An orchestra, boasting a Serpent, accompanied the choir until the early 19th century, occupying part of a gallery on the east wall of the tower.
In 1839, £75 purchased a Barrel Organ which could play 33 Hymn Tunes and 3 Glorias. Pew holders in the 'Minstrels Gallery' were displaced and
the dispute was recorded in the Wolverhampton Chronicle. The Rector of Donington acted as mediator. The Pews were freed in 1869 and the Sunday
collection substituted.
A new gallery in the south aisle costing £200 provided for the displaced pew holders but they had to bid for their new places at auction.
An American organ did not meet with the approval of a notable parishioner, Mr Loxdale, so in 1856 he gave a 2 manual pipe organ by a
quality builder of the day named Bevington.
In 1898 the organ was replaced as a memorial to the outstanding ministry of the Revd. George Windus Woodhouse, Vicar of Albrighton, 1836 – 1894,
who died 'in harness' a few days before his 94th birthday, the contract was given to the Jardine Organ Company of Manchester.
In 1969 the instrument was cleaned, enlarged and modernised with the addition of a detached console, originally situated on the south of the Chancel.
The contract was awarded to Nicholson's of Malvern in 1969 at a cost of £4,500.
A well-loved village doctor, Dr Melville Legge gave £4,000 towards the cost. The present arrangement of organ console and choir stalls in the south
aisle was part of the building restoration works which took place in 1994.
The Organ now having served the Parish for a further 40 years is in need of urgent restoration and modernisation, as the electric action
and winding system installed in the 1967 rebuild has become very unreliable.