Johann Friedrich Turley

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Johann Friedrich Turley (23 June 1804 – 1855 "not far from Köthen") was a German organ builder, who worked in Brandenburg in the first half of the 19th century.

Born in Treuenbrietzen, Turley learned organ building from his father Johann Tobias Turley and was his collaborator in the last years of his life. Several new organs were built by the two of them together. After his father's death, he took over the workshop and moved with the company to Brandenburg, where he worked together with his half-brother Albert Turley after 1844.[1][2] He bore the title "Königlich-Preußischer Orgelbaumeister". On 28 December 1827, he married Theresia Meyer from Wendhausen, from whom he divorced before 1844.

Work (selection)

Several new organs by Johann Friedrich Turley are known - most of them in the western Mark Brandenburg. Characteristic since the 1830s are the "coreless lingual pipes" with deeply seated cores and the ivory mouthpieces on tongue pipes. Some instruments have survived. Instruments that are no longer extant are set in italics.

New organ buildings

YearLocationBuildingPictureManualStopsNotes
1824 Altlüdersdorf [de] near Gransee Village church I 8 With the father Johann Tobias Turley, according to the inscription in the organ, no pedal; preserved
1824 Frankenfelde near Luckenwalde Village church I/P 15 First own organ, stop trombone 16′; 2019 extensive reconstruction of the original disposition by Alexander Schuke Potsdam Orgelbau
1826 Wölmsdorf Village church Built alone; since the mid-1970s in the old chapel of the Evangelisches Krankenhaus Königin Elisabeth Herzberge [de] in Berlin-Lichtenberg, restored in 2015.[3]
ca. 1827 Blankenburg (Uckermark) Village church I/P 15 (11) With his father (?).[4]
1829 Wildberg Village church I/P 16 (12) Completion of the father's organ
1829 Mützlitz (Nennhausen) Village church I/P 6 Built as an interim organ (originally only 4 stops) for Perleberg, 1831–1833 in the teachers' seminary there, then installed in Mützlitz; extended and rebuilt several times.[5]
1831 Perleberg St. Jakobi zentriert II/P 36 1913 New construction by Fa. Faber & Greve, Salzhemmendorf;

1958 New construction by Fa. Gebr. Jehmlich, Dresden. [6]

1834 Teschendorf Village church II/P 12
1836–1838 Salzwedel Katharinenkirche 42 [7]
1836 Buko St. Johannes
1837 Berlin-Wannsee (Nikolskoe) Ss. Peter and Paul, Wannsee II/P 19 Casing preserved; new movement by the Schuke company in 1937, Potsdam.[8]

Other works

YearLocationBuildingsPicturesManualStopsNotes
1833 Treuenbrietzen St. Marien Repair of the Wagner Orgel
1836 Bochow Village church Repair of the Wagner organ
1838 Treuenbrietzen St. Nikolai Repair of the Wagner organ
1844 Rühstädt Church Repair of the Wagner organ.[9]
1849 Oschersleben St. Stephan Arbeiten

Pupils

References

Further reading

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