ST JOHN’S ANGLICAN CHURCH, COOKS HILL



© PdL 2005

 

This cruciform building was opened in 1859 and designed in the Early English Gothic style by architect Edmund Blacket.  It is constructed of rendered brick with stone dressings and includes a nave, with paired lancet windows, and transepts.  The interior includes stained glass windows and a hammerbeam roof. [1]

 

The splendid pipe organ by J.W. Walker, of London, housed in an attractive Gothic case, was built in 1866 as job number 832.  Costing £305/15/-, it was originally erected at the west end of the nave.  In 1966 the instrument was restored by Arthur Jones of Sydney, who acted as agent for J.W. Walker & Sons, then at Ruislip, Middlesex.  A new pedalboard was added at this time and the casework and display pipes were repainted.  The hand-blowing mechanism was also removed at some stage.

 

In spite of the changes, the instrument survives in a remarkably pure state of preservation, with cone tuning retained, its sprightly tone being characteristic of Walker organs of the period. The double-rise bellows and weights survive, as well as the stopknobs, engraved stop domes, keyboards, keycheeks, composition pedals, swell shutter control, builder’s nameplate and telltale. [2]   Two vacant sliders are still available to complete the tonal scheme: a Great Flute 4 and Swell Oboe 8 were envisaged by the Walker firm.

 


© PdL 2005

 

J.W. Walker 1866 (2/11 mechanical)

 

 

GREAT

 

 

Open Diapason 

8 Ft.

 

Horn Diapason 

8 Ft.

 

Clarabella Flute Treb. 

8 Ft.

tone

Stop’d Diapason Bass 

8 Ft.

tone

Principal 

4 Ft.

 

Fifteenth 

2 Ft.

 

Mixture 

2 ranks

 

Spare slide for Flute

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SWELL

 

 

Sw. Open Diapason 

8 Ft.

 

Sw. Stop’d Diapason 

8 Ft.

tone

Sw. Principal 

4 Ft.

 

Sw. Cornopean

8 Ft.

 

Spare slide for Oboe

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

PEDALS

 

 

Grand Bourdon 

16 Ft.

tone +

 

 

 

 

COUPLERS

 

 

Swell to Great

 

 

Great to Pedals

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mechanical action throughout

 

Compass 56/30 (Note: All Swell stops of 44-note compass. The lowest octave of Swell manual plays only C-B of the Great Stop’d Diapason Bass)

 

3 composition pedals for Great

 

Hitch-down swell lever

 

No. of pipes = 585

Pitch a1 = 442 Hz at 190 C

Wind pressure (in 1981) =  62 mm (2⅜”)

 

Mixture composition:

C - b0 :  19.22

C1 - g3 : 12.15

 

+ 29 pipes only C - e1 per original pedalboard

 





© PdL 2005


© PdL 2005

© PdL 2005

 

 

J.W. Walker, London, 1866

St John’s Anglican Church, Cooks Hill

 (drawing by Graeme Rushworth)

 



[1] Barry Maitland and David Stafford, Architecture Newcastle.  Newcastle, NSW: RAIA (Newcastle Division), 1997, 8.

 

[2] John Stiller, “St John’s Anglican Church Cooks Hill Newcastle NSW.  Documentation of Pipe Organ built by J. Walker 1866”.  Organ Historical Trust of Australia, 1981.


© OHTA 2005