Enterprise church replaces defunct bell system
Published 7:00 am Sunday, February 13, 2022
- Loudspeakers broadcasts the bell sounds of the carillon installed Thursday, Feb. 10, 2022, at the Enterprise Community Congregational Church. The system has been out of service for a couple of years.
ENTERPRISE — After a couple of years of silence, the bells at the Enterprise Community Congregational Church are ringing again. The church on Thursday, Feb. 10, installed anew carillon.
A carillon is a set of bells in a tower, played using a keyboard or by an automatic mechanism similar to a piano roll. According to the Guild of Carillonneurs of North America there are 166 traditional carillons in the United States, and Enterprise has one of those.
Church member Stacy Green said the old carillon ceased to work a couple years ago.
Skip Pepers of the Verdin Co. drove from Boise the morning of Feb. 10 to install the carillon, largely the legacy left by longtime musical director and pianist at the “Big Brown Church,” Gail Swart.
“We have had carillon, according to Verdin’s records, since 1964,” Green said. “Verdin replaced the 1964 model in the 1990s and that lasted until a couple of years ago. We were trying to repair it, and we couldn’t repair it and we just decided we needed a new one, but that was $12,000, so it was a big expense.”
Swart was instrumental in getting the new sound system in place.
“It was something that was important to Gail Swart, who was our longtime music director. Gail passed away Jan. 28,” Green said. “She helped raise the money. She sent out letters and put the word out that we were trying to raise the money. That was last fall. Shortly after that, she was diagnosed with cancer. This was a project that was important to her and she was thrilled to know that it would go forward.”
Ken Holt, chairman of the church’s board of trustees, recalled Swart’s longstanding commitment to music at the church.
“She started playing here when she was 12 years old,” he said.
Mark Green, Stacy’s husband, said the success of the fundraising showed the church’s and the community’s affection for Swart.
“People just got together and made it happen,” he said. “Personally, I was skeptical we were going to be able to, but it’s a testimony to who Gail was.”
Stacy Green agreed.
“It’s about honoring Gail as a member of the church,” she said. “She played piano here most of her life. It’s being done in her honor.”
The carillon
The carillon has no real bells, Pepers said. He replaced the electronics: the control system and the amplifier, which sends a digitally recorded sound of bells through four large speakers mounted on the church’s roof.
“They’re actually all digital,” Pepers said. “They’re not real bells. Even the old system was all digital; they’re not real swinging bells. What’s up on the tower are four big horns that are in an array facing out. … It’s a complete digital system with recorded bells on it.”
As for the times the bells will ring, that will be up to the church leadership. Mark Green said the talk has been about sounding the bells at noon and 6 p.m.
Unlike what some people have thought, the carillon isn’t played from a keyboard or an organ, Stacy Green said.
Pepers said some carillons can be played by keyboards, but not this one. However, Stacy Green said, the church can alter its sound to coincide with special holidays, such as Christmas, Easter, Thanksgiving and the Fourth of July.
She said the Enterprise community has missed the carillon since the old system quit working and will be glad to have it working again — properly.
“We’ve gotten very positive comments from the community,” she said. “We did check with the city of Enterprise before getting a new one, and with the neighbors. The only problem we’ve ever had with the carillon is when our last one got misfired and was going at midnight, 3 a.m. and 6 a.m. That did not make us any friends in the neighborhood.”
Many people in the community donated toward the new carillon, many in the memory of someone they cared about and others to honor Swart, Stacy Green said.
“We hope every time people hear the bells,” she said. “It’ll bring joy to the neighborhood.”