Henry Niemann  
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HENRY Niemann, was one of the two most important organ builders in Baltimore, a city of many organ factories before the Civil War.  In fact, Baltimore led in the introduction of organs into North America.

Niemann, an apprentice cabinet maker, born in Asnabruch, Germany, came to this country in 1857, got a job with an organ builder in Cincinnati, but after two years went to Paris and Germany for 14 years to study organ building.

After a five-year apprenticeship with Cavailla-Coll, the leading 19th Century French organ builder, he returned to the United States on his honeymoon in 1872 to open his own business at Caroline and Holland Streets.  In 1878, he moved to 10 - 12 North High Street, the same year he won the Maryland Institute Exhibition gold medal.

In 1892, according to his advertisement, he was at 561 - 63 East Monument Street.

By the time of his death on 26 October 1899, he had built forty organs in Baltimore churches and many others had been shipped to all parts of the country.

Today, only seven Niemann organs remain in Baltimore and one is in Taneytown, all believed to still be in use.  The organs are located at;  

1.  First Unitarian Parish Hall - Charles and Franklin Streets - built in 1880

2.  St. Leo the Great (R.C.) - 227 South Exeter Street - built in 1881

3.  Chapel at former St. Joseph's Passionist Monastery (R.C.) 3800 Frederick Road - built around 1887.

4.  St. Thomas Aquinas (R.C.) - 1008 W. 37th St. Hampden - built in 1888.

5.  First Unitarian Church - Charles and Franklin Streets - built in 1893

6.  Church of St. Peter the Apostle - Hollins and Poppleton Streets - built around 1893

7.  Old Otterbein UMC - Sharp and Conway Streets - built in 1897 and the smallest of his organs.

8.   St. Joseph's Church (R.C.) - Taneytown, Md. rebuilt in 1876.  Originally built by George Pike of London, England, for St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Baltimore, it was rebuilt around 1876 by Niemann for its present home.  The case and some pipes are from the 1804 instrument; the windchest, keydesk, and action date from the Neimann rebuild.  (Source: David Storey)

Niemann's Life In Baltimore

Henry Niemann was married to Elizabeth Thuer, and was returning to Baltimore on his honeymoon in 1872, when he opened his own business on Caroline Street.  He later moved to 10-12 North High Street and finally to 561 - 63 East Monument Street.

Henry and Elizabeth had five children: Henrietta Frank, John, Ella and Cecilia, all of whom lived on East Chase Street, where he would read Charles Dicken' stories around the dinner table. 

Henrietta attended the Maryland Institute.  Frank entered business with his father.  Just before his marriage, however, his fiance died during an appendectomy operation.  He left Baltimore, never to return and his widowed mother had to close the business in 1908.  John, always interested in the railroads, worked for the Pennsylvania Railroad with an office in Union Station.  Ella studied voice and piano at the Peabody and sang in local churches.  Cecilia became an artist.  In 1906, she marrried J. Watson Owings, a metallurgist, and moved to Philadelphia.  they had a daughter, Elizabeth, who was named for her grandmother.

Henry Niemann died on 26 October 1899.  Because his wife, Elizabeth, had converted to Catholicism, he was buried in Holy Redemer Cemetery.  Henry's widow lived with her daughter Cecilia, in Philadelphia, until her own death on January 28, 1924, at age 85. 

In 1991, Henry Niemann had one living relative, Miss Elizabeth Owings, a granddaughter, who was a resident of the Fairhaven Retirement Community, in Sykesville, Maryland.  Daughter of Cecilia, Elizabeth Owings never married and worked for General Electric in Philadelphia.

 
 
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