Reuter's nephew, A.G. Sabol, left Casavant to work for his uncle's firm shortly after the company's founding.
"Pat" Netzer, wood worker, William Zweifel, pipe maker, and Frank Jost, console builder.
The first Reuter was completed in 1917, and was the firm's only organ built that year; the instrument consisted of eight stops over two manuals and pedals, and was sold to Trinity Episcopal Church in Mattoon, Illinois.
During the installation at the Masonic Temple in April 1919, Preyer convinced the company officials to select Lawrence as its new home.
While the factory in Lawrence was being prepared, the employees in Trenton started the arduous task of dismantling, crating and loading all of the equipment and furnishings.
The first instrument built in the Lawrence plant was opus 27, a 23-rank organ for the Central Congregational Church in Topeka, Kansas.
On June 4, 2001, Chairman of the Board Albert Neutel officially opened Reuter's new $4 million headquarters on the northwest edge of town; a building with double the space of the old Wilder Bros. shirt factory.
In November 2022, Reuter announced the sale of their 78,000 square-foot facility to Harvesters, a regional Feeding America food bank.