• Source: John Snetzler
  • John Snetzler (or Schnetzler) was an organ builder of Swiss origin, who worked mostly in England. Born in Schaffhausen in 1710, he trained with the firm of Egedacher in Passau and came to London about 1741. When he retired in 1781, his business continued and ended up with Thomas Elliot. Snetzler died in Schaffhausen on 28 September 1785.


    List of works


    Belle Skinner Collection, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, 1742 (restored 1983 by Noel Mander)
    St Saviour's Chapel, Cathedral of the Holy and Undivided Trinity, Norwich, Norfolk 1745
    St Andrew's Qualified Chapel, Carrubbers' Close, Edinburgh 1747, now in University of Glasgow Concert Hall
    Fulneck Moravian Church, Leeds 1748
    St Margaret's, King's Lynn 1754
    Chamber organ Clare College, Cambridge 1755 acquired from John Bibby of Winchester in 1985 and restored in 2016. It had been in the Mission Church of St James, Heysham, and before that in the collection of a 19th-century musicologist, J Fuller Maitland, of Borwick Hall, Lancashire. At one time it was in Shaw House, Berkshire.
    St Paul's Church, Sheffield 1755
    St Nicholas's Church, Whitehaven 1755 – removed to Arlecdon Church in 1904, where it survives in a heavily altered state.
    St Leonard's Church, Swithland, Leicestershire, 1756
    Church of St Mary and All Saints, Chesterfield 1756 (destroyed by fire 1961)
    Duke of Bedford's musical gallery 1756, now St Mary the Virgin, Hillington, Norfolk
    Holy Trinity Church, Hull (now Hull Minster) 1756 and 1758
    Chapel of St John, St John Street, Edinburgh, 1757; the organ purchased by Lodge Canongate Kilwinning No2, is featured in a picture of Burns being made Poet Laureate of the lodge. It is still in regular, hand-pumped use.
    Buckingham Palace 1760, now Eton College Chapel
    Buckingham Palace 1760, now Chapel Royal, St James's Palace
    Unitarian Church, Hastings, 1760 (restored 2010 by Matthew Copley) BA
    Chamber organ for Samuel Bard of Philadelphia and New York 1761, acquired by the National Museum of American History, Washington, D.C. 1969
    The New Room, Bristol 1761 (installed around 1930, previously elsewhere)
    Church of St Andrew, Blickling, Norfolk 1762
    Congregational Church of South Dennis, Massachusetts, United States, built in 1762, installed in 1854
    Concert Hall (Boston, Massachusetts), 1763–1774
    St Laurence Church, Ludlow, Shropshire, 1764
    Peterhouse, Cambridge 1765
    St Patrick's Cathedral, Armagh (Church of Ireland) 1765 (sold in 1838 to the Armagh Music Society in the Tontine, 1849 transferred to Donegall Square Methodist Chapel, Belfast and destroyed on the opening night by fire.)
    Halifax Parish Church 1766 (William Herschel first organist)
    Octagon Chapel, Bath 1767 (William Herschel first organist)
    St Michael's Episcopal Church, Charleston, South Carolina, USA 1768 (Case only; new organ 1994 by Kenneth Jones of Bray, Ireland)
    Beverley Minster 1769
    St Modwen's, Burton upon Trent 1771
    St Malachy's Parish Church, Hillsborough, County Down 1772–1773
    St Martin's Church, Leicester 1774 (Modified 1873 and 1930, some pipework remains)
    National Museum Cardiff 1774, given by Watkin Williams-Wynn
    St Mary's Church, Andover, Hampshire 1775 moved to Wesley Methodist Church, Newquay, Cornwall 1937 (now destroyed)
    St Mary's Church, Nottingham 1777 (some pipework survives in St Andrew's Church, Nottingham)
    Rotherham Minster 1777
    St Anne's Parish Church, Belfast 1781
    St Mary and All Saints Church, Sculthorpe, Norfolk


    Sources


    National Pipe Organ Register (NPOR) at the British Institute of Organ Studies
    The Organ, William Leslie Sumner


    References

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