Westmoreland

Hempfield church will mark 250th anniversary with organ concert

Patrick Varine
By Patrick Varine
3 Min Read Sept. 30, 2022 | 3 years Ago
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When organist Robert Copeland is practicing for the concert he’ll play Sunday at St. John’s Harrold Reformed United Church of Christ’s 250th anniversary, he won’t need to travel far to practice.

That’s because Copeland, owner of the Robert Copeland Pipe Organ Co. of Jeannette, has a full pipe organ installed in his Penn Township home.

“It’s actually a little bigger than the one at the church,” said Copeland, 74. “They’re both very different, though.”

Copeland will play the church’s M.P. Moller Co. pipe organ, installed in 1947 as part of the congregation’s 175th anniversary.

“We’ve added another set of pipes along the sanctuary wall called an 8-foot melodia,” he said. “They’re wooden pipes and they give me a way to solo in the church. It’s a very wonderful sound to be able to solo and close down the organ inside the chamber.”

Copeland has been servicing pipe organs since the age of 19, studying under world-renowned organist Homer Wickline, who used to play free organ recitals at Wilkinsburg and Braddock churches in the 1970s and ’80s.

Copeland estimated that he’s worked on more than 1,500 organs during his career, including: the Aeolian at Central Baptist Church in Pittsburgh’s Hill District, given to the church by the Mellon Family; the 1905 Moller at First Methodist Episcopal Church in Beaver Falls, originally purchased by Andrew Carnegie; and the Skinner organ at the Carnegie Music Hall in Oakland.

Lately, he’s been working on a large Moller organ at the historic Scottish Rite Cathedral in New Castle.

“One of the pieces they really love out there is the ‘Pomp and Circumstance March’ by Edward Elgar,” Copeland said. “That piece works out very nicely on the St. John’s organ, so it will be part of the program.”

Copeland said it took him some time to choose the pieces for the anniversary concert on Sunday.

“I wanted to make it a little different than your average organ concert,” he said. “There will be four hymns for people to sing, and we’re also going to have a flutist performing two pieces alongside me.”

Musicals selections include “The Church’s One Foundation,” “Leaning on the Everlasting Arms,” “When the Roll is Called Up Yonder,” “Pie Jesu” by Gabriel Faure, “There’s Something About That Name” by William J. Gaither, “Reverie” by Leon Boellman, the aforementioned “Pomp and Circumstance March” and more.

The concert will be at 6 p.m. at the church, 103 St. John’s Church Road in Hempfield.

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About the Writers

Patrick Varine is a TribLive reporter covering Delmont, Export and Murrysville. He is a Western Pennsylvania native and joined the Trib in 2010 after working as a reporter and editor with the former Dover Post Co. in Delaware. He can be reached at pvarine@triblive.com.

Article Details

History of St. John’s Harrold St. John’s Harrold Reformed United Church of Christ is considered to be the oldest church…

History of St. John’s Harrold
St. John’s Harrold Reformed United Church of Christ is considered to be the oldest church west of the Allegheny Mountains growing out of the Reformed denomination, with records dating back to 1772 when a local schoolmaster, Baltzer Myer, conducted baptisms and read sermons for both the Reformed and Lutheran settlers in the area.
Services were originally held in a log school house while the first dedicated house of worship, a log church of pioneer fashion, was constructed several years later and remained until 1830.
The second house of worship was the “stone church” dedicated in 1830 and lasting until 1892 when the present building was constructed.

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