A. B. Felgemaker Co.
Opus 433, 1881

High Street Methodist Church

230 E. High St.
Springfield, OH, US

Instrument ID: 59616 ● Builder ID: 2 ● Location ID: 42290
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Builder: Unknown
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This instrument is: Not Extant and Not Playable in this location

Database Manager on May 5th, 2017:
Updated by J. A. Hefner, listing conversations with this person as the source of the information: Aaron M. Tellers (Tellers Organ Co.).<br> According to email correspondence with Aaron M. Tellers (Tellers Organ Co., with ABF archives), three Felgemaker organs were installed in Springfield, Ohio in 1881 - opus 429, 430, 433. Opus 430 was Christ Episcopal [relocated to Trinity Episcopal in London, 1918], and the other two were installed in St. Paul Methodist and High Street Methodist.<br>Mr. Tellers presumes they were shipped and installed at the same time; no spec sheet exists but the three apparently were similar.

Database Manager on May 4th, 2017:
Updated by J. A. Hefner, naming this as the source of information: Dan Walter, High Str. UMC history.<br> Not long after installation, the organ fell out of tune and required service. Felgemaker had agreed to service it for a year, but church trustees frequently had to write him to ensure that contract was upheld. Unsurprisingly, the organ was virtually unusable at the end of its life.

Database Manager on December 8th, 2016:
This entry describes an original installation of a new pipe organ. Identified by J. A. Hefner, using information found in High Str. UMC history by Dan Walter, 2016. <br>High Str. previously used a reed organ. The new Felgemaker pipe organ was installed in 1881 (cost $1950); the church was electrified ca. late 1890s but the organ may not have been. <br>It was reinstalled in 1904 when the church was rebuilt, and it was officially in disrepair by 1936 church report. By summer 1941, the organ often didn't work at all, leading to discussion about replacing it with an "electric" [electro-pneumatic] one, along with chancel renovation (enter Schantz). <br>The Felgemaker was removed in 1941, though "a few pipes" were reused in the 1942 Schantz organ, but the grand majority of the new organ was Schantz-built.

Related Instrument Entries: A. J. Schantz, Sons & Co. (1942)

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