Comments from AndrewBarrett

Showing 1 - 25 of 199 comments

AndrewBarrett
AndrewBarrett commented about Lyceum Theatre on May 7, 2024 at 3:44 pm

Besides this one, I am aware of the following other existing examples of these two related Wurlitzer photoplayer models today

(Note, I might have counted the same single extant instrument more than once in at least one instance, due to not yet knowing the exact history)

(Further note: I have not included other extant Wurlitzer photoplayer styles/models in this list, such as styles D Duplex, F, G, G-L, O, YO, K, and YK, since it would get a bit long and off-topic for this post on the page for this theatre):

U formerly owned by collector, historian and researcher Q. David Bowers, when he lived in Vestal NY. Shown in his collection in his book “Put Another Nickel In” published in 1965. Later sold, but I don’t know where it went and who were the subsequent and current owners.

U Early history / original location unknown to me. formerly in the Pate Museum of Transportation in Cresson (Fort Worth), Texas (at least, was on display there in the 1970s/1980s). The museum closed and was auctioned off in 2010, but I am not sure if the photoplayer was still there at that late date. It may have been sold to another owner / collector some time before this.

YU Musee Baud, (Baud brothers Museum) L'Auberson, Switzerland. I do not know the earlier history of this photoplayer, except according to a c. 2007 blog post (“les2decoppet”), it originally was used in a theatre in the USA, (I don’t know which one or where) and was later sold to the museum and exported to Switzerland.

As part of the restoration of the instrument, the two 88-note roll frames were modified with new tracker bars for Philipps PM rolls (aka Wurlitzer Mandolin PianOrchestra rolls), so that it can play almost the entire instrument automatically for museum display / demonstration purposes. There are several videos of this photoplayer in action on the YouTube channel “les2decoppet”: https://www.youtube.com/@les2decoppet/videos

YU Early history / original location unknown to me. formerly in the late Denis McMenamy collection in Oregon. Upon his passing, this instrument was sold (I think via the late Tim Trager) and I think this is the same model YU now installed and in use in the Glenwood Springs Vaudeville Revue theatre in Glenwood Springs, Colorado. It is used for accompanying their stage shows, etc. It is one of the very few photoplayers in the USA which is currently installed in a theatre and serving its original purpose. I believe there are also several videos of this instrument on YouTube, and it is also mentioned on their website.

YU
Early history / original location unknown to me.
Private collection, Port Huron, Michigan.

YU Early history / original location unknown to me. center piano unit only (side cabinets missing; BUT the piano unit is fully restored) was offered for sale on Craigslist in Washington State (Seattle area?) about 10 years ago. I don’t know where it is now.

unsure whether U or YU (I don’t have a picture of it) Early history / original location unknown to me. Daughters of the Pioneers Museum, either Utah or Wyoming. (Likely, the Daughters of Utah Pioneers / DUP Museum in Salt Lake City). This instrument is reportedly located in their basement as a display piece, and they have no plans to restore it to working order, as per a (now deceased) collector who visited and inspected it years ago.

AndrewBarrett
AndrewBarrett commented about Lyceum Theatre on May 7, 2024 at 3:40 pm

The style U from the Lyceum in Red Hook was rediscovered in the 1970s, when some college friends of player piano restorer Larry Broadmoore, told him about a ‘player piano with two big speakers next to it’ that they saw in the theatre. Larry wasted no time getting over there to the theatre to inspect this instrument, and made a deal to buy it. (Of course the instrument has no “speakers”, what his friends saw are the side cabinets with grilles with cloth in the front, which contain actual organ pipes, percussion, and sound effects)

Several friends helped him move the piano and side cabinets to his parents' house, where the instrument ‘lived’ for the next several years, until Larry moved away. At that time he sold the instrument to collector Allan Stafford of Pennsylvania. [the above info was told to me directly by Larry, who is still active as a player piano restorer in Southern California].

While owned by Allan Stafford, Band organ and orchestrion enthusiast Bill Black came by to visit, and recorded the instrument (I think in the 1980s), and has put out a commercial cassette / CD recording of the restored instrument playing, as “Allan Stafford’s Wurlitzer Style U photoplayer”, on his private “Carrousel Music” record label.

Here is that recording: (cassette version): http://music.carouselstores.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=30&products_id=79 (CD version): http://music.carouselstores.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=30&products_id=80

I am not positive, but think Mr. Stafford later sold the instrument to the owner of the American Treasure Tour museum in Oaks, Pennsylvania, where it is currently on display (along with several other photoplayers, and a huge number of coin pianos, orchestrions, and band organs, as well as many other items).

Here is a photo of this exact instrument, taken in 2009 by Dale Dohler during a visit to the Treasure Tour: https://www.flickr.com/photos/dtdohler/albums/72157622361818962/with/3917305840

AndrewBarrett
AndrewBarrett commented about Lyceum Theatre on May 7, 2024 at 3:40 pm

The Lyceum Theatre in Red Hook, New York originally had music supplied by a Wurlitzer style U photoplayer.
(I don’t know the serial # of this photoplayer yet to help determine the age, but the first style U was built in 1915, and the last one in 1927).

This model uses Concert PianOrchestra orchestrion music rolls (having two roll frames, so music can play from one, while the other roll is being rewound, fast-forwarded, or changed, to cue up the music for the next scene), and has:

piano, large divided (bass and treble) 56-note rank of violin and cello pipes; large divided (bass and treble) 56-note rank of flute pipes; glockenspiel (I think 30 notes) bass drum w/tympani beaters snare drum cymbal crash cymbal triangle castanets tambourine and several sound effects, including bird whistle, horses' hooves, train/boat whistle, door bell, auto horn, and fire gong.

Wurlitzer also made a variation of this model called the “YU”, using regular 88-note piano rolls (meaning the roll only plays the notes; all registration/expression and percussion needs to be manually controlled/played by the operator, instead of the roll automatically turning off and on the pipes and bells, adding expression, and playing the drums etc as the other model does from the special rolls).

Both of these models were fairly popular as Wurlitzer photoplayers go, with 171 model U’s built from 1915-1927, and 40 model YU’s built from 1916-1924.

This photoplayer was probably no longer used, and forgotten, when sound movies came in.

While sadly a large number of photoplayers were destroyed in the 1930s-1960s, some were rediscovered and saved by collectors and enthusiasts in the 1960s-2000s.

AndrewBarrett
AndrewBarrett commented about New Colonial Theatre on Dec 21, 2015 at 11:05 pm

According to “The Encylopedia of the American Theatre Organ” by Mr. David L. Junchen, pg. 630, the “Colonial Th.” in Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania had a Smith theatre pipe organ made by the Smith Unit Organ Co. of North Tonawanda, New York, and installed in 1916. This organ had Kinetic blower serial #E214, which was 1 horsepower and delivered wind at 10" static pressure. Mr. Junchen does not list the number of manuals or number of ranks of the organ in his book, since they were not known to him at the time of publication.

Does anyone know what happened to this organ, and where it, or its parts, are today?

Its existence today seems unlikely, given how the theatre was demolished in 1930 to make way for a new theatre, but during the depression and even before (during the early advent of talking pictures), many theatres sold their organs to poor churches who needed an organ for their services and could only afford one that was secondhand.

Thus, there’s a chance this organ survived in a second life as a church organ somewhere.

At least, I would love to have some photos of the organ and some more information about it, such as (at least) the number of manuals/keyboards in the organ console, and the number of pipe ranks it had.

Thanks a lot!
-Andrew

P. S. the Smith and Geneva Pipe Organs history group is on Facebook here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/104769223198776/

AndrewBarrett
AndrewBarrett commented about Cinema Theatre on Dec 21, 2015 at 9:51 pm

According to “The Encyclopedia of the American Theatre Organ” by Mr. David L. Junchen, pg. 630, the “Regent (Alhambra) Th.” in Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania, had a 2-manual Smith theatre pipe organ, installed in 1916.

Mr. Junchen didn’t give the # of pipe ranks in the organ, since he didn’t have that info at the time of publication.

This instrument apparently had the “Smith” nameplate meaning it was built in the first North Tonawanda, New York factory of Mr. Smith.

Also according to the book, it had Kinetic blower serial #D656, which was 1 horsepower and delivered wind at 10" static pressure.

Does anyone know what happened to this organ and where it (or its parts) are today?

I realize that with the fire + vandalism, etc. of this theatre, the organ may have been damaged or destroyed, but it was very common for theatres to sell old pipe organs in the 1930s and 1940s (and later) to churches desiring to get an inexpensive secondhand pipe organ to use (who didn’t care much about the distinctions of popular vs. liturgical instruments), and then during the theatre organ revival of the 1950s-1970s, many others were sold to hobbyists and enthusiasts who sometimes installed them in their homes.

Another, less common, scenario was for some hard up theatre owners to sell or donate the long-disused organ’s metal pipes for scrap for the war effort (during WWII), or, occasionally, to junk the entire instrument as “useless”!!! Fortunately, this did not happen as often as some form of preservation or survival, however temporary.

It is possible that no part of the organ was left in the theatre at the time of the fires/vandalism, so again, does anybody remember this organ and know what happened to it, or its parts, and where they are today?

Thank you very much,
Andrew Barrett

P. S. you may also wish to view my Smith and Geneva Pipe Organs group on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/104769223198776/

AndrewBarrett
AndrewBarrett commented about Bison Theatre on Dec 21, 2015 at 9:09 pm

Mr. Tunney, however, says practically nothing about Brownsville-area theatre organs or organ music in columns #78 through #84, his long, well-researched (with many interviews with people who, in their youth, had actually worked in these theatres) series on the theatres of Brownsville, Pennsylvania.

According to “The Encyclopedia of the American Theatre Pipe Organ”, by Mr. David L. Junchen, page 630, the “Bison Th.” in Brownsville, Pennsylvania, had a 2-manual Smith organ installed in 1915. This organ had Kinetic blower serial #D559, which was 1 Horsepower and delivered wind at 10" static pressure. Mr. Junchen did not give the # of pipe ranks in the organ in his book, because he did not have that information at the time of publication. I also don’t currently know how many ranks it had.

Mr. Junchen also gives the organ’s nameplate as “Smith”, which, in conjunction with the 1915 install date, means this was one of the small handful of organs built and installed by Mr. Frederick Smith’s fledgling first organ firm, the Smith Unit Organ Co. of North Tonawanda, New York.

This firm only built and sold a handful of pipe organs, before Mr. Smith made a deal with (coin piano and orchestrion maker) Mr. Seeburg in Chicago, and moved his pipe organ firm to Chicago in 1916.

The “Seeburg-Smith” organs subsequently built in Chicago and sold by Seeburg dealers between 1916 and 1921, were the most popular built and sold by any of Mr. Smith’s 5 successive organ firms… I believe they may represent perhaps as many as 2/3 to ¾ of all of the 200 or so Smith organs ever sold by all five companies (1. “North Tonawanda” Smith (North Tonawanda, New York); 2. Seeburg-Smith in Chicago; 3. “Chicago” Smith (without Seeburg, still in Chicago); 4. Smith-Geneva (Geneva, Illinois); 5. “Alameda” Smith (Alameda, California).

Anyway, Smith organs of all types are quite rare today, and I would love to know: does anybody know what happened to the Smith organ that was in the Bison Theatre in Brownsville, Pennsylvania?

Could it have been sold to a local church or organ enthusiast before the theatre’s demolition in 1962?

Do any parts or pieces of this organ, or photographs, documentation, or recordings, exist today?

I’d love to know more, thanks!

-Andrew Barrett

P. S. if you know more, why not join my Smith and Geneva Pipe Organs group on Facebook here?: https://www.facebook.com/groups/104769223198776/

AndrewBarrett
AndrewBarrett commented about Bison Theatre on Dec 21, 2015 at 8:51 pm

It is too bad the Bison is gone. According to Mr. Glenn Tunney in his June 4, 2000 article “AND THEN THERE WAS ONE: ONLY THE PLAZA THEATER REMAINS”, available here: http://freepages.history.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~glenntunneycolumn/column84.htm

… the Bison was torn down in the Summer of 1962. It had indeed opened in 1913, modernized for sound movies, and done a generally thriving business through the 1950s. What a shame! Does anyone have any decent photos of this theatre, especially the inside?

AndrewBarrett
AndrewBarrett commented about Historic Rivoli Theater on Nov 3, 2015 at 3:06 pm

This is great that this vintage theatre is being restored! Here’s more info on it and photos: http://pstos.org/instruments/or/pendleton/rivoli.htm

The theatre’s original 2/7 Wurlitzer organ (style 170, opus #435) later spent time in a rink in Seattle before being sold to a fellow in Bremerton, Washington. I don’t know if he still has it, or if he does, that he’d eventually be willing to sell it back to the theatre, but you never know…

http://pstos.org/instruments/wa/seattle/ridge-rink.htm

AndrewBarrett
AndrewBarrett commented about Palace Theatre on Nov 3, 2015 at 3:02 pm

What is the pipe organ supposedly now in the Palace Theatre in Silverton?

The theatre originally had a two-manual, four-rank Robert-Morton organ, which was later sold to the late Mr. Dale Haskin of Portland, who had it in storage with many other organs. He passed away in 2009 and his organ collection was reportedly “dispersed” to local theatre organ society members. I wonder if this organ went back to the theatre? If not, it should! Robert Mortons are great organs!

http://pstos.org/instruments/or/silverton/palace.htm

http://pstos.org/instruments/or/portland/haskin.htm

AndrewBarrett
AndrewBarrett commented about Joy Theater on Nov 3, 2015 at 2:55 pm

Here’s the details on the Joy Theatre in Vernonia: http://pstos.org/instruments/or/vernonia/joy.htm

And, here’s some pictures of the console of the theatre’s Aeolian theatre organ (one of only three they ever built, I believe… they mostly built residence and concert hall pipe organs), now in storage in a private residence: http://pstos.org/instruments/wa/kenmore/werries.htm

Hope this helps!

AndrewBarrett
AndrewBarrett commented about Strand Theatre on Nov 3, 2015 at 2:35 pm

Damn, it’s too bad this is gone.

One of my favorite musicals, “Snobs” with book by George Bronson Howard, and songs and instrumental (music and lyrics) by the show’s star, comedian Shep Camp, played in this theatre in March 1913.

I would have loved to have visited this place and walked around in the same place where the musical was held. Are there any surviving photos of it?

Here’s the newspaper ad for “Snobs” at the theatre: http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84026749/1913-03-30/ed-1/seq-15/

And… the sheet music to the most excellent “Milkman’s Rag” by Mr. Camp: http://yorkspace.library.yorku.ca/xmlui/handle/10315/13834

AndrewBarrett
AndrewBarrett commented about Fischer Theatre on Sep 9, 2015 at 7:18 pm

Hey! That’s fantastic that this theatre still exists and is being restored. I wish the team all the best and hope to come visit when it’s finished! According to “the Encyclopedia of the American Theatre Organ” by Mr David Junchen, pg 629, the “Fischer Th.” in Danville, Illinois, had a Smith theatre pipe organ installed at some point. No date of installation is given in the book, but I would assume it was before 1929 when the four rank Robert Morton organ was installed. No other information about this Smith organ is in the book, including size (number of manuals / number of ranks), nameplate (Seeburg-Smith, Smith, or Smith-Geneva), or blower info, probably because none of this was known to the author at the time of publication.

Does anyone know more about this organ and where it, or its parts, are today? Thanks!

At least one other Smith organ was traded in for a Robert Morton organ: the one in the California Theatre in Pittsburgh, California. Interestingly, both organs still exist: the ten-rank Morton is currently being restored and reinstalled in that theatre, while the Smith is currently with a private owner, having spent time as a church organ in the interim.

I’m wondering if a similar situation could exist here: do both the Smith and Robert Morton organs from the Fischer Theatre still exist?

AndrewBarrett
AndrewBarrett commented about Rialto Theatre on Sep 9, 2015 at 3:31 pm

It is too bad that this theatre burned down. However at least there’s the one photo of it (and, I hope, more).

According to “the Encyclopedia of the American Theatre Organ” by Mr David Junchen, pg. 629, the “Rialto Th.” in Elgin, Illinois, originally had a three-manual Smith theatre pipe organ, installed in 1923. The organ had Spencer blower number 14426. Unfortunately, Mr Junchen did not have any additional information on the organ at the time of publication of the book, such as number of pipe ranks, or additional blower info horsepower, static pressure).

Does anyone know what happened to this organ, and where it, or its parts, are today?

Of course, given what happened to this theatre, plus the disdain that some theatre organ enthusiasts had (and, still have), for Smith organs, it is not very likely that it was bought/rescued by an early theatre organ enthusiast before the fire.

However, in my research I have identified at least a dozen Smith organs that were sold from theatres to churches in the 1930s-1940s, when many churches were too poor to afford a new organ and the theatres considered them surplus equipment after sound movies came in. These resales ensured the organs' survival for at least a few more decades.

At three manuals and (probably) from 10 to 12 ranks of pipes, this organ would have been amongst the very few larger theatre organs built by Mr. Smith’s short-lived own Chicago firm, the Smith Unit Organ Company, after the successful Seeburg – Smith partnership ended in 1921, and before he moved to Geneva, Illinois in 1924 to found what would later become the Geneva Organ Company.

As the builder of my beautiful two-manual console, I have an especial interest in all of the organs built by this small company and would love to know more about this one. Thanks!

AndrewBarrett
AndrewBarrett commented about Palace Theatre on Sep 9, 2015 at 3:06 pm

Dear Mr. Joe Vogel, thank you for your great comment! I am a Smith and Geneva pipe organ enthusiast (I own two of them, or rather, the remains of two of them) and was wondering what happened to this organ. Details below. I certainly hope this organ was not thrown out and will contact the Trinity Lutheran Church of Nokomis as soon as possible.

The organ originally installed in the “New Palace Th.” (as per Mr. David Junchen’s “Encyclopedia of the American Theatre Organ”, volume 2, pg. 629, was a Seeburg – Smith, made in Chicago, Illinois. Unfortunately, Mr. Junchen did not have any additional information about this organ at the time of publication of his book, such as size (number of manuals/number of ranks), install date, or blower info.

However, he did note that the organ’s nameplate was “Seeburg – Smith” meaning that the organ would have been built and installed between 1916 and 1921.

If I ever find out any more about this organ I will post it here. Hope this helps! and 1921.

If I ever find out any more about this organ I will post it here. Hope this helps!

AndrewBarrett
AndrewBarrett commented about Peerless Theatre on Sep 9, 2015 at 2:53 pm

It’s too bad that this theatre was demolished long ago.

According to ‘The Encyclopedia of the American Theatre Organ", volume 2, by Mr. David Junchen, (pg 629), the “Peerless Th.” in Kewanee, Illinois, originally had a two-manual, ten-rank Seeburg – Smith theatre pipe organ, installed in 1921.

Ten ranks was quite large for a Smith organ, as most organs built by this succession of firms were between four and nine ranks; very few organs over 9 ranks were ever built by them.

The organ had a Kinetic blower, serial number J132, which had a 2 horsepower # and delivered wind at 10" static pressure.

Does anybody know what happened to this organ, and where it, or its parts, are today? Thanks!

AndrewBarrett
AndrewBarrett commented about Lincoln $ Saver on Feb 5, 2015 at 2:50 pm

According to “The Encyclopedia of the American Theatre Organ” by Mr. David Junchen, pg. 631, the “Lincoln Th.” in Cheyenne, Wyoming, originally had a 2 manual, 6 rank Smith theatre pipe organ installed at some point.

No further information about this organ, such as install date, blower information (horsepower and wind pressure), or nameplate (Seeburg-Smith, Smith, Smith-Geneva, or Leathurby-Smith) is given in this book’s listing (not available at the time of publication).

Given what Mr. Vogel has written about the Lincoln Theatre opening in 1927, it seems this house must have had a Leathurby-Smith organ (or at least, the latest type of Smith organ built in Alameda, California from circa 1925 to 1928, and frequently sold along the West Coast by Leathurby who was a San Francisco-based dealer).

IF this is true and there was no earlier “Lincoln Theatre” in Cheyenne with a Smith organ, then this would be the first (and so far, only) Leathurby-Smith (or “California-built Smith”) organ I’ve seen sold East of the Western states (all of the others of which I’m aware were originally sold to California, Oregon, or Washington state).

Does anybody know more about this organ, and where it, or its parts, is/are today? Thanks!

AndrewBarrett
AndrewBarrett commented about Sourwine Theater on Jan 28, 2015 at 5:10 pm

Aw dang! At least the Walnut is still standing and in use, and so is the Lark (another nice old theatre).

According to “The Encyclopedia of the American Theatre Organ”, pg. 629, the “Sourwine Th.” in Brazil, Indiana, had a two-manual Seeburg-Smith theatre pipe organ installed in 1919. The size of this instrument (# of ranks) is not given in the book (not known at the time of publication). This organ had Kinetic blower serial #G381, which was 2 horsepower and delivered 10" of static wind pressure.

Does anybody know what happened to this organ, and where it, and/or its parts, is/are today? Thanks!

I can no longer see the postcard view of the Sourwine. Does someone else have an additional view to share, or could they re-upload the postcard to another site besides Ancestry? (the site where the postcard was originally posted). Thanks!

From whence deriveth the theatre name “Sourwine”? There must be a great story in there somewhere!!!

AndrewBarrett
AndrewBarrett commented about Riviera Theatre on Jan 28, 2015 at 4:59 pm

Is this theatre building still standing? Are there any photos of it, and/or does someone have a street address showing where it was located? Thanks!

According to “The Encyclopedia of the American Theatre Organ” by Mr. David Junchen, pg. 629, the “Riviera Th.” in Anderson, Indiana originally had a Smith theatre pipe organ installed at some point.

No further details, such as size of the organ (# of manuals / # of ranks), install date, blower info, or nameplate (Seeburg-Smith, Smith, Smith-Geneva) are given in the book (not known at the time of publication).

Does anybody know what happened to this organ and where it (or its parts) is/are today? Thanks!

AndrewBarrett
AndrewBarrett commented about Cinema 1 on Jan 28, 2015 at 4:55 pm

Good to see that this theatre building SEEMS to be still standing, and in use as a church. Are there any interior or exterior photos of it from its days as a theatre?

According to “The Encyclopedia of the American Theatre Organ”, pg. 629, the “Orpheum Th.” in Elkhart, Indiana originally had a two-manual Seeburg-Smith theatre pipe organ installed in 1920. The size of the instrument (# of ranks) is not given in the book (not known at the time of publication). This organ has/had Spencer blower serial #10866, which was 2 horsepower and delivered wind at 10" static pressure.

Does anybody know more about this organ and where it (or its parts) is/are today? Could it still be installed and in use in the building as a church organ?

Thanks!

AndrewBarrett
AndrewBarrett commented about Lincoln Theatre on Jan 28, 2015 at 4:49 pm

According to “The Encyclopedia of the American Theatre Organ” by Mr. David Junchen, pg. 629, the “Lincoln Th.” in Goshen, Indiana, had a Smith theatre pipe organ installed at some point.

No other information, such as size (# of manuals / # of ranks), install date, blower info, or nameplate (Seeburg-Smith, Smith, or Smith-Geneva) is given in the book, meaning that this info was not known at the time of publication.

Does anybody know any more about this organ, and where it, or its parts, is/are today?

Does anybody know any more about this theatre and know when it opened and when it was demolished?

Are there any interior or exterior photos?

Thanks!

AndrewBarrett
AndrewBarrett commented about Tivoli Theatre on Jan 28, 2015 at 4:40 pm

It’s too bad this theatre is gone. It looks like it was a nice one. Oh well, that’s the way it goes.

According to “The Encyclopedia of the American Theatre Organ” by Mr. David Junchen, pg. 629, the “Tivoli Th.” in Michigan City, Indiana, originally had a two-manual, 9-rank Smith theatre pipe organ installed at some point. The book does not have any additional info, such as install date, or blower info, but it DOES say, with some finality, that the organ’s nameplate was “Smith”.

From my meager research, relatively few Smith theatre organs under Mr. Smith’s own ownership/leadership of the company were built, first a handful in his first factory in North Tonawanda, New York, and then a few more (probably two dozen or so) in the factory in Chicago between 1921 and 1924, when the company relocated to Geneva, Illinois.

Only a few Smith organs were built in Geneva (“Geneva-Smith”) in 1924-1925, before Mr. Smith left for California in 1925 and the Geneva Organ Co. was reorganized as its own separate entity (and the designs of their organs changed from Smith in some ways).

Mr. Smith’s own last firm in Alameda, California (with most instruments sold by the Leathurby store in San Francisco as “Leathurby-Smith” organs) also only apparently built about two dozen or so organs.

By far, the majority of Smith organs built (probably over 100 of them) were built in the Seeburg factory in Chicago under the Seeburg-Smith partnership between 1917 and 1920, and usually bore the “Seeburg-Smith” nameplate, although a few of them bore the nameplates of prominent dealers, such as Kramer.

Thus, given that this theatre was built in 1922, the organ must have been a Chicago “Smith” organ, built around 1922-1924 and installed around that time (likely, but not necessarily, installed before the theatre’s grand opening).

Does anybody know where this organ, and/or its parts, is/are today? 9 ranks was on the large side for a Smith organ. Thanks!

AndrewBarrett
AndrewBarrett commented about Ritz Theatre on Jan 28, 2015 at 4:21 pm

Was the Ritz ever known as the “Loomis” Theatre, or was there another “Loomis” Theatre building located either on this site (I don’t know the address), or elsewhere in Peru, Indiana? I have a listing for a Smith theatre pipe organ installed at such a theatre in 1921, but don’t have a page to put it. Thanks!

Also, is this Ritz’s building still standing? The buildings in the Google Map view look old enough, but I’m not sure. Thanks!

AndrewBarrett
AndrewBarrett commented about Lawrence Theatre on Jan 28, 2015 at 4:16 pm

According to “The Encyclopedia of the American Theatre Organ” by Mr. David Junchen, pg. 629, the “Washington Th.” in Richmond, Indiana, had a two-manual Smith organ installed at some point.

No further information, such as size of the instrument (# of pipe ranks), install date, blower info, or nameplate (Seeburg-Smith, Smith, Smith-Geneva, etc) is available in the book (not known at the time of publication).

I know this is is a long shot, given that this building was torn down in 1935 in the height of the great depression, when theatre pipe organs were considered most useless and most unwanted in most parts of the US, (and thus it’s likely the organ went down with the building), but does anybody know what happened to this organ, and where it, or its parts, is/are today? Could it have been moved to a church in the greater Richmond area?

Thanks a lot,
Andrew

AndrewBarrett
AndrewBarrett commented about Long Center for the Performing Arts on Jan 28, 2015 at 3:34 pm

Dear folks, it is wonderful to see that this grand old theatre is still standing, restored, and in use for its intended purpose with the performing arts! Wonderful!

According to “The Encyclopedia of the American Theatre Organ” by Mr. Dave Junchen, pg. 629, the “Mars Th.” in Lafayatte, Indiana, originally had a Seeburg-Smith theatre pipe organ installed in 1920. This organ had Kinetic blower serial #I518, which was 2 horsepower and produced 10" of static wind pressure. The size (# of manuals and # of ranks) of the organ is not given in Mr. Junchen’s book, meaning it was not known at the time of publication.

Does anybody know what happened to this organ, and where it, or its parts, is/are today? Thanks!

It would appear from the wording of Mr. Ross' synopsis/history/article above that the Seeburg-Smith organ was replaced by a Wurlitzer in the 1970s/1980s as part of the building’s transition into the “Long Center for the Performing Arts”.

However, the TheatreOrgans.com list of original theatre organ installations shows that a Wurlitzer model 235SP (the standard model 235 was a 3 manual, 11 rank organ), Opus 893, was shipped from the Wurlitzer factory on August 30, 1924, and installed in the “Mars Theatre” in Lafayette, Indiana.

1924 is quite a lot earlier than the 1970s/1980s!

Are there any Indiana members of the American Theatre Organ Society who can chime in here with more info about this theatre and the two (+?) organs that were/are installed here? Thanks!

AndrewBarrett
AndrewBarrett commented about Luna Theatre on Jan 28, 2015 at 3:17 pm

According to “The Encyclopedia of the American Theatre Organ” by Mr. David Junchen, pg. 629, a Seeburg-Smith theatre pipe organ was installed in the “Luna Th.” in Lafayette, Indiana, in 1918. This organ had Kinetic blower serial #F462, which was a 2 horsepower blower. No further details on the organ, such as size (# of manuals / # of ranks), or the static wind pressure of the blower, are given in the book (not known at the time of publication).

It is known that Wurlitzer installed a style “E Special” (special/customized version of the style E, which was a two-manual, seven-rank theatre pipe organ) in this theatre in 1925, presumably replacing the earlier Seeburg-Smith instrument. User gorhamzoro was directly involved with the removal of the remains of this Wurlitzer organ and would/will know more about it.

However, it is not known (at least to me) what actually became of the Seeburg-Smith organ. Was it sold to another theatre, to a church, to a lodge hall, to a private home, or to a mortuary? All of these are possibilities.

The other possibility is that it was simply junked at the time, but this doesn’t seem as likely to me as having happened in 1925, since organs were still viable in theatres and used at that time, and thus had value.

Does anybody know where this organ, or its parts, is today? Thanks!