David Tannenberg
David Tannenberg | |
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Born | Berthelsdorf, Germany | March 21, 1728
Died | May 19, 1804 York, Pennsylvania | (aged 76)
Occupation | Organ builder |
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David Tannenberg (1728–1804) was a Moravian organ builder who emigrated to Pennsylvania. He is cited as the most important American organ-builder of his time. He constructed a number of organs during his lifetime, as well as other keyboard instruments. Many of the organs that he built are still in use.
Biography[]
David Tannenberg was born March 21, 1728 in Berthelsdorf, Upper Lusatia.[1] His parents, Johann Tannenberg and Judith Tannenberg, née Nitschmann, had left Moravia as refugees in 1727.[1][2] Tannenberg attended schools in the Moravian communities of Ronneburg, Marienborn and eventually Herrnhaag.[2]
He received a call to join the Moravian community in Zeist and traveled there in 1748.[3] While in Zeist, Tannenberg began making arrangements to travel with a group of Moravians to Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.[3] He boarded the Moravian ship The Irene and landed in America on May 12, 1749.[4] He arrived in Bethlehem the same year.[1] He married Anna Rosina Kern not long after arriving.[1] Anna Rosina Kern was born on March 2, 1721, in Ebersdorf, Upper Lusatia. According to Moravian church records, the surname Tannenberg was "colloquially, and usually written, Tanneberger."[5] The couple had three daughters, Rosina, Maria Elizabeth, and Anna Maria. They had two sons, David and Samuel.[5]
Tannenberg was a joiner by trade and began to practice that trade in Pennsylvania and played a role in the construction of the homes and buildings of Bethlehem.[6] He designed the steeple of the Moravian Church in Lititz.[7]
In 1778, Tannenberg and twenty-one other members of his congregation took an Oath of Allegiance to the newly formed government of the United States.[1] This caused some controversy, since the church had remained loyal to King George III.[1]
According to music historian Thomas McGeary, "Tannenberg was the most important eighteenth-century American organ-builder."[8]
Work[]
In late 1757 or early 1758, Tannenberg began learning the craft of organ building from Johann Gottlob Klemm. In 1758, he assisted Klemm in construction of an organ in Nazareth.[1] After Klemm’s death, Tannenberg did not build any organs for three years.[6] Tannenberg moved to Lititz, Pennsylvania, with his family in 1765. There, he purchased the home of one of the settlers of Lititz named George Klein.[1] He worked out of the house until his death.[1] He was active in the collegium musicum of Lititz as an organist and string player of the Moravian congregation there and began building organs for Lutheran, Reformed and Moravian Churches.[6] He was reportedly well regarded in his community. He was a good performer on the violin and a capable tenor singer.[1] He also built pianos, harpsichords, and probably a clavichord.[8] None of those instruments are known to still exist.[8] However, the directions for building a clavichord still survive and offer insights to building techniques of the time.[8]
In 1762, Klemm died, ending Tannenberg's training. He did not build any organs for the next three years. Then, from 1765 until his death in 1804, under Tannenberg's guidance, over forty organs were constructed. These were primarily for churches in Pennsylvania. However, organs were also constructed in Albany, New York, Frederick, Maryland and Salem, North Carolina.[9] He had an apprentice, Johann Philip Bachmann.[10]
List of known Tannenberg organs | showNotes[11] |
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At the time of its opening on October 10, 1790, the organ Tannenberg constructed at the Zion Church in Philadelphia was the largest in the United States and considered the best of its kind.[13] The construction was 24 ft (7.3 m) feet across in the front, by feet deep, by 27 ft (8.2 m) high. The front row of metal pipes numbered 100. There were 2000 pipes in the body. The organ had five sets of keys. There was a fire in the church on December 26, 1794, which destroyed the building. The organ was destroyed, except for a few salvaged pipes.[13] Tannenberg later wrote to a friend that, "On the main manual seven stops are now in place, and the pedal are complete, with the exception of five pipes in the Trombone Bass. The Echo is in place and completed. On the upper manual one stop, the Principal, is finished. When all is drawn out on the lower manual, with Pedal, the church is well filled with the volume of sound."[14]
In May 1797, the committee of the Moravian Church in Philadelphia sold the church organ, as it had fallen into a state of decay. The church paid Tannenberg a sum of eleven shillings and sixpence in November 1797 for tuning of the organ they had commissioned from Peter Kurtz during the interim.[15] Tannenberg's organs at that time were praised for the tones in the diapasons and in the upper registries, including the 12th, 15th, and sesquialtera.[16]
Legacy[]
Year | Location |
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1770 | Zion Lutheran Church, Moselem Springs, PA |
1776 | Moravian Chapel, Bethlehem, PA |
1787 | Moravian Congregation, Lititz, PA |
1791 | Zion Lutheran Church, Spring City, PA |
1793 | Moravian Chapel, Graceham, Maryland, moved in 1957 to (and currently extant at) Moravian Congregation Chapel, Lititz, PA |
1798 | Gemeinhaus Saal, Salem, North Carolina |
1800 | Home Moravian Church, Salem, North Carolina; Restored in 2004 and housed in the Old Salem Visitor Center. |
1802 | Hebron Lutheran Church, Madison, Virginia |
1804 | Christ Lutheran Church, York, PA |
Later years and death[]
Tannenberg was tuning an organ he had constructed at the Lutheran Church in York, PA when he suffered an episode of apoplexy.[1] He fell from the bench, struck his head, and was injured. He subsequently died on May 19, 1804. The last organ which he had constructed during his lifetime was played for the first time at his funeral.[1] Children from Lutheran and Moravian congregations sang at graveside services.[1]
References[]
Footnotes:
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m Philip Columbus Croll, Henry Addison Schuler & Howard Wiegner Kriebel 1909, p. 339.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Armstrong 1967, p. 6.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Armstrong 1967, p. 8.
- ^ Armstrong 1967, p. 9.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Reincke 1873, p. 245.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c Armstrong 1967, p. 12.
- ^ Philip Columbus Croll, Henry Addison Schuler & Howard Wiegner Kriebel 1909, p. 340.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d Kipnis 2013, p. 457.
- ^ David Tannenberg: Master Organ-Builder from Early Pennsylvania.
- ^ Ochse 1988, pp. 62-.
- ^ "David Tannenberg – Chapter 4". www.davidtannenberg.com.
- ^ Neal, Rome (April 9, 2004). "A Pipe Dream". CBS News. Retrieved January 24, 2015.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Scharf & Westcott 1884, p. 1424.
- ^ The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography.
- ^ Ritter 1857, p. 59.
- ^ Ritter 1857, p. 60.
- ^ The Extant Organs of David Tannenberg.
Sources:
- Armstrong, William Howard (1967). Organs for America: the life and work of David Tannenberg. University of Pennsylvania Press.
- Philip Columbus Croll; Henry Addison Schuler; Howard Wiegner Kriebel (1909). The Pennsylvania-German. Rev. P.C. Croll.
- Kipnis, Igor (April 15, 2013). Harpsichord and Clavichord: An Encyclopedia. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-94978-5.
- Ochse, Orpha C. (1988). The History of the Organ in the United States. Indiana University Press. p. 62. ISBN 0-253-20495-X.
- Reincke, Abraham (1873). A Register of Members of the Moravian Church: And of Persons Attached to Said Church in this Country and Abroad, Between 1727 and 1754. Transcribed from a Ms. in the Handwriting of the Rev. Abraham Reincke, to be Found in the Archives of the Moravian Church at Bethlehem, Pa., and Illustrated with Historical Annotations. H. T. Clauder, printer.
- Ritter, Abraham (1857). History of the Moravian Church in Philadelphia: from its foundation in 1742 to the present time : comprising notices, defensive of its founder and patron, Count Nicholas Ludwig von Zinzendorff, together with an appendix. Hayes & Zell. p. 60.
- Scharf, John Thomas; Westcott, Thompson (1884). History of Philadelphia: 1609–1884. L. H. Everts & Company. p. 1424.
- Cooper, Philip T. D. "The Extant Organs of David Tannenberg". davidtannenberg.com. Retrieved December 20, 2014.
- Cooper, Philip T. D. "David Tannenberg: Master Organ-Builder from Early Pennsylvania". davidtannenberg.com. Retrieved December 21, 2014.
- The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. Publication Fund of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. 1898. p. 232.
Further reading[]
External links[]
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- 1728 births
- 1804 deaths
- American pipe organ builders
- German emigrants to the Thirteen Colonies
- People from Görlitz
- Businesspeople from Saxony
- 18th-century American businesspeople
- Businesspeople from Pennsylvania