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Return to Virginia Business - January 2005

News and Features


Making music in the Shenandoah Valley

Virginia Business
January 2005

Who said craftsmanship was dead? At Taylor and Boody Organbuilders in Staunton, employees still build by hand every component of elaborate pipe organs. They make the keys, bellows and playing action, cast and hammer the metal used for the pipes, carve the wooden casework and test the final instrument for performance. “We follow very strictly this Old World approach,” explains co-owner John Boody. “Everything by hand, everything made in our own workshop. That’s what people want.”

Recent clients include Yale University, which contracted to build a pipe organ for its Marquand Chapel, and the Old Salem Moravian Community in Winston-Salem, N.C., which has relied on the company to restore several historic Tannenberg organs. Taylor and Boody’s work can also be seen in St. Margaret’s School in Tokyo; the Harvard Business School Chapel; the Oberlin Conservatory in Ohio; the Lee Chapel at Washington and Lee University; and The College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Mass.

Not surprisingly, Boody and co-owner George Taylor equate business performance with quality. The partners like to have a hand in all aspects of the business. As a result, they are content to produce just seven or eight organs each year.

For the first time since starting the business in the late 1970s, Taylor and Boody are expanding their facility, long housed in a former brick schoolhouse. The 5,000-square-foot addition will enable the company, which has gross revenues of nearly $1 million, to separate operations and move materials more efficiently.

Return to Virginia Business - January 2005


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