Thomas Swarbrick

Thomas Swarbrick (c. 1675 c. 1753) (sometime Schwarbrook) was an organ builder active in England in the eighteenth century.[1]

Organ case in St Philip's Cathedral, Birmingham by Thomas Swarbrick of 1715

History

He learned his trade as an apprentice to the famous builder Renatus Harris. He appears to be working on his own by 1706 when he rebuilt an organ in St Alphege’s Church, Greenwich.[2]

His most famous organ is that in St Michael’s Church, Coventry of 1733.[3]

His nephew, Henry Swarbrick, was organist of Hereford Cathedral from 1720 to 1754.

Works

gollark: On the visual ones, I would assume that most people have a mental picture of it or something like that, which I can't do.
gollark: I do also have aphantasia, which is possibly relevant.
gollark: Perhaps. I don't see why my computer would be much worse than average for that, though.
gollark: Humanbenchmark has a bunch of other things. I have this vaguely weird set of results.
gollark: Perhaps you could try and get a more comfortable keyboard.

References

  1. The English Organ. Stephen Bicknell. Cambridge University Press. 1999
  2. The Organ: An Encyclopedia. Douglas Earl Bush, Richard Kassel. Psychology Press, 2006
  3. The Organ. Hopkins and Rimbault. 1855
  4. A Provincial Organ Builder in Victorian England: William Sweetland of Bath. Gordon D. W. Curtis, Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2011
  5. A History of Lincoln Minster, Dorothy Owen, CUP Archive, 1994
  6. The Lives and Works of William and Philip Hayes, Simon Heighes. Taylor & Francis, 1995
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