I am reblogging this from another blog and both of us must note that we have no knowledge of the source of this story--but would welcome any information you might have so we can give due credit.-STEVE
In the winter of 1818 at St. Nicholas’ Church at Obendorf, a village
near Salzburg, Austria, Joseph Mohr, the assistant to the priest, faced a
dilemma. It was just days before Christmas,
and the church organ which was so important to providing music for the
Christmas services was broken. Since the organ repairman was not a local
of the village it would actually be months before the repair could be
made, and Christmas would be long past.
His solution to the problem of the broken organ resulted in one of
the most popular Christmas carols of all time. In 1816 Mohr had written a
simple poem that the villagers could understand expressing the wonder
of the birth of Jesus. He asked his friend Franz Gruber who was the
organist at St. Nicholas to write music to accompany his poem so that
they could sing it together using a guitar to accompany their singing.
They first performed their newly composed Christmas carol at the
Christmas Eve midnight service on December 24, 1818. It did not
instantly receive the worldwide recognition it has come to know,
however. It was not until years later in 1825 when Carl Mauracher was
rebuilding the organ at St. Nicholas that a handwritten copy of the
words and music was found in the organ loft.
Mauracher was from an area in the mountains of Tyrol which had many
traveling folk choirs who performed throughout Europe. He carried the
carol back home, and it became a popular song with the choirs as they
traveled and spread its popularity wherever they went.
In some versions of the story it is told that mice had eaten the
bellows of the organ. Others say that Gruber himself had broken the
organ. It is believed that there was frequent flooding of the area that
caused rust and mildew to affect the condition of the church organ often
making it unplayable. It is actually not known however if the organ was
truly broken at Christmastime of 1818. Some say that Mohr simply wanted
a new carol for the service and was fond of the guitar as an
instrument. Some stories tell that both the poem and the music were
hastily written that Christmas Eve. A manuscript for “Silent Night” in
Mohr’s hand was discovered in 1995 which is dated 1816. In the
manuscript Mohr credits the melody used for the carol to Franz Gruber.
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