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Letter from F.A. Anderson Winnipeg January 31, 1961 Dear Stuart, A few evenings ago, a scotchman went across the TV screen with his bagpipes and I thought of you and the times that you used to do the same in the old Grace church when the organ was being taken down. I must sincerely apologize for not answering your letter sooner, I was very glad to hear from you again. I have often wondered how you were making out with the organ and now that it is being readied for service again I would like very much to hear it once more. The day the organ was loaded in the vans was pretty wet. I had noticed how they had loaded the chests and suggested that they be turned on their sides but he said, they are up on the front deck and well padded and should be Okay. So they must have gotten into some rough roads to split one of them, they were so heavy that it would not be too hard to split them. I always find that it pays large dividends to mark everything you can when taking an organ apart and saves a lot of guessing where they go back again. Harry Gore had told me that he saw you in Saskatoon - I did not go there for the rebuilding of the 3rd Ave job, as I found that a lot of the parts are much too heavy for me now. The last rebuild job here was at First Lutheran and we had to cart a lot of the parts down to the basement and back up to the balcony where we had our workshop. We stored all the pipe work in the balcony which saved a lot of time. Being a summer job they could release the balcony to us. I have a Casavant 2 manual console and pedal board. The console had been pneumatic so will have to electrify it. It was for a 3-3 organ 3 stops on the great and three on the swell with the usual couplers. I am making up 4 unit chests and will use Reisner No 601 magnets which will make it direct action doing away with the primaries and secondaries etc - about the same idea that Wicks Company use. I have a lot of the Roosevelt type pneumatics, the same that Karn Warren used to use if I decide on doing any more later on. I also have a lot of magnets, the same type that I had on the theatre organ. They are smaller than the Reisner type. I think he took them out of an organ that he installed in a church here and replaced them with Reisner type which are more reliable and easier to service.
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Excerpts
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This is the story of a boy who loved pipe organs - "the sound of the soul."
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One day the boy saw an article and a picture of a pipe organ built by the students in the technical shop of a school in England. They used a book called "How to Build a Two Manual Pipe Organ" by H.F. Milne. -
Letter from F.A. Anderson
Winnipeg January 31, 1961Dear Stuart,
A few evenings ago, a scotchman went across the TV screen with his bagpipes and I thought of you and the times that you used to do the same in the old Grace church when the organ was being taken down.
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Casavant Freres Ltd.,St. Hyacinthe, P.Q.
Dear Sirs: Re. # 301, Grace Church, Winnipeg, 1907
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This instrument became my property in 1955, and was erected in a music room built for it on my farm home in Kindersley, Saskatchewan, in 1963. In 1979 I moved it to a specially built room added to my house in Victoria, where it is in almost daily use by students and others.

