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Doncaster Minster

Coordinates: 53°31′32.88″N 1°8′7.44″W / 53.5258000°N 1.1354000°W / 53.5258000; -1.1354000
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Doncaster Minster
The Minster and Parish Church of St George, Doncaster
St George's Minster, Doncaster
Map
53°31′32.88″N 1°8′7.44″W / 53.5258000°N 1.1354000°W / 53.5258000; -1.1354000
OS grid referenceSE 5742 0356
Location9 Church Street, Doncaster, South Yorkshire DN1 1RD
CountryEngland
DenominationChurch of England
ChurchmanshipBroad Church
Websitedoncasterminster.org
History
DedicationSt George
Consecrated14 October 1858
Architecture
Functional statusActive
Heritage designationGrade I listed[1]
Designated12 June 1950
Architect(s)George Gilbert Scott
Architectural typeGothic Revival
StyleGothic Revival
Groundbreaking1854
Completed1858
Construction cost£48,000
Specifications
Length168.5 feet (51.4 m)
Width92 feet (28 m)
Height160 feet (49 m)
Bells8
Administration
ProvinceProvince of York
DioceseDiocese of Sheffield
ArchdeaconryDoncaster
DeaneryDoncaster
ParishSt George Doncaster
Clergy
Vicar(s)The Revd David Stevens
Laity
Organist(s)Darren Williams

Doncaster Minster, formally the Minster and Parish Church of St George, is the Anglican minster church of Doncaster, South Yorkshire, England. It is a grade I listed building and was designed by architect designer George Gilbert Scott. The church was built in 1854–1858 to replace an earlier building destroyed by fire. It is an active place of worship and has a Schulze organ, a ring of eight bells, and a celebrated clock by Dent. The church is one of two parish churches to have minster status in South Yorkshire. The other is the minster church of Rotherham.

History

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St George's Minster, Doncaster

The original 12th-century Norman building burnt down on the last day of February 1853.[2] This fire resulted in the loss of the medieval library which was above the south porch.[3]

The current building was designed by architect Sir George Gilbert Scott in 1853 and constructed between 1854 and 1858 at a cost of £43,126 4s 5d.[2] It was consecrated by the Archbishop of York on 14 October 1858.[4]

The Minster today

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The Minster is one of Doncaster's most architecturally important buildings evidenced by its Grade I listing[1] and was described by Sir John Betjeman as "Victorian Gothic at its very best". It was given minster status as the Minster and Parish Church of St George by the Bishop of Sheffield on 17 June 2004.[5] It is an active place of worship with regular services and is also used for civic services, arts events and other celebrations.[6] The Minster is a member of the Major Churches Network, successor to the Greater Churches Network.[citation needed]

Amongst its treasures are a clock by Dent (the designer of the Palace of Westminster Clock, more usually known as Big Ben)[2] and a spectacular 5 manual organ by the renowned German organ builder Edmund Schulze (1824–1877).

The minster has eight bells with a tenor of 29 long cwt 2 qr 17 lb (3,321 lb or 1,506 kg).[7]

Vicars

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Organs and organists

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Organists and choirmasters

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1862 Schulze Organ

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Rising from the ashes

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The medieval Parish Church of St George possessed a fine Harris organ of 1739–40. This instrument was praised by John Stanley, who declared "every pipe in the reed stops to be worth its weight in silver".[citation needed] It grew from an original specification of some 24 stops to one of 51 stops and was reputed to be the largest organ in England except for York Minster, due to the efforts of Jeremiah Rogers (organist 1835–1879), who paid for much of the work himself. The organ had just been relocated from the west gallery to the chancel and its pedal extended to 32 ft pitch, when it was consumed by fire, along with the entire building, on 28 February 1853.

The leading architect of the day, Sir George Gilbert Scott, was commissioned to rebuild the church, a task which he completed in only four years. Consecrated in 1858, the new church is the most cathedral-like of Scott's parish churches and is crowned by a bell tower 170 feet high.

Jeremiah Rogers was desirous of commissioning an organ worthy of Scott's new church and set out to acquire "the best organ that could be obtained anywhere in the world".[citation needed] Rogers made many visits around Europe inspecting famous organs, often in the company of his friend E. J. Hopkins (organist of the Temple Church).

J. F. Schulze and Sons

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Johann Friedrich Schulze was born in Milbitz near Paulinzella, Thuringia, in 1794, and began making organs there in 1825. His first organs were for Horba (10 stops) and Milbitz (21 stops). In 1825, he moved to Paulinzella where his business increased and he undertook substantial contracts at Solingen and Bremen Cathedral. In 1851, he exhibited an organ at the Great Exhibition, reputedly at the express invitation of Prince Albert, himself a native of Thuringia. One of three foreign organs on exhibition, Schulze's instrument was a modest two manual of 15 stops. Subsequently, transferred to Northampton Guildhall, it was later destroyed. It presented several features which at the time were new to the country and aroused much interest, resulting in the award of a prize medal. The specification was as follows:

Specification

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Great Organ
Bordun 16
Principal 8
Gambe 8
Gedact 8
Hohlflöte 8
Octave 4
Mixture 15,19,22,26,29
Clarinet 8
Choir Organ
Lieblich Bordun 16
Geigen Principal 8
Lieblich Gedackt 8
Flauto Traverso 8
Geigen Principal 4
Lieblich Flöte 4
Pedal Organ
Bordun (Gt) 16
Octav Bass 8
Posaune 16

E. J. Hopkins, in the first edition of Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians, comments on Schulze's exhibition organ and describes the Lieblich Gedackt as "the invention of Schulze....singularly beautiful in quality of tone".[citation needed] The Flauto Traverso he describes thus "double length in the upper part....the pipes being of wood bored and turned to a cylindrical shape were in reality so many actual flutes".[citation needed] In addition he noted that the organ possessed two excellent free reeds.

The exhibition organ did not by itself produce any orders for the firm and it may have been Hopkins' personal familiarity with some of the German instruments which finally clinched the Doncaster commission for Schulze. Hopkins visited the 1852 Schulze organ at Bremen Cathedral and was later to recall:

"The effect of the organ was exceedingly solemn, grand or soothing, according to whether I used the 16 and 8ft diapasons, the full organ, or the flutes and gedackts. In fact, I never at any organ, in the whole course of my life, felt myself under such a great enchantment. Indeed the excitement was so great that I had two or three times to leave the church in the most urgent state."[citation needed]

Writing in The Organ, its History and Construction (E. J. Hopkins and E. F. Rimbault, Third Edition, London 1877), Hopkins describes a specification for an ideal 4 manual organ of 87 stops which bears a close resemblance to Doncaster.

The order was placed in 1857, originally for a three manual instrument. With the death of Johann Friedrich Schulze (1793–1858), it was left to his son, Heinrich Edmund Schulze (1824–1878), to take over as the innovative and creative force within the firm (see plate I). Edmund Schulze soon persuaded Rogers to enlarge the specification to a 5 manual instrument which was to be the largest church organ in the country with 94 registers over 5 manuals including 25 stops on the pedal department, exceeded only by Willis's organ for St. George's Hall, Liverpool of 1851.

In 1860 the main consignment of parts from Germany arrived at Hull. Much of the construction took place in the church itself where Edmund Schulze together with four or five men worked on the project for two years. One observer reputedly noted that the large 32 foot principal was cleverly made from the wooden packing cases of the shipment itself. According to Rogers, Schulze spent three weeks regulating and finishing the mixtures working from the early hours of the morning until midnight and sleeping on the bellows before resuming his labours. The new organ was dedicated at a service on 24 September 1862.

As a result of the publicity of the Doncaster organ, many other orders followed, especially in the North of England, including St Mary's Tyne Dock (1862), Meanwood Towers (1869, subsequently moved to Harrogate and finally to St Bartholomew's Armley), St Peter's Hindley (1873) and St Peter's Harrogate (1879).

Doncaster was to be the largest organ the firm were to build. Prior to this, Schulze's largest contract had been the 80 stop 4 manual instrument in the Marienkirche, Lübeck, completed in 1854 (destroyed in 1942), often regarded as a sister instrument to Doncaster. After the death of Edmund Schulze in 1878, the firm ceased trading the following year.

Innovations of Edmund Schulze

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The Doncaster Schulze contained a number of technical innovations. Huge pedal slider soundboards were built to enable each pedal stop to be available at two pitches, thus enabling an independent pedal section of some 25 registers including 2 mixtures, 4 mutations and 8 reeds, well able to support both classical and romantic repertoire. In terms of sheer number of stops, though perhaps not in ranks, it exceeded its rival at St. George's Hall, Liverpool.

In addition to the provision of conventional beating reeds, Schulze provided two free reeds: the pedal Contra Posaune 32 ft and Posaune 16 ft. Doncaster possesses the only known example of this stop at 32 ft pitch in England.

In order to obtain more definition in his pedal department, Schulze provided the first known example of a wooden 16 ft Violone, fitted with a box mouth to steady the speech.

Other innovations included in the instrument were the triangular section Hohl Flute 8 ft on the Great division and the use of wooden harmonic flutes. Stop names and characteristics unfamiliar in this country included the Quintaten, Lieblich Gedackt, Gemshorn, Dolce, Terpodian and of course the famed wide mouthed Schulze diapason. The Flauto Traverso 8 ft and the Flauto Traverso 4 ft, as noted by Hopkins, consist of cylindrical open flute pipes, made from Beech, bored and turned on a lathe.

The chief glory of the Doncaster Schulze is its bold Great Flue Chorus which extends from its manual 32 ft to no fewer than 14 ranks of mixture (the Swell having to be content with a mere 12 mixture ranks).

Norman & Beard and later works

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In 1910 the only significant changes were made to the instrument with the replacement of Schulze's "borrowed" solo manual with an independent department in its own swell box. Another new swell-box was provided for the echo organ making it in the words of Magnus Black "inaudible above the traffic except in the early hours of the morning". The echo swell box shutters have since been removed! A large leathered No1 Diapason, standing in its own separate chest, was added to the Great at this time. It was removed in 1959.

The sum total of the Norman & Beard changes was the addition of 8 new stops (i.e. the Solo division and the Swell Celestes). It is believed that the wind pressure to the Great Reeds was increased, but no other changes were made to the voicing.

In 1935 J W Walker & Sons provided a new electro-pneumatic action and radiating terraced stop tab console on the south side of the choir (see plate VI). Further work was carried out by Walkers in 1959 including the replacement of the original pedal chests, which after 100 years service were no longer reliable. The Walker console was removed in 1999 when Andrew Carter installed a replacement 5 manual drawstop console built by Nicholson. The blowing plant and Great action were overhauled at this time.

Critical Appreciation

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The organ at Doncaster Minster is the Magnum Opus of Edmund Schulze and is the largest instrument that the firm produced. One of the largest organs in Europe, it is no exaggerated claim that this single instrument revolutionised the British organ and led to a complete reappraisal of the classical organ. Doncaster became, and still is, a place of pilgrimage for musicians and organ builders alike.

One example of its significance was the reaction of the Victorian architect, T.C. Lewis, who became a follower of Schulze and set up on his own account as an organ builder. Lewis, whose famous instrument at Southwark Cathedral owes much to Doncaster, had high praise for the Doncaster instrument:

"...anything finer it is, I believe, impossible to imagine...it is by far the grandest instrument I have ever heard."

Dr. Nicholas Thistlethwaite in "The Making of the Victorian Organ" Cambridge 1990, states:

"The Doncaster organ proved to be one of the two most influential organs built in England during the second half of the century. Schulze's work and especially his monumental organ at Doncaster, established a new ideal. His later English work was to be received with equal respect, but it was Doncaster that showed the way."

The historical importance of the Doncaster instrument to the present day lies in the fact that it was sufficiently good to escape the almost continual rebuilding that similar instruments of the period underwent. Sadly similar instruments at St. George's Hall Liverpool, York Minster and Birmingham Town Hall found themselves undergoing regular rebuilds to keep up to date with the latest organ fashion.

A number of works have been written specifically for the Doncaster Schulze; these include Francis Jackson's Fourth Organ Sonata and a Trio Sonata by Magnus Black (organist 1957–1995).

Magnus Black summed up its musical significance thus:

"The classical revival....led to an appreciation of well-balanced manual choruses and independent pedal departments......These are among the features of the Doncaster Schulze. The German Romantic organ never lost its connections with its classical predecessor and many important features relate it to the organs of Bach's time."

Andrew Wilson

Specification

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I Choir
1 Lieblich Bourdon 16
2 Geigen Principal 8
3 Viol de Gamba 8
4 Flauto Gamba 2 ranks 8
5 Gemshorn 8
6 Salicional 8
7 Flauto Traverso 8
8 Lieblich Gedackt 8
9 Flauto Traverso 4
10 Lieblich Flute 4
11 Geigen Principal 4
12 Quintaten 4
13 Flautina 2
II Great
14 Sub Bass (c) 32
15 Double Open Diap. 16
16 Bourdon 16
17 Open Diapason No. 1 8
18 Open Diapason No. 2 8
19 Stopped Diapason 8
20 Hohl Flute 8
21 Stopped Flute 4
22 Principal 4
23 Gemshorn 4
24 Quint 5+13
25 Twelfth 2+23
26 Fifteenth 2
27 Mixture V
28 Cymbal III-V
29 Cornet (c) IV
30 Double Trumpet 16
31 Posaune 8
32 Trumpet 8
33 Clarion 4
III Swell (enclosed)
34 Bourdon 16
35 Open Diapason 8
36 Terpodian 8
37 Echo Gamba 8*
38 Voix Celeste (c) 8*
39 Harmonic Flute 8
40 Rohr Flute 8
41 Harmonic Flute 4
42 Stopped Flute 4
43 Principal 4
44 Viol d'Amour 4
45 Mixture V
46 Scharf III
47 Cornet IV
48 Double Bassoon 16
49 Trumpet 8
50 Horn 8
51 Hautboy 8
52 Clarion 4
53 Vox Humana 8
Tremulant
IV Solo (enclosed)
54 String Gamba 8*
55 Harm. Claribel Flute 8*
56 Concert Flute 4*
57 Clarinet 8
58 Orchestral Oboe 8*
Tremulant
59 Tuba (unenclosed) 8*
V Echo
60 Tibia Major 16
61 Harmonica 8
62 Vox Angelica 8
63 Flauto Amabile 8
64 Flauto Traverso 8
65 Celestina 4
66 Flauto Dolcissimo 4
67 Harmonic Ætheria II
Pedal
68 Sub Principal 32
69 Major Bass 16
70 Principal Bass 16
71 Open Bass 16
72 Violone 16
73 Sub Bass 16
74 Major Bass 8
75 Flute Bass 8
76 Violoncello 8
77 Octave Bass 8
78 Quint Bass 10+23
79 Great Tierce 6+25
80 Quint 5+13
81 Fifteenth Bass 4
82 Tierce 3+15
83 Mixture II
84 Cymbal II
85 Contra Posaune 32
86 Posaune 16
87 Bombarde 16
88 Contra Fagotto 16
89 Trumpet 8
90 Horn 8
91 Fagotto 8
92 Clarion 4
Couplers
Solo to Pedal
Swell to Pedal
Choir to Pedal
Great to Pedal
Solo to Choir
Swell to Choir
Solo to Great
Swell to Great
Choir to Great

Manual compass C to a3 Pedal compass C to f1 (originally to e1)

  • Stops added by Norman & beard 1910. The original Solo division consisted of stops borrowed from the Swell. The Vox Humana was originally playable only from the Solo division.

8 thumb pistons to Great 8 thumb pistons to Swell 8 thumb pistons to general combinations 6 thumb pistons to Choir 3 thumb pistons to Echo 4 thumb pistons to Solo Thumb pistons for So-Pd, Sw-Pd, So-Gt, Sw-Gt, Gt-Pd, Ch-Pd 8 toe pistons to Great 8 toe pistons to Swell Reversible toe piston for Gt-Pd Great and Pedal combinations coupled Generals on Swell toe pistons Balanced Swell and Solo pedals

16 levels of departmental memory 64 levels of memory on generals

Wind pressures

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  • Swell Flue - 3+12"
  • Swell Reeds - 6"
  • Great Flue - 3+12"
  • Great Reeds - 5"
  • Choir - 2+34"
  • Echo - 2+14"
  • Solo - 6"
  • Solo Tuba - 15"
  • Pedal Reeds - 5"
  • Pedal Flue - 3+34" and 5"

Chronology of Main Works

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  • 1862 Edmund Schulze & Son, Paulinzella. Tracker and Barker lever action.
  • 1894 Abbott & Smith, Leeds. New console and tubular pneumatic stop action.
  • 1896 Abbott & Smith removed foot blowing gear and installed Shipley gas engine and compressor.
  • 1910 Norman & Beard provided a new Solo organ together with 5 new stops to Solo organ & 2 Swell strings at a cost of £985. Large open diapason added to Great (removed in 1958).
  • 1935 J W Walker & Sons Ltd, London. New stop tab console with electric action.
  • 1958 J W Walker & Sons Ltd, London cleaned the organ and provided new soundboards to the pedal.
  • 1983 Swell and choir organs restored after water damage.
  • 1989 Cleaned after fire in church.
  • 1992 J W Walker & Sons refurbished soundboards of Great Organ reeds and mixtures.
  • 1994 A J Carter refurbished the Great flue soundboards.
  • 1999 Nicholson in collaboration with A J Carter installed new console; octave & sub-octave couplers to Swell and Solo, and the Echo to Choir and Echo to Pedal couplers were removed. Blowing plant refurbished.
  • 2000 A J Carter, Wakefield restored Great main action.
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See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Historic England. "Minster Church of St George (Grade I) (1151447)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 10 September 2015.
  2. ^ a b c Doncaster Minster website Archived 2012-03-21 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ "Total destruction of Doncaster church by fire". Westmoreland Gazette. Westmoreland. 5 March 1853. Retrieved 10 September 2015.
  4. ^ "Consecration of St George's Church, Doncaster". Yorkshire Gazette. York. 16 October 1858. Retrieved 10 September 2015.
  5. ^ "History and Heritage". www.doncasterminster.co.uk. Doncaster Minster. Retrieved 8 December 2021.
  6. ^ "Services and Events". www.doncasterminster.co.uk. Doncaster Minster. Retrieved 8 December 2021.
  7. ^ "Doncaster, South Yorkshire, Minster Ch of S George". dove.cccbr.org.uk. Dove's Guide for Church Bell Ringers. Retrieved 8 December 2021.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k The history and description of St. George's Church at Doncaster (1855), by John Edward Jackson
  9. ^ in biography of his son, also John Jackson, born 1686, within Aikin A General biography vol 5 (1799) "His father afterwards becoming Rector of Rossington and Vicar of Doncaster"
  10. ^ John Helyin (1734) A sermon preached at St. Sepulchre's Church; April the 25th, 1734, p. 50
  11. ^ Listed as a subscriber to: L. Holden (1763) A paraphrase on the Books of Job, Psalms, Proverbs, and Ecclesiastes
  12. ^ Listed as subscriber to: Fawkes (translator) The idylliums of Theocritus 1767
  13. ^ Morning Chronicle, 6 March 1822.
  14. ^ Mentioned as vicar from 1822 to 1859, the name John Sharpe given in Hull Packet, 17 March 1829, list of donations to York Minster
  15. ^ Leeds Mercury 18 August 1860, "Dr Vaughan, the new vicar of Doncaster..."
  16. ^ Derby Mercury, 15 September 1869 "Dr Vaughan, the vicar of St. George, Doncaster, preached his farewell sermon on Sunday September 5th"
  17. ^ Leeds Mercury 18 August 1869
  18. ^ a b Hull Packet, 15 October 1875
  19. ^ a b Birmingham Daily Post 8 June 1886 "Canon Wright.. succeeded the Hon. and Rev. E. Carr Glyn at Doncaster in November 1878
  20. ^ And mentioned in Leeds Mercury, 14 August 1885
  21. ^ Derby Mercury, 16 June 1886
  22. ^ Bristol Mercury 23 July 1886
  23. ^ mentioned as vicar of Doncaster in Northern Echo 11 October 1894, and referred to as Bishop of Hull in Leeds Mercury 16 January 1895
  24. ^ (simultaneous with being Bishop of Sheffield) rootsweb YORKSGEN-L Archives Re: Bishop of Sheffield
  25. ^ www.doncaster.gov Archived 15 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine The Mayoress's Drawing Room (refers to portrait of him)
  26. ^ a b c d e f Musical Times (1 June 1905) 4, 748 pp. 370–78
  27. ^ a b c d Scowcroft, Philip. Some Yorkshire Organist-Composers (2001)
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