WESTERN AUSTRALIAN PIPE ORGANS
A
short account of organs and organbuilding in Western Australia
by
J.R. Elms
___________________________________________________
Organbuilding in Western Australia got off to a slow start.
It was nearly 50 years after the first settlement of the State that the first
organ was installed in a church. In 1875 two were built in quick succession. A
Bishop and Son instrument of two manuals and pedal with 15 speaking stops was
installed in Wesley Church in Hay
Street in June 1875. This was followed in December
1875 by the installation of an organ of two manuals and pedals and 15 speaking
stops in St George's Church, the forerunner of the present St George's Cathedral.
This instrument was by Hill and Son, of London.
The next four organs to be built in
Western Australia
were all built by Robert Cecil Clifton, who was at the time a clerk in the
Lands Department of the colony. He states that he became inspired to try his
hand at building an organ through watching the installation of the Wesley
Church instrument. He found a magazine which gave instructions for the building
of a small organ, and set to work. His first instrument was completed in 1878
and was rented by the vestry of St John's
Church, Fremantle until replaced by a
larger instrument in 1884, also built by Clifton.
Clifton's
second organ was built for Johnston Memorial Congregational Church, Fremantle
in 1880. This also was a small organ of two manuals and a dozen stops. It was
followed in 1884 by Clifton's largest instrument,
that which he built for St John's
Church, Fremantle to
replace the small organ installed as a temporary measure in 1878. The new
instrument was large by the standards of the colony with 17 speaking stops; the
smaller instrument it replaced was sold to St Matthew's Anglican Church, Guildford where it remained for about 26 years.
Clifton built two more organs, one of six ranks in 1886 for an exhibition
of work in Perth, and a second for the music
room in his home in Adelaide Terrace, Perth.
The latter was completed in 1902. Of the five organs built by Robert Cecil
Clifton four remain. The 1878 instrument is in use in St Aidan's Uniting Church,
Claremont; that of 1880 which served for some
years in Bunbury has been demolished; the 1884 organ in St Johns Church,
Fremantle is still in that church, and has all of its original pipework intact,
although fitted with new chests and electric action about 30 years ago. In 1993
this instrument was again rebuilt with the original pipework returned to the
great and pedal chests but with the swell additions of the first rebuild
retained, part being used to provide a third manual (choir organ). The organs
built in 1886 and in 1902 are still substantially in their original condition
and are in use at the Old Cathedral of St John the Baptist in Kalgoorlie, and St Alban's Anglican Church in
Highgate respectively.
In the period from 1890 to 1900 a
number of organs were imported from the United Kingdom. The imported
instruments organs consisted mainly of small English instruments by Hill, Monk,
Atterton, Bishop, Kirkland and others, with two larger instruments, a Bishop
and Son for St Patrick's RC Church, Fremantle, and a fine Norman and Beard of
16 speaking stops for Trinity Congregational Church in Perth. The only contribution
from an Australian builder during this period, apart from Clifton's opus V, was Alfred Fuller's small
instrument for Scots Church Fremantle. It was not until 1908 that any volume of
organs from the eastern states of Australia entered the Western
Australian market. During the period from 1900 to 1923 a number came from J.E.
Dodd of Adelaide.
Most of these consisted of two manuals and pedal with less than a dozen stops.
Two notable exceptions were the 1908 Dodd instrument for Wesley Church, Perth, and that of 1910
for St Mary's Catholic Cathedral. These were sister organs, well-endowed two
manual instruments of close to 30 speaking stops. Later, in the 1920s, some
good quality instruments came from Adelaide
builder Roberts Ltd, instruments of about the same size as Dodd's. Early in the
century one Fincham organ was imported by Mowbray Bunbury for his home in
Balingup; this was Fincham's only contribution to this State. There was no
local organ builder of any significance during the 50 year period from 1902 to
the 1950s.
The firm of J.E. Dodd & Sons
Gunstar Organ Works, based in Adelaide, carried
out much work in Western Australia
in the 1950s and 1960s. This firm built some new organs and rebuilt a number of
others, notably the very successful instrument at St Mary's Cathedral, which
was enlarged from two manuals to three manuals and 65 speaking stops.
The local builder Paul Hufner
commenced operations in 1951. The work of this man has been of inestimable
importance in the history of organbuilding in Western Australia, since through his work
pipe organs were installed in many churches which would have put in electronic
instruments had it not been for his efforts in promoting the effective small
pipe organs he built at a very low price. In all, Hufner has contributed more
than 30 instruments, a few of which were rebuilds of older instruments. Most of
his organs were small, of one or two manuals, with one to four extended ranks,
and of good workmanship. A few were larger: of five or six extended ranks. All
of Hufner's organs were manufactured completely in his factory, including
keyboards, stop switches and wooden pipe ranks. Only the hard-to-make items of
hardware such as magnets and metal pipe ranks were imported. The organs were
bold toned and had resources and variety far beyond what might be expected from
an extension instrument. On the eve of his retirement Paul Hufner completed in
1990 his largest organ, a three-manual instrument of 57 speaking stops for his
parish church, St John's Lutheran Church
in Perth.
Again, even in an instrument of this size, Hufner makes a good deal of use of
extension.
The work of Hufner led directly to
that of F.J. Larner, who commenced work as an apprentice in the Hufner firm in
the late 1950s, but later branched out on his own. Larner's first instruments
were also extension instruments with electric action along the lines of those
built by Paul Hufner. However, these were the years of the neo-classical reform
movement, and Larner became interested in building classical organs with
mechanical action. A number of these came from his workshop with the most
significant that in Guildford Grammar School Chapel. Others have followed in
the Roman Catholic Cathedral in Geraldton and in other churches. Larner's work
continues. In all Paul Hufner and John Larner have between them, or together,
built or rebuilt more than half of all the organs presently in Western
Australian churches, more than 50 instruments: a remarkable achievement in a
little over 30 years.
In
1975, Melbourne organbuilder, Geoffrey Revell,
trading as Bellsham Pipe Organs, moved to Western Australia. Until 1982 the firm
continued to build new organs for Victoria and
Western Australia
as well as renovating and restoring some older organs. The two most significant
renovations are the unique Moser organ in the Pro-Cathedral of the Holy Trinity
in New Norcia, and the Randebrock organ in St Kilian's Church in Bendigo, Victoria.
At the start of 1982, Bellsham Pipe Organs became incorporated, the new Company
being registered in both Western Australia and
Victoria as Bellsham Pipe Organs (Australia) Pty.
Ltd.
Bellshams have contributed a
significant number of new instruments, mostly of two widely divergent types.
First, there have been some very small chamber organs of one or two manuals,
with pedals, and with five to 12 classically voiced ranks and a light
mechanical action. These are to be found at the University of Western
Australia, in the Monks' Chapel at the Abbey at
New Norcia, and in a number of other churches and private homes. Second, there
are several of the largest organs in the State: these are the three-manual
instruments in the First Church of Christ Scientist in Perth (electric action: 38 speaking stops - a
complete redesign and rebuild of an existing Whitehouse instrument of 1953),
and in Wesley College Chapel (mechanical action: 42 speaking stops - of
classical voicing). Bellsham's largest and most recent work is the four-manual
organ in The Basilica of St Patrick, Fremantle (a magnificent building of
cathedral-like proportions and fine acoustics). This latter instrument, which
has electric action to slider soundboards, is the largest organ in Western Australia and
one of the largest in the Commonwealth. Unfortunately this organ suffered from
some serious problems and was never completed because of the liquidation of the
company. In 1997-98 it was rebuilt and enlarged by South Island Organ Company
Ltd, of New Zealand.
It now consists of eight divisions, including a two manual transept organ. The
completed organ would be arguably the largest church organ in Australia and
one of the largest organs in the country. The two organs can be played from
either a two manual console in the transept, or a four manual console in the
gallery.
A history of West Australian
organbuilders would not be complete without mention of the work of University
of Western Australia mechanical engineering lecturer, Lynn Kirkham, who has
built one completed organ (in Trinity College Chapel), and one
still-to-be-finished organ in the home of notable Western Australian organist
Annette Goerke. The Trinity
College organ, built on
the lines of the Dutch 17th century school, has been widely acclaimed as an
instrument of high quality. That in the Goerke residence is of French classical
design.
During the period from 1950-1993
three large organs have been imported. The first from overseas (Winthrop Hall:
J.W. Walker & Sons Ltd.); the second from Sydney
(Perth Concert Hall: Ronald Sharp); and the third from Healesville,
Victoria (St George's Cathedral: Knud Smenge). The Walker firm was also responsible for the rebuilding of the
former St George's
Cathedral organ in 1959 which was replaced by the Smenge instrument in 1993.
The State of Western Australia has still a deficiency of
concert organs available for recital. The organs most favoured by recitalists
are the three-manual Smenge organ in St George's
Anglican Cathedral, Perth
and the four-manual organ in St Patrick's Basilica, Fremantle. The Perth
Concert Hall organ, a three-manual classically-voiced instrument by Ronald
Sharp, is little used: the cost of using the instrument is prohibitive for most
organizations, and, in addition, it appears to be too lightly voiced for use
with an orchestra or large choir. There are, of course, few buildings in the City
at present except for the churches where a concert organ could be accommodated.
This will continue to be a problem for some years to come.
There
are few organs remaining in West Australia of
historical importance; most which had a claim have been altered beyond
recognition. Unfortunately there is no protection for organs which form part of
our heritage in this State. The oldest organ in original condition is the 1891
Hill & Son instrument in St John's
Church, Albany. Two others have a unique significance
historically. One, by English builder Albert Pease (in Holy Trinity Anglican
Church, York), is in original condition, having been restored recently without
alteration. This organ, according to English organbuilder N.P. Mander, is the
only remaining unaltered example of its builder's work and one of only two
Pease organs still in existence. The other is the Albert Moser organ in the
Benedictine Abbey Pro-Cathedral in New Norcia. This large two-manual organ has
a most unusual specification, together with a number of unusual features; it
also has survived unaltered stylistically apart from the electrification of the
console. There are a few others: an original Fuller in Scots
Church, Fremantle; a Monk in Wesley
Church, York; and a Hill & Son in St Luke's
Church, Mosman Park. In addition, there are the two
largely unaltered Clifton organs: one in St John's, Kalgoorlie
and the other at St Alban's, Highgate, both of which are of great significance.
Little else remains. The oldest organ without doubt is an English organ in an
18th century case imported for St Mary in the Valley, Kelmscott some years ago.
This instrument was originally thought by some to be by one of the early
English builders such as Father Smith or Snetzler, but later opinion is that it
is of early 19th century origin built into an 18th century English case.
Whatever its origin it has been altered, albeit probably more than 100 years
ago.
This page last
updated 27 December 2008
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