READING TOWN HALL

The organ was built by Henry Willis in
1864 for the old Town Hall, which dates from 1785. Additional
buildings, designed by Alfred Waterhouse, were erected in front of the
small Hall in 1876. The present large Hall was added in 1882, to a
design by Thomas Lainson in harmony with the Waterhouse building;
the Art Gallery and Reading Room completed this impressive group of
municipal buildings in 1894.
The organ was rebuilt by Willis for the new Hall in 1882, with
magnificent casework designed by Thomas Lainson jnr, and new front
pipes of tin. The Solo Organ and several other stops (shown by an
asterisk in the following specification) were new at that time, the old
Solo Organ becoming the new Choir Organ.
The organ has been cleaned several times; electric blowing was
introduced earlier this century, the pitch was lowered in 1947, and a
balanced swell pedal was introduced in 1964; but no other changes have
been made.
In 1999 the organ was restored to its 1882 form, with reinstatement of
the original sharp pitch (c=540).
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THE FATHER WILLIS ORGAN
1864 and 1882
RESTORED BY
HARRISON & HARRISON 1999