Positive Organ Company

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FormerlyWR Andrew, Casson’s Patent Organ Co Ltd
Founded1898
FounderThomas Casson
Defunct1941
Positive Organ Company Ltd, Positive Organ Company (1922) Ltd
FormerlyWR Andrew, Casson’s Patent Organ Co Ltd
Founded1898
FounderThomas Casson
Defunct1941
FateTerminated
HeadquartersLondon, England, UK
Area served
International
Key people
Thomas Casson, William Raeburn Andrew, Lewis Casson
ProductsPipe Organ Builders

The Positive Organ Company (also known as Casson's Patent Organ Co Ltd and Positive Organ Company (1922) Ltd but often referred to as Casson Positive) was an English pipe organ maker, established in London in 1898 by Thomas Casson, although with some earlier antecedents. The firm was best known for small, one-manual organs, which were able to be moved about. It ceased trading in 1941, but the name was revived in 2020 with a new, unrelated organ builder.

William Raeburn St Clair Andrew (1853-1914) was the son of the Indian railwayman, Sir William Patrick Andrew.[1] His mother was Anne Raeburn. She was a granddaughter of the painter Sir Henry Raeburn, of whom Andrew wrote a biography: Life or Sir Henry Raeburn, R.A. (1886: W.H. Allen & Company).[1]

He was educated at Harrow and Exeter College, Oxford, and was called to the bar in 1878. He did not long practise: by 1881 he was a non-practising barrister[2] and by 1891 a retired one.[3] He did write a law text book (with the future MP Charles Conybeare), which was published in 1883.[1]

He married first, in 1877, Frances Gardiner Ramsay Inglis,[4] who died in 1892,[5] and secondly, in 1893, Ellen Nichols.[6]

In 1896 Andrew set up as an organ builder, in Kilburn High Road. The following year he moved to Berkley Road NW1. A year after that, he sold the firm to Thomas Casson.[7] Although the National Pipe Organ Register has records of seven organs with Andrew's name, most are also labelled Positive Organ Co.[8][9]

Andrew died in 1914, and is buried in Kensal Green Cemetery.[10]

Thomas Casson

Positive Organ Company

References

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