M is for McLoughlin’s Melodeon: A-to-Z Challenge

Before treatment!

John McLoughlin was the Father of Oregon, and his history is celebrated at the McLoughlin House in Oregon City.

We conserved the Prince & Co. Melodeon he gave to his granddaughter, part of a larger collection housed at his home, now part of  our National Park Service.

The melodeon was not operational, and covered by 100 years of wood smoke and soot from oil heaters.    It had missing veneer and trim, and structural damage to the stretcher.

Inside before cleaning, 100 years of dirt.

Inside after cleaning, even some of the stains lifted.

Kate cleaned the melodeon inside, above; Mitchell removed layers of soot from the finish, created new veneer and trim for the missing pieces, and we began to match the original historic shellac to the new veneer.  The instrument’s carcass was polished, and delivered back to the house, below.

After treatment! She is sweet!

And finally, we made the melodeon work again.  Mitchell worked on the mechanism that operated the billows, and we were able to hear the sound of the melodeon again!  There is a free ebook with enhanced sounds that you can download and then you can hear it too!

For more information, you can view a PDF of the before and after here.

Tours are free — You should go!

©MPF Conservation.  May be printed for your own use ONLY,
not for use on blogs without permission.

About D. Katie Powell

hollywood baby turned beach gurl turned steel&glass city gurl turned cowgurl turned herb gurl turned green city gurl. . . artist writer photographer. . . cat lover but misses our big dogs, gone to heaven. . . foodie, organic, lover of all things mik, partner in conservation business mpfconservation, consummate blogger, making a dream happen, insomniac who is either reading buddhist teachings or not-so-bloody mysteries or autobio journal thangs early in the morning when i can't sleep
This entry was posted in antiques, conservation techniques, house museums, preservation, restoration techniques, shellac, traditional varnishes, wooden objects and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a ReplyCancel reply