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AN IRISH GEORGE III MAHOGANY AND, PARCEL-GILT CHAMBER ORGAN, by HULL OF DUBLIN, circa 1810-20, wit..

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AN IRISH GEORGE III MAHOGANY AND, PARCEL-GILT CHAMBER ORGAN, by HULL OF DUBLIN, circa 1810-20, wit..
AN IRISH GEORGE III MAHOGANY AND
PARCEL-GILT CHAMBER ORGAN, by HULL OF DUBLIN, circa 1810-20, with six stops, in a panelled case with an arrangement of giltwood pipes above black and gilt-japanned panels, inscribed 'Hull Dublin Fecit', flanked by breakfront reeded and acanthus carved brackets surmounted by further pipes and with pierced fretwork convex frieze above a pair of panelled doors and moulded plinth base, losses
165cms wide.
e10,000/15,000
LITERATURE: E. McParland. 'Lissadell, Co. Sligo', Country Life,
6 October 1977, p.916.
J. O'Brien and D. Guinness, Great Irish Houses and Castles, London, 1992, p.201 (illustrated in situ)
H. Montgomery-Massingberd and C. Simon Sykes, Great Houses of Ireland, London, 1999, p.191 (illustrated in situ).
J.Gore-Booth, 'Lissadell', Irish Arts Review, Summer 2003, p.115 (illustrated in situ)
Sean O'Reilly, 'Lissadell, Co Sligo', Country Life, 25 September, 2003, p.112 (illustrated in situ)
This handsome organ, built in 1810-20 by William Hull (fl.1800-1830), the eminent organ-builder of Merrion Row, Dublin, was introduced in the 1830's by Sir Robert Gore-Booth, 4th Baronet.
Private correspondence by John Holmes, F. Inst. M.E. suggests that this is the only 'example of Hull's work now extant anywhere' ...Although he did good work, William Hull was a thorough rogue. In 1803 he was in right trouble for stealing 'a large quantity of pipes' from the organ in St. Michan's, Dublin and using them to provide 'new stops' ordered for organs in St Paul's Nth King Street, Dublin, and St Werburgh's Dublin. The St Michan's churchwardens gave him '14 days to put matters right or else...'