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Collection
Heritage Center Collection
Object ID
P.85.09
Date Range
c. 1807
Collection
Heritage Center Collection
Description
Chamber Organ in Hepplewhite kidney-shaped case, flat top, with French feet. Cabinet made of mahogany veneers; secondary woods are curly maple, walnut, and pine. Figured mahogany veneers on case contrast with lighter colored wood inlay on top, sides, and front. Three wide strips of banding encircle case at lid, above doors, and at bottom above feet and apron.
Front section of lid is hinged, revealing keyboard of 32 ivory-plated keys and 22 sharp keys of ebonized poplar and fruitwood nosings At each end of keyboard are pierced wood grilles (for sound emission) with badly deteriorated fabric backing. Below keyboard lid is an inlaid lock escutcheon. Two front doors curve inward, recessing below keyboard section and creating a concavity for knee space. Inlaid lock escutcheon on right door.
Pine and leather bellows in good shape, some repair at hinged end. There are 17 loose pipes, apparently fallen out but intact. Fabric covering missing on back.
Conrad Doll was a cabinetmaker, organ builder and tunebook publisher as well as organist & schoolmaster for the First Reformed Church. Three extant organs by Doll are the 1807 organ in Chippendale case made for Peace Church near Camp Hill, Pa., and two chamber organs which are visually identical (One owned by Ray Brunner and the other by HCLC). Ours was deemed to have been built circa 1806 due to the Oct-Dec.1805 date of the newspaper lining of the bellows. See Notes!
Provenance
Likely built by Doll for his brother Joseph, a tunebook publisher in Harrisburg. The organ passed to Joseph's daughter Catherine Elizabeth Doll who married George Mish (1783-1851). Their son Dr. George F. Mish (1824-c.1919) married Ms. Smuller and they lived at 460 Union St., Middletown. The organ remained at the house, passing to son George Smuller Mish (1862-1939) & successive descendants until the house was sold in 1983. The furnishings went to auction, but the organ did not sell for lack of interest and was shoved under staircase. The Vreelands who purchased the house agreed to keep the organ, allowing it to be rescued and eventually sold to HCLC. It was restored to playing condition by R.J. Brunner and Co. (Ray & Ruth) of Silver Spring, Pa. in 1995-1996.
Date Range
c. 1807
Year Range From
1806
Year Range To
1809
Made By
Doll, Conrad, 1772-1819
Storage Location
LancasterHistory, Lancaster, PA
Storage Room
DAC
People
Doll, Conrad
Doll, Joseph
Subject
Musical instruments
Organ (Musical instrument)
Search Terms
Chamber organs
Musical instruments
Organ (Musical instrument)
Object Name
Organ, Chamber
Material
Wood, Ivory
Height (cm)
98.425
Height (ft)
3.2291666667
Height (in)
38.75
Width (cm)
123.825
Width (ft)
4.0625
Width (in)
48.75
Depth (cm)
59.69
Depth (ft)
1.9583333333
Depth (in)
23.5
Condition
Good
Condition Date
2017-07-26
Condition Notes
Originally in need of many repairs to case and interior musical works (see file for description). Restored to playing condition in 1995-1996 by Raymond & Ruth Brunner.
Foot piece later came unglued and is detached.
Object ID
P.85.09
Notes
In Historical Soc. of Pennsylvania's Daybook of J. Eichholtz on page 30 is an entry dated March 1, 1810 for John Wind: "To painting frontispiece" with a charge of 15. This is presumably for the one in LHO collection, or perhaps another.
An identical entry on page 20 for organmaker Conrad Doll dated May 19, 1809 lists "To painting a frontispiece" for the same charge of 15. (Copies of these pages in file P.86.3 for Eichholtz copper measure).
See: That Ingenious Business, Pa. German Organ Builders, Raymond J. Brunner, The Pa. German Society, 1990, pp. 158-161.
"A Conrad Doll Chamber Organ," The Tracker, Raymond J. Brunner, Vol. 25, No. 2, Winter 1981, pp. 16-19.
Research notes on Doll family genealogy. Also one-page article written for 1997 Exhibit label by Ruth Brunner.
Place of Origin
Lancaster
Credit
Heritage Center Collection through the generosity of the James Hale Steinman Foundation
Accession Number
P.85.09
Less detail

Organs for America; the life and work of David Tannenberg

https://collections.lancasterhistory.org/en/permalink/lhdo5839
Author
Armstrong, William H.
Date of Publication
1967.
Call Number
786.6 A735
Responsibility
by William H. Armstrong.
Author
Armstrong, William H.
Place of Publication
Philadelphia
Publisher
University of Pennsylvania Press,
Date of Publication
1967.
Physical Description
xvi, 154 p. 21 plates (part col., incl. facsims.) 23 cm.
Notes
Bibliography: p. 135-145. Discography: p. 145.
Tannenberg came to the United States in 1740 with a group of colonists from the Moravian Church. He settled in Bethlehem, PA, and worked there and in nearby Nazareth as a joiner. Soon after Johann Gottlob Klemm, an organ builder, joined the religious community in 1757, Tannenberg became his assistant and worked with him until Klemms death in 1762. In 1765 Tannenberg moved to Lititz, PA, where he established a reputation as a meticulous and distinctive craftsman and carried on the South German tradition he had inherited from Klemm. All of the 32 organs he constructed are said to have been painted white with gold trim and to have had beautifully carved decorations. These instruments were mainly constructed for small churches requiring only one keyboard, or manual. Tannenbergs largest organs were built for Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, Lancaster, PA (1774), and Zion Lutheran Church, Philadelphia (1790); he also built other keyboard instruments such as harpsichords and virginals.In his later years Tannenberg was assisted by Philip Bachmann (17621837), who succeeded him. [Britanica.com]
Contents
Contents include biographical information and information about the craft of making organs and other instruments
Subjects
Tannenberg, David.
Organs - United States.
Location
Lancaster History Library - Book
Call Number
786.6 A735
Less detail
Collection
General Collection
Object ID
2-22-05-10
  1 image  
Object Name
Print, Photographic
Collection
General Collection
Description
Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, Tannenberg Organ. Choir Loft, Pews and Pulpit with open Bible.
Provenance
From the Collection of the Heritage Center Museum
Creator
Thompson, Robert Hugh Sr.
Storage Location
LancasterHistory, Lancaster, PA
Subcategory
Documentary Artifact
Search Terms
Holy Trinity Lutheran Church
Churches
Organs (Musical instrument)
Pews
Choir lofts
Object Name
Print, Photographic
Print Size
8 x 10 inches
Condition
Good
Object ID
2-22-05-10
Images
Less detail

That ingenious business : Pennsylvania German organ builders

https://collections.lancasterhistory.org/en/permalink/lhdo4674
Author
Brunner, Raymond J.
Date of Publication
1990.
Call Number
786.6 B897
Responsibility
by Raymond J. Brunner.
ISBN
0911122559
Author
Brunner, Raymond J.
Place of Publication
Birdsboro, Pa
Publisher
Pennsylvania German Society,
Date of Publication
1990.
Physical Description
viii, 248 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 29 cm.
Series
Publications of the Pennsylvania German Society ;
Notes
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Subjects
Tannenberg, David
Dieffenbach family.
Krauss family.
Wind family.
Organ builders - Pennsylvania
Organs - Pennsylvania
German Americans - Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania Dutch
Additional Corporate Author
Pennsylvania-German Society.
Location
Lancaster History Library - Book
Call Number
786.6 B897
Less detail
Call Number
786.6 T759
ISSN
0041-0330
Place of Publication
[Richmond, Va., etc.]
Publisher
Organ Historical Society.
Physical Description
v. ill. 28 cm.
Publication Frequency
Four no. a year
Notes
LCHS has incomplete issues from 1960 (vol. 4) to 1981 (v. 25).
Includes articles on David Tannenberg and Conrad Doll
Subjects
Organs - Pennsylvania.
Additional Corporate Author
Organ Historical Society.
Location
Lancaster History Library - Book
Call Number
786.6 T759
Less detail