The Knox Memorial Organ
The new Chapel of St. Peter and St. Paul, begun in 1888 to the designs of Henry Vaughan, originally housed a three-manual Geo. S. Hutchings organ, the console of which was placed in the balcony at the organ’s lowest level.
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Presiding over this instrument was James Carter Knox, who distinguished his service to Saint Paul’s School over the six decades from 1868 to 1928. In the Chapel choir room hangs an oil portrait of Knox seated at the Hutchings, its mechanical couplers in full evidence.
From 1928 to 1930, the Chapel was expanded to designs of Cram and Ferguson of Boston. Principal changes came in the addition of two bays to the chancel, a new choir room, an expanded organ chamber and sacristy, augmentation of antechapel spaces, and an exterior cloistered arcade. In this expansion, the Chapel received its second organ, Skinner Organ Company Op. 825 of 1930, which was named in honor of Knox. This instrument’s 43 speaking stops were concentrated in the Great, Swell, Choir and Pedal; the fourth manual governed a French Horn and a three-stop Antiphonal housed in an elegant new case in the antechapel. The façade (comprising the basses of the Great 16ft and two 8ft diapasons), the Pedal wood Diapason and Bourdon were retained in the new instrument.
Opus 825 was revised several times in the 1930s and ‘40s, first with the relocation of the console from the original gallery to the chancel floor, and later with revisions to the Swell reed chorus. In 1953, during Channing Lefebvre’s tenure as organist and choirmaster, Aeolian-Skinner undertook a comprehensive rebuild. Pressures in the Great and Swell were lowered; all but two stops in the Great were provided new; the Swell retained the softer 1930 material, but with new principal and reed choruses; the Choir was somewhat revised; and the Pedal was thinned out with greater independence. The Diapason, Octave and Tromba of the Antiphonal were replaced with a Gedackt, Octave and Mixture. The most dramatic visual and musical change was the introduction of a Positiv on the Gospelside canopy just inside the chancel arch. A new, low-profile four-manual console was provided. Aeolian-Skinner thought enough of the installation to feature it in advertisements and on one page of a promotional brochure, showing the Positiv beneath the fine Clayton & Bell window.
The 1930 chamber expansion had created temperature inequality and stratification, and the organ needed plenty of regular tuning to keep pace with the shifting climate of the tempestuous New Hampshire winters. Perhaps one goal of the change in Antiphonal stoplist was to remove the need to tune reeds (access is gained through a hinged panel on the face of the façade) and in general to stabilize its tuning. Such was not the result, alas; moreover, the installation of the Positiv had tuning problems of its own. Originally voiced on 2-1/2” wind pressure, the installers could find no way of providing the department with adequate wind, owing to inadequate apertures from basement space up and behind the canopy. Eventually two smaller flexible windlines had to make do for one of sufficient capacity, but still there was not enough. The solution came in raising the pressure, initially to 4” and finally to 5”, undermining the notion of the lightly-blown, crisply speaking gentle foil to the Great chorus. Even then, the department remained chronically underwinded, its tuning compromised as a result, not helped by unpredictable cold drafting off the stained glass.
Perhaps the greatest result from the 1953 rebuild was its scaling back the organ’s output. Jack Bethards and Nelson Barden both surveyed the organ in 1991, offering recommendations for mechanical and tonal renovation. Robert Leslie assumed the curatorship and oversaw a multiyear renovation that saw to basic rebuilding while boosting the organ’s tonal output and variety. The Antiphonal tuning issue was handled by providing electronic voices there (tunable from the console), and bringing those stops into the Choir to create a chorus; the Positiv was strengthened by three stops inside the main case; digital 32ft and 16ft tone strengthened the bass line; and pressures and output were raised to give the organ a greater presence in the nave. Capping the project was an imposing new four-manual console, provided by Copeman-Hart. Following English precedent, stopknobs governed all voices and couplers, and an elegant lozenge, carved by David Nugent and featuring an image of Saint Paul, was fitted into the music desk.
With the arrival of Linda Morgan Stowe as organist and choirmaster in 2002, focus was retrained upon the organ’s mechanical standing and streamlining its tonal forces. The Positiv pipework and Nave Trumpet were removed during the renovations of 2001-02; the Positiv pipework was not reinstalled at that time. Spencer Organ Company was named curators in that year. Beginning in the summer of 2003, aspects of the mechanism that had not been handled in the 1990s work were seen to, including more in-depth releathering; eventually the Swell and Choir were overhauled entirely, pressures established at the 1930 levels, and pipes cleaned and re-regulated. The Nave Trumpet was re-voiced in 2004, and new Swell chorus reeds (patterned after the 1930 models, but louder) were installed in 2005.
When Colin Lynch succeeded Ms. Stowe in 2007, the console had grown increasingly unreliable. Additionally, its height and position had proven unworkable for ready communication between organist and conductor. Eventually another chapter of the project formed, combining an effort to reinstate the 1953 console (which the School had wisely stored), a new solid-state switching system, and removal and sale of the Positiv. The renovated console arrived in 2008.
Future work will concentrate upon further streamlining of musical and mechanical forces in the Great and Pedal.