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The
organ in the chapel has a long and distinguished history. Our detailed
knowledge of the instruments in there begins in the 17th century, when
the great organ-building family of Dallam built a new organ. King George
III paid for a new organ built by Samuel Green in 1789 and through the
19th century improvements were made by the firm of Gray & Davison.
A drastic rebuild of the organ took place in 1930 when it was decided
to move the instrument from the centre of the screen to the sides, allowing
an unimpeded vista of the roof vault of the chapel. This work was done
jointly by Frederick Rothwell and J.W.Walker & Son, a most unusual
collaboration, if not unique. Controversially the organ was equipped with
two consoles whose complex mechanisms allowed each to be played simultaneously
and independently. By the 1960s this mechanism had started to fail and
a further major rebuild by Harrisons of Durham followed in 1965 in which
the organ was completely redesigned by Sidney Campbell, organist at the
time. In 2002 Harrisons dismantled the instrument, cleaned and renovated
it, and provided the console with a new and more flexible piston mechanism.
For
a detailed specification of the organ click here. |
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