By 1912 the firm had perfected the "Pitman Windchest" to a state of simple technical elegance. The Pitman chest allows the air to be held constantly pressurized, directly at the valves located beneath each of the thousands of pipes, which increases responsiveness to the player, and eliminates noise and other problems found with the "Ventil"-style chests, which apply wind only when a stop is drawn. Virtually all major builders of electro-pneumatic action organs, including M. P. Möller, W. W. Kimball, Schantz, and Reuter, use some form of the Pitman windchest to this day, although most have only recently begun to credit Skinner with the design and subsequent refinements that make it an industry benchmark.
in Columbia, Missouri was a favorite of organist James Thomas Quarles.
Skinner also developed and perfected numerous parts of the "actions" for the instruments, as well as the Whiffletree Shade Motor, a mechanical device that moves the expression shades in a smooth, fluid motion without the "slam" that often accompanies mechanical expression shade controls. This allowed the instruments to provide quick and responsive control of the expression levels of the different parts of the instrument.
In 1914 the Skinner Organ Factory company moved into a new factory building in the Dorchester neighborhood of Boston at Crescent Avenue and Sydney Street.
Harrison period
G. Donald Harrison joined the Skinner firm in July 1927, and slowly began to influence how Skinner organs were built. After several years of conflict between Ernest Skinner and Arthur Marks, Harrison was appointed Vice-President and Tonal Director of Æolian-Skinner in 1933. The company’s tonal philosophy continued to turn from the romantic-style orchestral instruments built under the direction of Skinner to a classically eclectic style. Organists began to look to the past to find direction for the future, and in doing so they found that they were in sympathy with the ideas being developed by Harrison. These ideas included the provision of smaller-scaled diapasons, along with more higher-pitched and mutation stops in place of large-scaled unison diapasons, color reeds and flutes.During Harrison's tenure from 1933 until his death in 1956, the tonal design of Æolian-Skinner organs changed a great deal, but retained and perfected many of Ernest Skinner's mechanical innovations. The company used Skinner's Pitman windchest, for example, throughout its existence. Also the high quality and distinctive design details of the Æolian-Skinner console were preserved.
Notable instruments built or rebuilt during the Harrison period include :
- New Haven, Connecticut: Trinity Church on the Green
- Boston, Massachusetts: Church of the Advent
- Minneapolis, Minnesota: Northrop Auditorium Opus 892C
- Groton, Massachusetts: Groton School
- San Francisco, California: Grace Cathedral Opus 910
- New York, New York: Church of St. Mary the Virgin
- Salt Lake City, Utah: Mormon Tabernacle
- St. Mark's Episcopal Church, Mt. Kisco, New York
- Boston, Massachusetts: Symphony Hall
- Boston, Massachusetts: The First Church of Christ, Scientist Opus 1203
- Jacksonville, Illinois: MacMurray College Annie Merner Chapel – G. Donald Harrison "signature" organ
- New York, New York: Cathedral of St. John the Divine
- Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Sage Chapel
- Rock Hill, South Carolina: Winthrop University Opus 1257
- Rochester, Minnesota: St Marys Hospital Chapel
- Seymour, Connecticut: Seymour Congregational Church, Opus 1262
Whiteford period
Notable instruments from the Whiteford period include:
- Detroit: Ford Auditorium. Currently dismantled. The theater will be demolished. The organ will be installed in St. Aloysius Catholic Church in downtown Detroit.
- Westminster, Maryland: Baker Memorial Chapel
- Independence, Missouri: RLDS Auditorium
- Honolulu: St. Andrew's Cathedral
- Ypsilanti, Michigan: Eastern Michigan University Pease Auditorium. Still in full working order and used for regular performances.
- New York City: Church of the Epiphany
- Atlanta: Cathedral of St. Philip
- New York City: Lincoln Center, Philharmonic Hall. Removed and incorporated into the Crystal Cathedral organ, Garden Grove, California.
Aeolian-Skinner Records
Beginning in 1954, Aeolian-Skinner produced a series of LP records titled The King of Instruments. These LPs are devoted to the tone and history of the modern organ. Volume 1, The American Classic Organ, contains a descriptive discussion written over both sides of the LP cover by Tyler Turner and Joseph Whiteford on the beginnings of the American classic organ. The five recorded sections on the record, with G. Donald Harrison as narrator describing the five selections, are "I-Principles", "II-Flutes", "III-Strings", "IV-Reeds", and "V-Mixtures and Mutations". Organ demonstrations come from the Aeolian-Skinner organs of St. John the Divine, Symphony Hall, St. Paul's Cathedral, and First Presbyterian Church, Kilgore, Texas.- Volume 1: "The American Classic Organ"
- Volume 2: "Organ Literature-Bach to Langlais"
- Volume 3: "Organ Recital" – Robert Owen, Christ Church; Bronxville, New York
- Volume 4: Edgar Hilliar at St. Mark's; Mount Kisco, New York
- Volume 5: "Music of Richard Purvis" – Grace Cathedral; San Francisco, California
- Volume 6: "The Cathedral of St. John the Divine" Alec Wyton-Organist
- Volume 7 "Marilyn Mason in Recital" St. John's Chapel; Groton, Massachusetts
- Volume 8: "Norman Coke-Jephcott at St. John the Divine
- Volume 9: "The Mother Church; Boston, Massachusetts" – Ruth Barrett Phelps
- Volume 10: "Music of the Church" – Organ and choir recital at the 1st Presbyterian Church in Kilgore, Texas
- Volume 11: "Henry Hokans at All Saints"
- ASC 502: Catharine Crozier at the RLDS Auditorium, Independence MO – Program I
- ASC 503: Catharine Crozier at the RLDS Auditorium; Independence Missouri