Stanley Theatre

516 N. Howard Street,
Baltimore, MD 21201

Unfavorite 4 people favorited this theater

Uploaded By

Tiny John Bennaman.

More Photos of This Theater

Photo Info

Uploaded on: October 19, 2013

Camera: SAMSUNG SGH-T889

Size: 2.6 MB

Views: 2,093

Full EXIF: View all

Image width: 2541

Date time: Thu Oct 17 15:19:54 -0700 2013

Model: SGH-T889

Make: SAMSUNG

Pixel X dimension: 2541

Pixel Y dimension: 1889

Image length: 1889

License:

Stanley Theatre

Unfavorite No one has favorited this photo yet

Comments (2)

John Bennaman.
John Bennaman. on November 15, 2013 at 12:55 am

The Beautiful Console Kimball Triple Console organ was installed in Baltimores Stanley Theatre Baltimore in 1927 at a expansive cost of $50.000 dollars. The organ was able to rise out of the orchestra pit with a push of a button controlled by the organist and was capable of playing a Kimball upright piano from the console and featured a series of off pitch couplers which allowed the organist to play chords with one finger. It also featured Crysoglotts, Glockenspiels chimes and of course cymbols and over 300 stops and tabs. Today the console of the Stanton Theatre lives on in the John Dickerson High School in Wilmington Delaware where it is being used for a duplicate Kimball Organ that was saved from the Boyd Theatre in Pennsylvania. But the 15HP Spencer Blower remains under the parking lot of where the Stanley once stood next to the Mayfair Theatre as a special reminder.

MarkA
MarkA on August 19, 2015 at 11:49 pm

John, you are correct. In addition to the blower being under the parking lot, the piano and the swell expression shades (which were controlled by the organist at the console for volume) went down with the building. This was shared with me by several of the crew who restored the great Kimball in the 1960’s. There was an unscrupulous organ broker who bought the organ away from that group and offered to sell at back at a huge profit. Before the broker could hear the organ when he came from the West Coast, the organ was disabled in a way so it could not be played but was unharmed. I have two copies of Leonard MacLaine recording. The off pitch couplers were often known as trick couplers. The largest Kimball, in the Atlantic City Boardwalk Hall Ballroom, still has them and work.

You must login before making a comment.

New Comment