A. Hunter & Son

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FormerlyHunter & Webb, Alfred Hunter
Founded1856
FounderAlfred Hunter
Defunct1937
A. Hunter & Son
FormerlyHunter & Webb, Alfred Hunter
Founded1856
FounderAlfred Hunter
Defunct1937
FateAcquired by Henry Willis & Sons
HeadquartersClapham, London, England, UK
Area served
International
Key people
Alfred Hunter, Henry Webb, Robert Hunter
ProductsPipe Organ Builders

A. Hunter & Son (also known as Hunter & Webb and Alfred Hunter but generally referred to as Hunter) was an English pipe organ maker and refurbisher, established in London in 1856. Hunter was best known for the instruments at St Cuthbert's Philbeach Gardens and St James's, Spanish Place. The firm was acquired by Henry Willis & Sons in 1937.

Alfred Hunter (1827–1911) was born in Lambeth, the son of Frances Steare Hunter, a wax chandler, and his wife Mary.[1][2] He was baptised at St Mary's, Lambeth in 1827.[3] (St Mary's, Lambeth had a 1700 Renatus Harris organ; in 1918 Hunter's firm restored it, but the church was made redundant in 1972, and the organ was broken up.)[4] He was apprenticed to George Maydwell Holdich, and then worked for Henry Bevington and JC Bishop (Holdich had been apprenticed to Bishop).[5]

Hunter organs

Some Hunter organs

References

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