<HTML><FONT FACE=arial,helvetica><FONT SIZE=2 FAMILY="SANSSERIF" FACE="Arial" LANG="0">Date: Sat, 2 Jun 2001 19:09:06 -0700
<BR>From: "Ed Carwithen" <edwithen@oregontrail.net>
<BR>Subject: mystery
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<BR>Hello experts...
<BR>
<BR>I was called to look at an instrument that has me mystyfied! It is in =
<BR>a piano cabinet. Looks like a very ornate upright cabinet of the early =
<BR>1900's. It has a full piano keyboard. There are two pedals which look =
<BR>strange and angle away from each other. The pedals pump a bellows, and =
<BR>the keys play tones like a harmonium. There is NOTHING behind the =
<BR>top-front panal. It is empty! A great big boxy open space. All of the =
<BR>mechanism is below the keyboard and above the pedal space. It sounds =
<BR>like one of those portable camp organs. But it looks like there ought =
<BR>to be an upright piano action in there...There isn't.
<BR>
<BR>It is made by H. Lehr and Co. in Easton, PA. According to my atlas =
<BR>H.Lehr & Co. was located in Easton, Pa., and they made Lehr & Lafayette =
<BR>pianos. This ain't no piano!!! The first number in the atlas for Lehr =
<BR>pianos is 18,000. This serial is 4642.
<BR>
<BR>This isn't something someone has modified. The keys are obviously =
<BR>designed for the action which is stowed beneath. There is a label =
<BR>describing it as a Grand Organ =20
<BR>
<BR>Has anybody seen one of these babies? Does anyone one anywhere have any =
<BR>information at all about this instrument. =20
<BR>
<BR>Enquiring minds want to know.
<BR>
<BR>
<BR>Ed Carwithen
<BR>John Day, OR
<BR></BLOCKQUOTE>
<BR></FONT><FONT COLOR="#000000" SIZE=3 FAMILY="SERIF" FACE="Bell MT" LANG="0">Ed, this is indeed just a reed organ. Even Sears was selling one like it,
<BR>though cheaper and not at all ornate, under the Beckwith name. I was given
<BR>one in terrible condition back in the '50s, and got it all working, though
<BR>not very expertly! It had a full 88 keyboard, with reeds to match, no
<BR>fudging by repeating a higher octave at the bottom. The outer pedals were to
<BR>the bellows, the middle pedal was a coupler, octaves up from the split
<BR>(sorry, don't remember where that was, maybe G3 or thereabouts), octaves down
<BR>below. And, as I recall, it had 6 pull stops coming out of a full-width
<BR>music desk......though there were only two full sets of reeds. No knee
<BR>pedals like most old pump organs had for the venetian swell built in--this
<BR>one used suction caused by harder pumping to move the back of the wind
<BR>chamber forward, opening the swell louvers automatically.
<BR>
<BR>Seeing two high school kids carrying it easily into my house must have been a
<BR>shock to the neighbors.............LOTS lighter than a piano!
<BR>
<BR>Stan Ryberg
<BR>Barrington IL
<BR>mailto:<U>jstan40@aol.com</U></FONT></HTML>