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This is the story of a boy who loved pipe organs - "the sound of the soul." For the first time he realized he might have an organ of his own, so he sent for the book with high expectations. Years were to pass, and much hard work, before his dream became a reality. 1955 - It took six weeks to take the organ apart ready for shipment. Then one day, a month later, two large moving vans drove into the farm yard. The trucks had to return without delay, so the organ's thousands of parts were dumped on the ground. Fortunately the weather was good and dry. The more delicate parts were stored in the farm workshop, and the pipes were carried up to the hayloft. All except a few of the largest wooden pipes, some 16' long, were safely under shelter when a terrible blizzard roared in, without warning. Many people died in the storm, which lasted for three days. When it was over the big pipes were under twelve feet of hard-packed snow! They remained there until the next spring, when the sun softened the top crust of the snowbank, and the pipes were dug out of their frosty grave, undamaged because the snow around them had not yet begun to melt.Five years later, enough money was saved to start building a music room, and a year after that, the organ was playing in time for a Christmas concert. Visitors came from near and far to see and hear the organ in its new home. Already over 50 years old, so well made was it and so carefully installed, it played as well as when it was new. Then one day in 1971 its owner announced that Victoria was to be their new home. A house had been found on beautiful Despard Avenue. It had a lot deep enough so that a new music room could be built for the organ. For nearly seven years it stood silent on the Prairies, until the new home could be built for it, an addition on the house in Victoria. Once again it was taken apart, and packed into a huge "piggy-back" van and shipped by rail and boat, arriving in November of 1979, but this time there would be no blizzard to threaten it. By Christmas it was once again playing the beloved Carols as it had in Winnipeg seventy years before. Now students play it nearly every day, so that anyone who wishes to learn that great instrument will not have to endure the struggle of the farm boy of long ago who loved the organ and its music so dearly. Work is about to start on additions and improvements, and, if properly cared for and maintained, the great Casavant will be sounding for generations to come. Admin Note: The boy, of course, was Stuart. His boss was Franklin Legge. This is one of the first stories Stuart composed on his new word processor and printer, a state-of-the-art Atari system....... in the early 1970's. The ending of the story was added in the mid-80's. Always eager to try out new technologies, Stuart was quite enamoured with his word processor, and one Christmas each of his 4 daughters received an identical piece of equipment. He was careful to print out copies of everything he composed, and these letters and stories became the inspiration for my project.For the heart-wrenching story of the dismantling of the instrument in 1979, see the letter to Stuart Kennedy, dated November 28, 1979
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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.

