Second Presbyterian Church
Lexington, Kentucky
The organ at Second Presbyterian Church began life as Opus 760 of the Skinner Organ Company, originally constructed in 1929. In 1979, the firm of Bunn=Minnick substantially added to this modest instrument. Many of the original Skinner ranks were retained. Buzard was commissioned to provide and new console and switching system in 2011. In 2014 our team was entrusted with restoring the static reservoir for the instrument. Because of water damage, the wind box and flange attached to it were newly created.
In 2025, we removed the entire organ for the following work:
-Restoration of the Skinner chests.
-Replacement of the Bunn=Minnick chests with newly constructed ones.
-Some judicious tonal modifications were made.
The organ was re-dedicated in a festive Sunday morning service in summer of 2025.
Stoplists
Great
| 8′ | Diapason 73 |
| 8′ | Flauto Dolce CH |
| 8′ | Flute Celeste CH |
| 4′ | Flute d’Amour CH |
| Chimes |
Swell
| 8′ | Diapason 73 |
| 8′ | Rohr Flute 73 |
| 8′ | Aeoline 73 |
| 8′ | Voix Celeste 73 |
| 4′ | Flute Triangulaire 73 |
| III | Chorus Mixture 183 |
| 8′ | Trumpet 73 |
| 8′ | Vox Humana 73 |
| Tremolo |
Choir
| 8′ | Flauto Dolce 73 |
| 8′ | Flute Celeste 61 tc |
| 4′ | Flute d’Amour 73 |
| 8′ | English Horn 73 |
| Tremolo | |
| Harp (prepared for) | |
| Celesta (prepared for) |
Pedal
| 16′ | Sub Bass 32 |
| 16′ | Echo Bourdon 12 SW |
| 8′ | Octave 12 |
| 8′ | Still Gedeckt SW |
| Chimes GT |








