Medford Chamber of Commerce calls off annual banquet, Citizen of the Year award
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The Club House
Community Content
Note: In response to concerns about the coronavirus, many area clubs and groups may have canceled, postponed, or limited the attendance at certain events. Please contact organizers to confirm event details.
Medford Garden Club: Garden Club meetings are free and open to the public. To join the Garden Club, contact Sarah Cummer at sbcummer@msn.com.
Medford Historical Society & Museum
Marker Program: Homeowners can celebrate the architectural history of Medford with a historical marker that shows the original date their house was built. The Medford Historical Society & Museum is offering these markers at $175 or $150 for Medford Historical Society & Museum members. Markers purchased by nonmembers include a free one-year membership to the society. Participation in this program helps to support historic preservation programs at the society, provides information about the city’s architectural development and builds a sense of pride in the communi
The Club House
Community Content
Note: In response to concerns about the coronavirus, many area clubs and groups may have canceled, postponed, or limited the attendance at certain events. Please contact organizers to confirm event details.
Medford Garden Club: Garden Club meetings are free and open to the public. To join the Garden Club, contact Sarah Cummer at sbcummer@msn.com.
Medford Historical Society & Museum
Marker Program: Homeowners can celebrate the architectural history of Medford with a historical marker that shows the original date their house was built. The Medford Historical Society & Museum is offering these markers at $175 or $150 for Medford Historical Society & Museum members. Markers purchased by nonmembers include a free one-year membership to the society. Participation in this program helps to support historic preservation programs at the society, provides information about the city’s architectural development and builds a sense of pride in the communi
Ken Krause
“You’ve never heard anything like this!”
That was a common refrain in the early 1920s when the grand movie palaces across the country began to introduce audiences to a new musical invention: the theater pipe organ.
A century later, the same may soon be said at the city of Medford’s historic Chevalier Theatre, where the installation of a 1922 Wurlitzer theater organ is approaching completion.
The theater pipe organ was an early 1900s creation of a British inventor and telephone engineer, Robert Hope-Jones. He called his instrument a Unit Orchestra, because it was designed to imitate and sound of a full orchestra – some 300 instruments worth – at the hands (and feet) of just one person: the organist.
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