Mamert Hock (organ builder)

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Mamert Hock was a German organ builder from Saarlouis . The company existed from 1833 to 1943 and produced organs from 1855. Mamert Hock mainly worked in Saarland , but also in Rhineland-Palatinate and as far as Trier .

History of the company

First Sylvester Hock founded a company in Schonach in the Black Forest in 1833 , in which he manufactured music boxes and small musical works. When he arrived in Saarlouis in 1855, he also built organs, among other things . Larger organs were built from 1865 and the company grew.

After Sylvester Hock died in 1861, Mamert Hock I took over the company. In 1872 this was modernized and a gas generator was installed . It was the first business in Saarlouis to produce electricity. The company continued to grow, so that the Mamert Hock company moved within the city around 1890 and had a new, larger building built with a twelve-meter-high assembly hall so that it could now manufacture larger church organs. It was completed in 1904.

In the meantime, Mamert Hock II, one of Mamert Hock I's two sons, had taken over the management of the organ building workshop in 1900. During the First World War , the company was forced to switch its production to war supplies - ammunition boxes, tent sticks and the like. The workshop was partly used to store bells that were to be melted down.

After the war the company specialized in making furniture. From 1923 organs were built again. Due to the difficult economic situation, the organ building company went bankrupt in 1928, but was able to continue to operate under the name Hock & Co. until 1932.

From then on, Mamert Hock only ran a small workshop in his house where he carried out repairs. During the Second World War he was an expert for war-related damage to organs in Saarland. After Mamert Hock II had an accident on the way to an organ repair in 1943, the company was dissolved.

List of works

year opus place building image Manuals register Remarks
1901 2 Niedaltdorf Parish Church of St. Rufus II / P 14th The oldest surviving organ from the Hock company
1901 Saarlouis Garrison Church II / P 22nd Was later transferred to the new Protestant church. Organ not preserved. Parts were reused by Thomas Gaida in 2002 to build the organ in Wustweiler .
1904 Reimsbach Parish Church of St. Andreas u. Assumption Day Reimsbach, St. Andreas and Maria Himmelfahrt (3) .JPG II / P 25th Largest preserved organ from the Hock company
1904-1912 Felsberg (Saar) Parish Church of St. Nicholas Felsberg St. Nikolaus Inside Organ Prospect.JPG II / P 13
1904 Merzkirchen Parish Church of St. Martin II / P 13 not received
1904 Konfeld St John the Baptist Konfeld, St. John the Baptist (4) .JPG II / P 15th
1905 Bisten Parish Church of St. Peter Bisten, St. Peter (2) .JPG II / P 14th
1905 Düppenweiler Parish Church of St. Leodegar II / P 16 some registers are contained in today's Seifert organ
1905 Saarburg Parish Church of St. Laurentius II / P 24 not received
1906 Malberg (Eifel) Parish Church of St. Quirinus II / P 12
1906 Mettnich (Today: Primstal ) cath. Parish church II / P 14th not received
1907 Better wrestling Parish Church of the Sacred Heart of Jesus II / P 15th not received
1908 Hasborn-Dautweiler Parish Church of St. Bartholomew II / P 13 not received
1908 Beltheim-Frankweiler Parish church I / P 4th not received
1908 Hüttersdorf old church II / P 14th Church and organ not preserved
1908 Elections (Losheim am See) Parish Church of St. Helena Elections, St. Helena (15) .JPG II / P 12
1908 Nonnweiler Parish Church of St. Hubertus I / P 6th not received
1908 Bedersdorf Parish Church of St. Margaretha II / P 15th
1909 Marpingen Parish Church of the Assumption II / P 18th Housing preserved and expanded. Organ not preserved
1909 Hermeskeil Parish Church of St. Martinus II / P 19th
1909 Wadrill (waders) Parish Church of St. Martin II / P 14th some registers are contained in today's Seifert organ
1910 Kostenbach Parish Church of the Sacred Heart of Jesus Kostenbach, Herz-Jesu Hock-Orgel.jpg II / P 15th 1930 remodeling by Klais
1910 Neunkirchen-les-Bouzonville Eglise Saint-Anne II / P 13 not received
1910 Guerstlingen Eglise II / P 13 not received
1913 trier Clarissenkirche II / P 10 not received
1923 Büdingen (Saarland) Visitation of the Virgin Mary I / P 7th
1929 Böckweiler Ev. church II / P 9 not received
1930 Bliesdalheim Ev. church II / P 9 not received
1930 Chicken field St. Mary III / P 28 Reconstruction after organ fragments by Gaida; Largest organ Mamert Hocks
1931 Rütgen Catholic Church II / P 13 not received
1931 Usselkirch Catholic Church II / P 17th not received

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Armin Lamar: The history of the Mamert Hock organ building company in Saarlouis. Seen March 29, 2012.