St Fin Barre’s Cathedral Organ

The organ was built in 1870 by William Hill & Sons. It consisted of three manuals, over 4,500 pipes and 40 stops. The main organ utilised a tubular-pneumatic action, with tracker action for the other two manuals. It was in place for the cathedral’s grand opening on Saint Andrew’s Day, 1870, and positioned in the west gallery, but moved to the north transept in 1889, to improve acoustics, maximise space, and avoid its interference with the view of the windows. That year, a 14-foot pit was dug in the floor beside the nave, as the new location for the organ.

Its maintenance has been one of the most expensive parts of the cathedral’s upkeep. It was overhauled in 1889 by the Cork firm T.W. Magahy, which added three new stops. The organ was moved from the west gallery (balcony) down to a pit in the north transept, where it sits today. Most of the choir organ is housed in an enclosure attached to the console, the lid of which the organist can raise or lower electrically. The next major overhaul was in 1906 by Hele & Company of Plymouth, which added a fourth manual (the Solo). By this stage, the action of the organ was entirely pneumatic. In 1965–1966, J. W. Walker & Sons Ltd of London overhauled the soundboards, installed a new console with electropneumatic action, and lowered the pitch.

By 2010 the organ’s electrics were unreliable. Trevor Crowe was employed to reconstruct and increase the number of pipes, and make tonal enhancements, including a 32′ extension to the pedal trombone. The project cost €1.2m and took three years to complete.

Organ Specification today:

GREAT ORGAN

Double Diapason 16’

Open Diapason No.1 8’

Open Diapason No.2 8’

Cone Gamba 8’

Stopped Diapason 8’

Flauto Traverso 8’

Quint 5 1/3’

Principal No.1 4’

Principal No.2 4’

Harmonic Flute 4’

Twelfth 2 2/3’

Fifteenth 2’

Cornet [Tenor G] V

Full Mixture IV

Sharp Mixture III

Trombone 16’

Trumpet 8’

Clarion 4’

SWELL ORGAN

Lieblich Bourdon 16’

Open Diapason 8’

Stopped Diapason 8’

Salicional 8’

Voix Angelica 8’

Principal 4’

Wald Flute 4’

Twelfth 2 2/3’

Fifteenth 2’

Tierce 1 3/5’

Mixture IV

Oboe 8’

Vox Humana 8’

Contra Fagotto 16’

Cornopean 8’

Clarion 4’

Swell Octave

Swell Sub Octave

SOLO ORGAN

[Unenclosed]

Open Diapason 8’

Octave 4’

Contra Posaune 16’

Tuba 8’

Posaune 8’

Clarion 4’

Flauto Traverso[Gt] 8’

[Enclosed]

Doppel Flute 8’

Viol di Gamba 8’

Voix Céleste 8’

Harmonic Flute 4’

Corno di Bassetto 8’

Orchestral Oboe 8’

Solo Octave

Solo Sub Octave

CHOIR ORGAN

Bourdon 16’

Open Diapason 8’

Gamba 8’

Gedeckt 8’

Dulciana 8’

Principal 4’

Gemshorn 4’

Suabe Flute 4’

Nazard 2 2/3’

Fifteenth 2’

Flautina 2’

Tierce 1 3/5

Mixture III

Cremona 8’

Trumpet 8’

NAVE GREAT

Bourdon 16’ [Available on the pedal with a separate stop]

Open Diapason 8’

Hohl Flute 8’

Principal 4’

Fifteenth 2’

Mixture IV

PEDAL ORGAN

Subbass [A] 32’

Open Wood [B] 16’

Open Metal [Gt] 16’

Violone 16’

Bourdon 16’

Subbass [A] 16’

Quint [B] 10 2/3’

Principal 8’

Bass Flute[A] 8’

Octave Wood[B] 8’

Fifteenth 4’

Flute [A] 4’

Mixture IV

Contra Trombone[C] 32’

Ophicleide[D] 16’

Trombone[C] 16’

Trumpet[D] 8’

Clarion 4’

Electro-pneumatic action

Sequencer

Stepper

16 general and 8 divisional pistons for each department

16 memory levels on divisionals and 96 memory levels on generals

All available for 8 users


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