C. S. Haskell [Haskell Pipe Organ Manufacturing Co.]
1897

St Andrew Protestant Episcopal Church / St. Andrew and St. Monica

3600 Baring Street
Philadelphia: West Philadelphia, PA, US

29 Ranks - 1,645 Pipes
Instrument ID: 65484 ● Builder ID: 1014 ● Location ID: 56843
⬆️ These are database IDs that may change. Don't use as academic reference.EXPLORE IMAGESVIEW STOPLIST

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IMAGES

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STOPLISTS

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CONSOLES

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Builder: C. S. Haskell [Haskell Pipe Organ Manufacturing Co.]
Position: Unknown
Design: Unknown
Pedalboard Type: Unknown
Features:
3 Manuals (61 Notes)30 Note Pedal

Stop Layout: Unknown
Expression Type: Unknown
Combination Action: Unknown
Control System: Unknown or N/A

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DETAILS

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Exhibited in the 1996 OHS convention(s)
This instrument is: Not Extant and Not Playable in this location

Paul R. Marchesano on January 17th, 2026:
The organ was discarded several years ago. Console removed. Eletronic substitute installed. The organist reports there are some pipes still behind the facade.

D.Damien Jones on March 13th, 2024:
Instrument was removed by Grafton Organ Company and replaced with a Allen in the early 2000's. Nothing remains but the facade.

Paul R. Marchesano on October 20th, 2022:
Built by C. S. Haskell c.1897, with tubular- or electro-pneumatic action to slider chests, it is housed in a chamber located over the sacristy. It is listed by Haskell as a three-manual instrument; perhaps the firm considered it as "prepared for" the addition of a choir or solo division. There is certainly room for the addition of another division in the huge chamber, which is the size of a small railway station. The organ was provided with a replacement console by Edgar H. Mangam of Philadelphia around 1976, but is tonally unaltered. The Great is on two massive chests, and has two prepared-for stops. The Swell, on one chest of truly heroic proportions, has four prepared-for stops. The Stopped Diapason 8' has pierced stoppers; the Dolce Celeste 8' has an octave of capped basses; the "Gemshom" 4' is not tapered and is actually a principal; the Cornopean is not harmonic.

Paul R. Marchesano on January 14th, 2021:
The congregation was known as St. Ansrew's from 1851-1965 when they merged with St. Monica's to become The Church of St. Andrew and Monica.

Paul R. Marchesano on January 14th, 2021:
A 1910 ad in *The Philadelphia Inquirer* lists an organ installed here by Bates & Culley. This project was likely a rebuild or repair to the Haskell organ.

Paul R. Marchesano on November 19th, 2020:
Built by Charles S. Haskell, and appeared on an opus list published by the firm in *The Diapason*, January, 1909.

Related Instrument Entries: Bates & Culley (1910 ) , Russell Meyer & Associates (Opus 10, 2007)

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