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Jaeckel Pipe Organ

The hand-crafted tracker pipe organ of First Presbyterian Church was custom-designed for the congregation by Dan Jaeckel, Inc., of Duluth, Minnesota. The instrument was constructed at Jaeckel’s shop in 1997-99, dismantled, shipped to Portland, and installed in the church sanctuary from August 1999 to February 2000. The formal Service of Dedication was celebrated on April 30, 2000.

The Jaeckel organ has 52 stops, 69 ranks, 3 manuals, and 3,515 pipes. Several hundred pipes from the church’s previous organ were rebuilt and revoiced to become part of the new one. The mechanical workings of the instrument are based on the great European organs of the 17th and 18th Centuries. The console action uses simple red cedar strips, called trackers, to connect the keys to each of the pipes. J.S. Bach himself would be comfortable with the style, craftsmanship, and sound of the instrument, but he would be surprised by the six flat-screen video monitors built into the case so that the organist and choir can see the pulpit.

Jaeckel created the main case of cherry and alder woods to match the 19th Century Carpenter Gothic sanctuary. The new instrument restores the basic appearance of the church’s original 1890 Ryder organ, which was replaced by a Möller organ in 1929.

The project was made possible by a generous leadership gift from Sally and Cecil Drinkward. Dan Jaeckel was chosen to construct the organ after an extensive nationwide search. Jaeckel impressed the church’s Organ Committee with his capacity to design instruments uniquely suited to acoustically-challenged spaces and to embrace the history and musical heritage of the First Presbyterian congregation.

Through its singing beauty and visual splendor, the Jaeckel organ inspires each of us to seek and worship the living God. It will serve as a gift to the congregation and the community for many years to come.

Organ Console

Organ Console

Stop List

Great Organ, Manual II, 58 keys

1 Montre 16′
2 Montre 8′
3 Salicional 8′
4 Flûte harmonique 8′
5 Bourdon 8′
6 Prestant 4′
7 Flûte 4′
8 Quinte 2 2/3′
9 Doublette 2′
10 Tierce 1 3/5′
11 IV-VI Fourniture 1 1/3′
12 V Cornet harmonique 8′
13 Trompette 16′
14 Trompette 8′

Swell Organ, Manual III, 58 keys

15 Bourdon 16′
16 Diapason 8′
17 Viole de gambe 8′
18 Voix céleste 8′
19 Cor de nuit 8′
20 Prestant 4′
21 Flúte octaviante 4′
22 Piccolo 2′
23 II Cornet 2 2/3′
24 IV Plein-jeu 2′
25 Basson 16′
26 Trompette harmonique 8′
27 Basson-hautbois 8′
28 Voix humaine 8′
29 Clairon harmonique 4′

Positive Organ, Manual I, 58 keys

30 Principal 8′
31 Flúte à fuseau 8′
32 Prestant 4′
33 Flúte douce 4′
34 Nasard 2 2/3′
35 Doublette 2′
36 Tierce 1 3/5′
37 IV-V Plein-jeu 1 1/3′
38 Dulcian 16′
39 Trompette 8′
40 Cromorne 8′

Pedal, 30 keys

41 Soubasse 32′
42 Montre 16′
43 Violon basse 16′
44 Soubasse 16′
45 Principal 8′
46 Flûte conique 8′
47 Flûte ouverte 4′
48 IV Fourniture 2 2/3′
49 Contrebombarde 32′
50 Bombarde 16′
51 Posaune 16′
52 Trompette 8′

Couplers
Great to Pedal, Positive to Pedal, Swell to Pedal
Swell to Great, Positive to Great
Swell to Positive

Accessories and design features

• Detached low-profile terraced console, adjustable bench
• Mechanical key action; electric stop action
• 32-level combination system; 12 generals, 6 divisionals each division, tutti, general cancel, sequencer, store/retrieve function, 3 coupler reversibles
• Tremulant, Clochettes, Rossignol, Wind stabilizers on/off
• Mechanical, balanced expression pedal for Swell division
• Main case and Positive case built of solid wood to match church woodwork; decorative carvings and ornamentation match that of the church interior
• Pedal keyboard is flat/parallel with sharp fronts in concave pattern; curved keyboard also available
• Manual keys of bone, manual sharps and pedal sharps of grenadil, pedal naturals of hard maple
• 4 flat screen monitors (Sharp Laboratories) installed in console
• 2 flat screen monitors installed on rear of Positive case

 

Additional information on First Presbyterian’s organ history:
The used Erben organ in the old church

The Geo.H. Ryder tracker

The 1929 Möller organ

The 1979 tonal rebuild of the Möller

The return of the Erben

The present Jaeckel