Hinners Organ Company

Hinners Organ Company was an American manufacturer of reed and pipe organs located in Pekin, Illinois. Established in 1879 by German-American John Hinners, the firm grew through several partners, becoming Hinners & Fink in 1881, Hinners & Albertsen in 1886, and Hinners Organ Company in 1902. In the 1920s Hinners established a subsidiary, the Illinois Organ Supply Company, which mass-produced parts for Hinners and other firms. Business declined in the 1930s due to the Great Depression, changing technology, and increasing competition. Hinners became a service company in 1936 and closed in 1942.

Hinners pipe organ at Our Redeemer Lutheran Church, Staplehurst, Nebraska (built 1917)

During its history, the company built over 10,000 reed organs and its pipe organ opus numbers reached #3097, including rebuilds and enlargements. The majority of its pipe organs were stock models of two manuals and mechanical action, with electro-pneumatic instruments introduced in the 1910s. Hinners also built at least 49 theatre organs and some larger custom projects, including several three- and four-manual installations.

Hinners was one of the first American mail order catalogue companies. Its focus on standard models, mass production, and direct marketing meant that even small churches in Midwestern towns could afford a respectable pipe organ. Hinners was also notable for high-quality construction that could be serviced by local craftsmen in an era before reliable roads and electricity. By being among the first to make his products widely affordable to ordinary people across rural America, John Hinners has been compared to both Henry Ford and Aaron Montgomery Ward.

History

John L. Hinners (1846–1906) was the son of German Methodist Episcopals and originally a carpenter by trade.[1] He apprenticed at Mason & Hamlin in Chicago where he learned to build pump organs. In 1879, Hinners set up shop as the Perfection Organ Manufactury at the back of Schæfer's music merchandising store in Pekin, Illinois. When Schæfer sold his store, Hinners recruited investors to expand his organ building business. It became Hinners & Fink when J. J. Fink became partner in 1881, Hinners & Albertsen when Fink was bought out by Ubbo J. Albertsen in 1886, and incorporated as Hinners Organ Company in 1902 when Albertsen retired.[2]:19–20

Hinners began building pipe organs in 1890. His primary customers were the many German-speaking immigrant congregations then flourishing in the Midwestern United States. Company literature was printed in both English and German, and German was the language used by workers on the factory floor.[3] The earliest known instrument was built in 1890 for the German Evangelical Church in Edwardsville, Illinois.[4] Because Hinners didn't consistently date and number his nameplates, the first pipe organ for which there are company records was installed in 1892 at the German Evangelical Church in Huntingburg, Indiana.[5]:16

There is record of a nameplate that reads “Established 1879 Hinners Organ Co. Pekin, Illinois U.S.A” on the organ installed in 1891, at the original St. Bartholomew Catholic Church, in Columbus, Indiana. The organ is still there today, however it is non working.

Unlike competitors who made each pipe organ by hand as a custom job, Hinners began building stock models and offering them by catalog without a sales force. His simplified manufacturing and distribution methods were specifically tailored so that small rural churches who wanted the grand sound of a pipe organ could afford one. The average cost of a one-manual Hinners instrument in the 1890s was about $100 per rank, including shipping and installation. If a church wished to reduce costs further, members of the congregation could pick up the organ in their own wagons at the factory. There was more variety to the company's organ cases, some of which were quite elaborate. This was an important selling point, as the organ was often the most prominent architectural feature in otherwise spartan country church buildings. Hinners was also known for high-quality workmanship that could be easily serviced by local craftsmen.[6]

The company became a prolific manufacturer, building 10,000[6]-20,000[2]:80 reed and 2,000[6]-3,000[2]:80 pipe organs over its history.[lower-alpha 1] Hinners pipe organ opus numbers are known to reach #3097.[lower-alpha 2] The majority of pipe organs Hinners manufactured had two manuals with mechanical action, although many divided one-manual instruments were also made. The company began offering products with tubular-pneumatic action in 1910 and electro-pneumatic action in 1916. Hinners did build some large custom organs, including several with three-manuals and two with four-manuals.[7] The company's peak year was 1912, when it had 97 employees and was shipping 3 pipe organs per week.[5]:20 Hinners organs were not only popular in the American midwest, many were shipped abroad.

John Hinners' son Arthur took over as president in 1915. To further increase efficiency, he established the subsidiary Illinois Organ Supply Company in 1920, which mass-produced component parts for Hinners and other firms. Although some new product offerings were introduced, the firm did little to invest in new technology in subsequent years. Competitors began building newer factories, new customers were demanding larger and more customized instruments, and the company's target rural market began to decline. While Hinners provided the first theatre organ in Chicago in 1908,[8] it failed to capitalize on this booming trend and made only 48 more such instruments.[3] Increasingly viewed as "old fashioned", the company was already in a weak position by the time the Great Depression hit in 1929. By 1936 Hinners had built its last organ. It spun off its reed organ business and hung on as a service firm until 1942.[2]:55

Legacy

Hinners was one of the first American businesses to exclusively make use of direct mail order.[2]:4 All preliminaries were handled by letter, including design, customization, and financing. In a typical arrangement, a completed pipe organ would be shipped to the customer by rail or steamboat, and then a company employee followed to perform onsite installation.[6] Just as Aaron Montgomery Ward first reached isolated rural customers with his mail order business in 1872, John Hinners was also among the first to realize these communities wanted better access high quality products.[9] His early experiences as a church musician in small towns, and the inadequacies of the instruments then available, no doubt influenced this business philosophy.[5]

Hinners' application of mass production and rigid controls on product variability also allowed the company to offer greater volume at lower cost. In this regard he has been compared to Henry Ford, wherein “Ford brought the passenger car to the common man while Hinners brought the pipe organ.”[9][10] By making these complex musical instruments available to thousands of rural communities over its 56 years in business, Hinners was said to have "filled the plains with music".[2]:25

The loud, romantic sound and mechanical action of Hinners instruments fell out of fashion by the mid-20th century. Many have disappeared or been radically altered such that they no longer resemble the original. Of the 30 Hinners pipe organs installed in North and South Dakota, more than all the company's competitors combined, only 15% survive. The first pipe organ in South Korea was a Hinners, and it was destroyed in the Korean War.[11][2]:16–21

In recent decades a new appreciation has developed for these elegant workhorses. Prominent examples that still survive include Hinners opus 1024 (1909), the oldest pipe organ original to the state of Oklahoma. Once located at the German Methodist Church in Oklahoma City, it was damaged by the nearby Murrah bombing on April 19, 1995. It has since been fully restored by the American Organ Institute at the University of Oklahoma and re-installed at Trinity Lutheran Church, Norman, Oklahoma.[12][13]

Notable instruments

Notes

  1. Estimates vary because instruments and company records have been lost over time.
  2. Hinners opus numbers also include rebuilds and enlargements of existing instruments.
gollark: That's annoying. There's *another* 2G prize up asking for something I might be able to breed... in two hours.
gollark: I see them occasionally, but then miss them, as is required by centuries of DC tradition.
gollark: Ah, the ambiguity of language.
gollark: I read it as "CB copper or CB aeon or CB gold".
gollark: They generally ask for more.

References

  1. Fox, David (1991). A guide to North American organbuilders: compiled from historical sources and the work of various researchers. Richmond, Virginia: Organ Historical Society. ISBN 0-913499-08-0., p. 122.
  2. Alcorn-Oppedahl, Allison (August 1997). Mail Order Music: the Hinners Organ Company in the Dakotas, 1879-1936 (PhD). Denton, Texas: University of North Texas. OCLC 39025422. Retrieved April 3, 2018.
  3. Ochse, Orpha (1975). The history of the organ in the United States. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. p. 302. ISBN 978-0-253-32830-4.
  4. Boeringer, James (1962). "Chronicle of The Hinners Organ Company" (PDF). The Tracker: Journal of the Organ Historical Society. 7 (2): 1–4. ISSN 0041-0330.
  5. Alcorn-Oppedahl, Allison (2000). "A History of the Hinners Organ Company of Pekin, Illinois" (PDF). The Tracker: Journal of the Organ Historical Society. 44 (3): 13–25. ISSN 0041-0330.
  6. Lawrence, Arthur (2006). "Hinners". In Bush, Douglas Earl; Kassel, Richard (eds.). The Organ: an Encyclopedia. Encyclopedia of Keyboard Instruments. Volume III. New York: Routledge. p. 254. ISBN 978-0-415-94174-7.
  7. Chace, Larry (2003). "Some Large Hinners Organs in Bloomington, Illinois". University at Albany. Retrieved April 9, 2018.
  8. Schiecke, Konrad (2011). Downtown Chicago's Historic Movie Theatres. Jefferson: McFarland & Co., Publishers. p. 97. ISBN 978-0-7864-8865-0.
  9. Sugg, Marvine (August 24, 2013). "100-year-old pipe organ restored to former grandeur". The Daily Herald. Columbia, South Carolina: GateHouse Media. Retrieved April 3, 2018.
  10. Coleberd, Robert (1966). "John L. Hinners: The Henry Ford of the Pipe Organ" (PDF). The Tracker: Journal of the Organ Historical Society. 10 (3): 4–6. ISSN 0041-0330.
  11. "First Pipe Organ Erected in Korea". The Diapason. 1. April 1, 1919. ISSN 8750-9229.
  12. Nehrenz, David (February 28, 2018). "Hinners Organ Dedication and Concert". Trinity Lutheran Church. Norman, Oklahoma. Retrieved April 4, 2018.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  13. Culver, Galen (February 16, 2018). "Hinners Saved: Oklahoma's oldest organ, and a 1995 Bombing survivor, gets new life and a new home in Norman". KFOR.com. Retrieved April 4, 2018.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  14. "OHS Database: Instrument 49236 Details". Organ Historical Society Pipe Organ Database. February 20, 2012. Retrieved April 8, 2018.
  15. "Christ Temple Cathedral 1926 Hinners Organ". John-Paul Buzard pipe organ builders. 2010. Retrieved April 8, 2018.
  16. "Dobson Op. 5". Dobson Pipe Organ Builders, Ltd. Lake City, Iowa. Retrieved April 8, 2018.
  17. "OHS Database: Instrument 3319 Details". Organ Historical Society Pipe Organ Database. January 26, 2011. Retrieved April 8, 2018.
  18. "OHS Database: Instrument 39261 Details". Organ Historical Society Pipe Organ Database. January 19, 2009. Retrieved April 8, 2018.
  19. "Hinner's Pipe Organ". Trinity Lutheran Church - New Richland. October 15, 2015. Retrieved April 8, 2018.
  20. "OHS Database: Instrument 49114 Details". Organ Historical Society Pipe Organ Database. January 18, 2012. Retrieved April 8, 2018.
  21. Henry, Helen (1989). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: St. Leonard's Catholic Church"., section 7, pp. 3-4. Nebraska State Historical Society. Retrieved April 8, 2018.
  22. "OHS Database: Instrument 24919 Details". Organ Historical Society Pipe Organ Database. October 13, 2015. Retrieved April 8, 2018.
  23. "OHS Database: Instrument 1233 Details". Organ Historical Society Pipe Organ Database. March 18, 2018. Retrieved April 8, 2018.

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