WURLITZER
THEATRE PIPE ORGAN
AT THE REPUBLIC
OF WEST FLORIDA HISTORICAL SOCIETY MUSEUM,
JACKSON, LOUISIANA
An on-going theatre organ project is this 2 Manual, 10 Rank Wurlitzer organ (Opus 1677) which was originally built for the Paramount Olympia Theater in Newhaven, Connecticut. The insturment is the only publicly accessible theatre pipe organ in Louisiana. Visitors to the museum may request to see and even play the organ if they wish, and regularly scheduled annual performances are held including silent movies and recitals.
Pipe Chamber exterior
view
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Solo chamber interior | Chamber with chrysoglott above |
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Post horn, oboe
and tibia ranks
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Spencer turbine blower and Peterson Relay |
Console View following
initial renovation
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View of restored Clarinet rank | Toy Counter | 16' Pedal Bourdon |
IF YOUR COMPUTER IS EQUIPPED FOR
SOUND, YOU ARE LISTENING TO A THEATRE ORGAN.
(Deep Purple played by John DeMajo at the ROWFHS Wurlitzer)
THE ORGAN IS MAINTAINED TOTALLY THROUGH VOLUNTEER
EFFORT. HERE ARE SOME PHOTOS OF RECENT WORK THAT WAS COMPLETED ON THE
WINDING SYSTEM.
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Left: Old Century 3 HP wound
rotor motor, along with its modern 5 HP, 3 phase replacement. At right,
Harold Henderson, working with SMGC maintenance crew, pressure washes
blower housing in preparation for re-assembly of the unit. |
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Below, blower with new motor
installed. The original 3 HP Century motor, installed before the organ
reached the museum, had overheated due having been ms-applied on a blower
requiring a 5 HP motor. Although it powered the organ for ten years prior
to this corrective work, the instrument was plagued by low wind pressure
and motor overheating and failures throughout those years of service.
The new motor is a three-phase unit of adequate size for the organ, and
winding problems have proven to have been corrected with this action by
the museum and the chapter's maintenance crew. |
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REWIRING OF CONSOLE AND RESTORATION
OF KEYBOARDS |
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Console shown with keyboards
removed. Keyboards were shipped to Arndt Organ Company for complete restoration.
The organ is expected to be returned to service in late Summer of 2005. |
Rear of console showing new
cabling to relay and chambers. Peterson terminal boards were installed
in place of the original Wurlitzer spreaders which had been damaged by
attempts to solder the pressure connections prior to the time the organ
was acquired by the Jackson museum. |
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During the Summer of 2005, the organ console
was subjected to some much needed corrective action by the local ATOS
chapter. The original keyboards had become unplayable due to moisture
problems and deterioration which began when the console was in storage
prior to its acquisition by the ROWFHS Museum. After much planning and
preparation, the instrument was shut down after Christmas of 2004, and
the keyboards were removed and shipped to Bob Arndt (Arndt Organ Supply)
for restoration. At the same time, the console wiring was addressed. The
original cotton wiring was removed due to fire code concerns. All cabling
was replaced with modern thermo-plastic wire. The Wurlitzer spreader boards,
which had been badly damaged by overheating due to attempts to solder
the connections over the years, were replaced with Peterson terminals.
All re-wiring was performed on-site by members of the chapter.
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