Notre Dame de Rouen. The façade of the Gothic Church in France. Photographer: Hippo1947. Licence: SHUTTERSTOCK.

20 May, 2026

Chester Cathedral Organ. Organist: Jonathan Scott.


Chester Cathedral Organ.
Played by Jonathan Scott.
29 May 2021.
Available on YouTube


Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopædia,
unless stated otherwise.

The Choral Tradition at Chester is 900 years old, dating from the foundation of the Bendedictine Monastery.

In 1844, an Organ by Gray & Davison of London was installed in the Cathedral, replacing an instrument with parts dating back to 1626, possibly by Father Bernard Smith.

Father Bernard Smith, 1630 – 1708, was a German-born Master-Organ-maker in England in the Late-17th-Century.


The Organ was rebuilt and enlarged by Whiteley Bros. of Chester in 1876, to include harmonic flutes and reeds by Cavaillé-Coll.

It was later moved to its present position at the front of the North Transept. In 1910, William Hill and Son of London extensively rebuilt and re-voiced the Organ, replacing the Cavaillé-Coll reeds with new pipes of their own.

The Choir division of the Organ was enlarged and moved behind the Choir-Stalls on the South side. The instrument was again overhauled by Rushworth and Dreaper of Liverpool in 1969, when a new mechanism and some new pipework made to a design by the Organist, Roger Fisher, was installed; the following year, the instrument was inaugurated by Maurice Duruflé and his wife, Marie-Madeleine Duruflé.

Since 1991, the Organ has been in the care of David Wells, a Liverpudlian Organ-builder.[4]


The Organ Case was built and designed by Sir Gilbert Scott.[5]

The Organ’s four manual keyboards run through a five-octave range and its radiating concave pedal board runs through a two-and-a-half-octave range.

The key and draw stop mechanisms employ electro-pneumatic action. Its bellows are pumped electrically, which is triggered by a key at the console, thus powering the instrument.

The console labels and keys are veneered in ivory; and it has 109 pistons including fourteen generals on thirty-two memory channels.

It is tuned to a' = 440hz in equal temperament. In total, the instrument carries sixty-nine stops accounting to eighty-six ranks of pipes.

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