In 1931 the Estey Organ Company installed a new, large
pipe organ in the Bridges Auditorium
of Pomona College, Claremont, CA. The
auditorium and the organ were the gifts of
Mr. and
Mrs. Appleton Bridges in memory of their daughter Mabel Shaw Bridges
who had died
in 1907.
Joseph W. Clokey, college
organist, and James B. Jamison of the Estey company drew
up the specifications for
the organ. The organ incorporated the results of Mr. Jamison's
recent study of
instruments built by prominent organ builders in Germany, England and
France. The
instrument represents the high point of Estey's building of what may
rightly
be called "symphonic" organs,
and paralleles the work of other important America builders, such as
E.M.
Skinner, Aeolian-Skinner,
Kimball, Austin and Moeller. As the organ was under construction in
Brattleboro, many important
organists visited the factory to hear the organ (
see list of names
).
However, documents in both
the files of the College and the Estey company record that
the installation was a
difficult one and not particularly successful. The chambers in
which the organ was
installed were deep and widely divided on either side of the stage,
making it all but
impossible for the instrument to be heard by performers on the stage,
nor properly heard by the
audience. For many years the instrument has been unused and
not maintained.
However, this instrument
is clearly an important one, not only as the "magnum opus" of the
Estey company and James B.
Jamison, but also representing important early steps toward
the so-called "organ
reform movement" in the United States.
The Console
Dr. William H.
Barnes, a noted organ designer of the time, in an article in "The
American
Organist" (September 1931) wrote:
"I was one of the first visitors
to the Estey factory after they had a half-dozen
stops in playable form on the factory
floor, which gave an idea of a true
Schulze Diapason Chorus. I was
very much impressed but still somewhat
skeptical.... It was not until my last
visit to the factory, about the middle of July,
just before the Great and Swell
divisions of the Claremont organ were to be
shipped, that I became fully convinced
that Mr. Jamison had obtained tangible
and practical results of extraordinary
merit."
In an extensive article in the same magazine in October 1931, Mr.
Jamison describes at
great length the thinking that went into designing each stop for this
important instrument:
"As I went from country to
country and heard, tried and studied the best
features of national
schools of organ design, it seemed to me that no one
of them was entirely right
or comprehensive, but that a judicious blend of
the best features of
American, English, French and German practices would
result in the most
catholic of organs, with the broadest tonal palette of all, and
without question the most
enjoyable of instruments, as well as the most majestic.
"Therefore, the Claremont
organ has a typical English Great, with one or two
American embroideries, and
one original idea of our own; a quasi-French Swell,
an American Choir, and an
American-English Solo. There are a few German
touches, and they are
important ones. The pedal has no claim to nationality, but is
a rather comprehensive
affair."