In 1987 Laburnam House in Northgate (opposite Northgate Mill) was for sale in Pinchbeck, and adjacent to the house was a barn - which looked like an ideal home for a pipe organ. The moment we viewed the house we both knew that it was what we had been looking for, and so we put in an offer for the full asking price straight away.
'Laburnam House' - which should have been spelt 'Laburnum' - became our new home in October 1987. We continued to use the incorrect spelling ....
The house itself was a very charming three bedroom property which had been built in the mid 1800s.
Although everything had looked perfect when we originally viewed it with the estate agents, as with most properties, a certain amount of work did need carrying out.
The first job was to rewire all of the lighting circuits throughout the property. The sockets had already been rewired, but the lighting circuits needed all new cables and fittings. I did this during the last week of October, and then we started to attend to other jobs that would need attention during the coming months. The original sash windows needed maintenance, and repainting, and the end wall needed treating - to prevent water permeating the solid brick wall. A new damp course also had to be installed around the utility room and hall.
Once all this had been finished, the work on the house was complete, and now we could concentrate on renovating and extending the barn.
In about 1995 we had five new upvc sash windows installed at the front of the house, to help reduce the noise from the increasingly busy road. Unfortunately we didn't get very much benefit from these, as it was only about two years before we sold the property, in 1997.
The original barn
Although the barn was a good starting place, it needed extending. So during 1988 a double garage and store room was built on the side of the old barn, making the building L-shaped. An upper floor was built to accommodate a small 'concert room' with a separate upstairs store room for organ pipes. The upstairs store room later became the coffee bar. The Marylebone console was then installed in the concert room, and the organ chamber - to hold the organ pipes - was located in the corner of the L-shaped building - 16ft high.
Building work in progress
The concert room at Laburnam House
The coffee bar at Laburnam House
The installation of the Marylebone organ took about 3 years in total with work taking place between 1989 and 1991. A three-phase blower had to be installed - which involved building a small blower shed on the side of the building, and four second-hand chests were collected from Barrow-in-Furness. A new Solid State transmission system also had to be made and fitted. This new organ chamber could only accommodate about 1/4 of the original pipework from the Marylebone organ, so a certain amount of 'extension' was necessary (Extension means using some of the same pipes at different pitches.)
Rex Pitts in the concert room at Laburnam House
In order to allow the organ to be used for light entertainment music as well as for classical music a few additions were made , including a Glockenspiel, a Xylophone, Chimes, and a set of Tibia pipes - complete with tremulant.
Nick in the lower section of the organ chamber at Laburnam House
By the end of 1991 the organ was complete, and Nigel Ogden was booked to give the opening concert - attended by friends, relations, those who had helped with the project - and neighbours.
Ticket for the opening concert in 1992 by Nigel Ogden
Concerts by different organists were then held each month in aid of charity - with the concert room accommodating about 50 people.
Northgate Cattery
The garden at Laburnam House was quite extensive, and we decided to build a brand new cattery on the West side. Having visited several catteries the previous year to house our own cats whilst we went on holiday, we felt there was an opportunity here for a new purpose-built cattery in the area.
Mark designed the cattery, following advice and guidance from the Council, to house 20 individual cages, and a separate Isolation block. The cattery office was to be on the ground floor of the barn, to the left-hand side of the double garages.
George Bird, Roly Rivett, Mark and I set to work constructing the new building, which consisted of a solid concrete base with breeze block walls and an outer brick wall at each end.
The upper part of each cage was constructed from wire mesh, with a metal and mesh door for each unit. At the end of the cages was a kitchen for preparation and washing up.
Roly completed all the block and brick work, and George Bird cut and welded all the partitions and doors. Once all this had been completed the individual cages were fitted with heaters, wooden doors and a small ladder leading up to a balcony level - so the cats would have a view over the garden.
Rex designed and painted a sign for Northgate Cattery - complete with a picture of a black cat, and the new Cattery opened in 1991.
Mark owned and ran the cattery, although very occasionally I would help at the really busy times - in August and at Christmas. Our own cats used to wander down the garden and have a look at the cats in the cattery - although they didn't seem that bothered about strange visitors on their territory!
The Compton Cinema Organ
In 1993 David Shepherd contacted me with the news that there was a Compton Cinema Organ for sale.
Henley and District Organ Trust had purchased the Compton organ from its original home at The Ritz, Tunbridge Wells and had installed it in the Regal Cinema, Henley, where it was used for monthly concerts until 1986, when the cinema closed down. It remained untouched, and fell into disrepair until 1993, when developers bought the cinema, which was to be demolished to make way for a car park for a nearby supermarket. In order for the organ to be saved it had to be bought, dismantled and removed within a couple of weeks.
I decided to buy the 7-rank Compton - unseen - and together with a small army of helpers we travelled to Henley one Saturday with seven vehicles to dismantle and pack all of the organ parts. Using a generator to supply power for lighting - as there was no electricity now in the cinema - in the semi-darkness we located all of the parts, and brought the console, all of the chests, workings and blower - and its 600 pipes - back to Pinchbeck - just in time, as two days later the cinema was demolished!
There followed two years of hard work to restore the organ to its former glory. All moving parts were removed for renovation, with all the leather, wiring and wind ducting being replaced with new. The pipework was cleaned and repaired, and five additional sets (ranks) of pipes were included in the specification to make a total of twelve ranks.
A new computer controlled-transmission system - Uniflex -had recently come onto the market in America, and I decided to use this for the Compton. After a long wait, all the circuit boards arrived from the USA together with instructions about how to install it. This was the first time the American system had been used in the UK and it was soon discovered that there were slight differences in the way American and UK computers were set up. Peter Morris, our Assistant Organist at Spalding Parish Church, came to the rescue, and eventually we had the system up and running.
The Compton console was then installed in the concert room at Laburnam House. A new organ chamber had to be built to accommodate the Compton pipework, and the existing Concert Organ console was moved to the left-hand side of the room.
Inside The Regal, Henley in 1992
The new organ chamber being built to hold the Compton Organ pipework
The completed concert room and organ chamber at Laburnam House
Once the organ had been completed, and had a chance to settle in to its new surroundings, it was time for the opening concert. Robert Wolfe opened the Compton in March 1996 and gave two concerts on the same day - one in the afternoon, and one in the evening.
Robert Wolfe at the opening concerts of the Compton organ in 1996
Now more people wanted to see and hear the organ again - including visitors from its home town of Tunbridge Wells. A series of monthly concerts was planned and these became so popular it was soon evident that it was time to move to larger premises!
Not only had the audience outgrown the size of the small concert room at Laburnam House, but there was not adequate provision for car parking, and some of the less-abled visitors found the outside stone staircase a problem.
In 1997 we began to look around the district for a suitable site to use as a new venue. We looked at a pig farm in Weston, a site in Holbeach, a plot of land in Moulton Seas End - and the disused Milroy Country Club in Holbeach - before finding a possible site at West Pinchbeck. (Actually it was an unofficial viewing at The Milroy - as a window was open!) However, Angela Newton from AP Sales contacted us to view a site on Burtey Fen Lane - less than 1/4 mile from Laburnam House. When we first arrived at the site we found disused greenhouses and a gravel area - complete with a skip and a disused car. We were not really sure that the site would be big enough - however, we had not realised that the site extended about one acre beyond the hedge. With that included as part of the sale, the site seemed ideal - but now it was all down to the Planning Department of SHDC.
We decided that whatever happened we were going to sell Laburnam House, and by October 1997 a sale had been agreed - with completion due by April 1998 to give us time to dismantle and remove the organs.