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  2. The Cable Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cable_Company

    The Cable Company (earlier, Wolfinger Organ Company, Chicago Cottage Organ Company; sometimes called by the name of its subsidiary, The Cable Piano Company) was an American manufacturer and distributor of pianos and reed organs that operated independently from 1880 to 1936.

  3. Organ Supply Industries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organ_Supply_Industries

    Organ Supply Industries, Incorporated is a pipe organ parts manufacturer founded in 1924 as the Organ Supply Corporation in Erie, Pennsylvania. With over 46,000 square feet (4,300 m 2 ) of manufacturing floor, it is the largest organ parts supplier in North America .

  4. List of pipe organ builders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_pipe_organ_builders

    Leek Pipe Organ Company, Oberlin, Ohio (1976-2014), then Berea, Ohio (2014- ) [136] Levsen Organ Company, Buffalo, Iowa (1954- ) Link Piano and Organ Company; Los Angeles Art Organ Company, Los Angeles, California; Charles McManis, Kansas City, Kansas (1913–2004) Marr and Colton, Warsaw, New York (1915–1932) Midmer-Losh Organ Company ...

  5. German Jubilate Harmonium Reeds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../German_Jubilate_Harmonium_Reeds

    In the early 1960s the factory making the German organ reeds used in the Indian sub-continent for harmoniums, having changed hands several times and now situated in post World War II East Germany (GDR), was taken over by the communist government and the reed making machinery was scrapped. This marked the end of German reed production.

  6. Tellers Organ Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tellers_Organ_Company

    The company was known as Tellers-Kent for a number of years until the name changed back to Tellers Organ Company. The company would eventually become a pioneer in the combination pipe/electronic organ fields and would come to produce the Conn-Tellers Electro-Pipe Combination Organ. The company later became an authorized Rodgers Instruments dealer.

  7. M. P. Moller - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M._P._Moller

    Today this mostly-Möller organ is the world's largest all-pipe organ in a religious structure, although the First Congregational Church of Los Angeles, California makes a similar claim with its two pipe organs. Möller rebuilt and expanded the Naval Academy Chapel Organ in 1940, and built the organ for the Air Force Academy Chapel in 1963.

  8. Pump organ - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pump_organ

    A hand-pumped Indian harmonium, of the type used in South Asia, here used at a European jazz festival.. The pump organ or reed organ is a type of organ using free-reeds that generates sound as air flows past the free-reeds, the vibrating pieces of thin metal in a frame.

  9. DeBence Antique Music World - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DeBence_Antique_Music_World

    DeBence Antique Music World Band Organ by Artizan Factories Inc., at the Drake Day Circus at Drake Well Park, August 24, 2013. DeBence Antique Music World is a museum in Franklin, Pennsylvania whose collection contains more than 100 antique mechanical musical instruments, including music boxes, band organs, player pianos, a nickelodeon piano, as well as a number of other antiques.