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  1. Krakauer Brothers Upright Piano
  2. Krakauer Upright Piano Value

Prices of new or used Krakauer Bros. Upright and grand pianos. Buyers & sellers can determine a piano's fair market or resale value. What year is this piano from krakauer Bros serial number 12124 ~M√sty~ 2. What is the value of these 2 pianos: 1) Krakauer Bros ser #50158 w/bench fr. Aug 30, 2012 - I have a 1925 krakauer brothers upright piano in good condition. Serial number 53779. Can you tell me the - Answered by a verified Musical.

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Straube Piano Company
IndustryPianos
FounderWilliard Naramore Van Matre, Sr.
William Straube
HeadquartersHammond, Indiana,
Area served
North America
ProductsPianos

The Straube Piano Company (1895–1937) and its successor Straube Pianos Inc. (1937–1949) were American piano manufacturers of uprights, grands, players, and reproducing grands.

  • 3Brands and models
  • 4Sample Straube serial numbers
  • 5Addresses

History[edit]

1901 Straube Cabinet Grand in a house (c. 1901, Bellingham, Washington)
Market perspective

The years 1875 to 1932 were a golden age of piano making, a time when pianos had few competitors for home entertainment. Straube manufactured pianos for the last thirty-seven of those years. Industry-wide, nearly 364,545 pianos sold in the United States at the peak in 1909, according to the National Piano Manufacturers Association.[1] By comparison, in 2011, 41,000 were sold, along with 120,000 digital pianos and 1.1 million keyboards, according to Music Trades magazine.[2] The Straube Piano Company had its own golden era, from about 1904 to 1935, from several perspectives. The company flourished as an innovator of player pianos, rapidly grew into a high-volume producer of premium and affordable pianos, and earned acclaim for its concert grands.

Straube Piano Company developed influential business models based on innovative management, promotion, advertising, and pricing. Its company executives and plant superintendents, particularly E.R. Jacobson (president) and William G. Betz (superintendent and inventor/innovator), were influential industry exponents who held leadership roles in industry organizations. The company produced premium pianos under the Straube name—but also manufactured Hammond, Gilmore, and Woodward brands, some of which sold at lower prices, but were still of high quality. It distributed all models nationally, and its players internationally, particularly in Australia.

Founders – Van Matre & Straube

The Straube Piano Company was the outgrowth of Van Matre & Straube(akaStraube & Van Matre), a partnership formalized in February 1895 by Williard Naramore Van Matre, Sr. (1851–1939), and William Straube (né Straub;[MTR 1] 1857–1928). That same month, Van Matre and Straube leased a factory near Chicago at Downers Grove, Illinois, on the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad,[MTR 2] at the present intersection of Warren and Forest Avenues.[3] The original wareroom was at 24 Adams Street, Chicago.[MTR 3]

Straube manufactured its first piano in June 1895 at that factory,[MTR 4][MTR 5] which was also the factory of Van Matre & Co.[i][4][5] W.N. Van Matre & Co. was a music dealer at 105 State Street in Rockford, Illinois. Around July 1896, Van Matre and Straube dissolved the partnership, after Straube purchased Van Matre's share. Straube continued the business under his own name.[MTR 6]

Alternate founding years attributed to the Straube Piano Company
1901 Straube Cabinet Grand with a engraving 'ESTABLISHED 1878'.

In 1907, Straube Piano Company executives publicly recognized 1895 as the founding year. However, in 1911, Alfred Dolge published an influential reference book, Pianos and Their Makers, that gave 1878 as the founding year.[6] The December 19, 1914, issue of Music Trade Review began using the 1878 founding date.[MTR 7] At some point, Straube Piano began casting the numerals '1878' in the piano plates (aka iron frames). Straube Piano in 1924 attributed 1879 as the founding year.[7] In 1996, a book author provided 1859 as the founding year.[8]

Incorporation of Straube Piano Company

William Straube, an investor, not a piano expert, incorporated Straube Piano Company in 1897 as an Illinois entity.[MTR 3]

Initial executives

James (Jim) Francis Broderick (19 August 1854 Philadelphia – 17 November 1920 Chicago) became president on January 1, 1898,[Presto 1] and served in that role until March 1911. Before joining Straube Piano, Broderick had been a traveling salesman for Steger & Company and the B. Shoninger Co.[MTR 8]

William Straube (1857–1923)[Presto 2] had sold all his interest around 1901[9] and signed a 5-year non-compete agreement.[MTR 9] But in 1901, Straube, his two brothers, Herman Charles Straube (1867–1921) and Martin Straube, Jr. (1869–1934), and an associate, Charles Jacobsen (no relation to the Jacobsons of Straube Piano Company), formed another piano manufacturing company and leased the Club Block in Downers Grove, Illinois.[MTR 10] The Straube Piano Company challenged and won an injunction on December 16, 1901, in Cook County Circuit Court forbidding the Straubes and Jacobsen from using the Straube name in the manufacturing of pianos.[MTR 11][MTR 9]

Ernfrid (Ernest) Reinholdt Jacobson (25 December 1877 Gothenburg, Sweden – 19 June 1976 Chicago) – who began at Straube in August 1898 as a bookkeeper and stenographer – purchased the entire interest of the remaining partner and became president in March 1911.[10]

In 1901, Straube Piano Company was one of 31 Chicago area piano manufacturers that were recognized nationally.

New factory, Hammond, Indiana
Straube Piano Factory, Hammond, Indiana, 1904[MTR 12]

In 1904, the Straube Piano Company moved its manufacturing and executive offices from Chicago to a newly built piano factory in Hammond, Indiana – in the Calumet Region – on five acres served by the Monon and the Chicago, Cincinnati & Louisville railways. The new factory was custom designed and owned by the company.

It was a 3-story facility, with a basement, with 34,000 sq. ft. of factory space.[11] The exterior of the building was a light gray colored brick, made in Michigan City, Indiana, known as Oehlmacher brick. The factory was of mill construction. The main structure was 160 x 50 feet, two stories high. The engine house was 50 x 35 feet, detached, and the boiler house was 60 x 45 feet and detached. The Monon dry kiln was 35 x 65 feet and held 20,000 feet of lumber over six days. It had shipping facilities. And it was equipped with automatic fire doors and fire walls. It had standpipes throughout the structure with separate hose attachments and concrete floors in the basement engine and boiler rooms.[12][MTR 12][11] At full capacity, the new factory required 200 employees and was capable of producing 3,000 finished pianos a year.[12]

Straube Piano introduced its first player piano in November 1909.

Straube Piano under the leadership of E.R. Jacobson

After initially purchasing a small interest in the company, Ernfrid Reinholdt Jacobson became secretary, and continued to acquire stock from time to time. When Ernfrid Reinholdt Jacobson became president in March 1911, he appointed his brothers as executives: Charles (Carl) Herman Jacobson Thorby (1875–1946),[ii] vice-president; and James Frithiof Jacobson (1885–1968), secretary, who all became owners and were actively involved with the further development of the business.

According to Fred E. Cooper, contributor to the Presto-Times, prior to E.R. Jacobson presidency, the Straube Piano Company was just an ordinary piano manufacturer. But under Jacobson and his associates, Struabe Piano became one of the most successful contenders in the high quality piano field.[Presto 3]

Third addition to the factory

In 1913, construction began on the 3rd addition to the original Straube factory erected in 1904 at 205 Manila Avenue. On January 30, 1930, the Hammond City Council enacted dozens of street name changes – including the change from Manila Avenue to Wildwood Street.[13] The architect was J.T. Hutton (Joseph T. Hutton; 1861–1932) and the contractor was Mahlon Abraham Dickover (1856–1932)[14]

Straube re-incorporates in Indiana

In late 1914 or early 1915: The Straube Piano Company was incorporated in Indiana by E.R. Jacobson, J.F. Jacobson, and C.H.J. Thorby with $150,000 (equivalent to $3,751,993 in 2018) capital stock.[15][16] Around that time, the factory was producing about 12 finished pianos a day worth about three-quarters of a million dollars a year (equivalent to $18,759,967 in 2018) and employed about one hundred and fifty men, paying them combined wages of about $125,000 (equivalent to $3,126,661 in 2018) a year.[11]

1916

Around 1916, the Straube Piano Company was manufacturing ten to twelve finished units a day.[17]

Record monthly production

The company reached a new all-time high monthly production volume in November 1922, surpassing its previous monthly high in March 1920.[18] It has been estimated that, of the some 360,000 pianos produced in America in 1909, 56% were players.

Fifth addition to the factory

In 1925, construction began on the fifth and largest addition to the original Straube factory. The architect was J.T. Hutton & Son, the son being William Sturgeon Hutton (1890–1975). The structure was four stories with a basement. The new addition was devoted largely to the manufacturer of grand and re-producing grand pianos.[19]

June 1925, Straube moved into the new plant. The new plant added 70,000 square feet of manufacturing space and provided a suite of new executive offices. The total floor-space, including the addition, was about a hundred and sixty thousand square feet. The new space was especially designed for a new unit that could produce 2,500 Straube grands a year to meet demand. William G. Betz – Straube's plant superintendent since 1917, piano design engineer, and inventor who was highly regarded by the industry – had spent several years perfecting the construction and design of the new Straube grands. Straube also hired William David McIlwrath (né McIlwraith; 1872–1931), a veteran piano factory superintendent and piano engineer with years of experience in the production of grands, to take charge a department in the new unit.[Presto 4] McIlwrath had been the manufacturing superintendent of Jesse French & Sons Piano Co. of New Castle, Indiana, since February 16, 1920, and had been employed there since 1913. McIlwrath learned the profession in Canada, having been associated with many of the leading factories in the East.[MTR 13][Presto 5]

Straube enters radio manufacturing

In 1929, Straube began producing radios.[Presto 6]

1930 advertising

In 1930, Straube was using the advertising firm of Lamport, Fox & Co., Irvin Sylvester Dolk (1891–1981), ad executive of South Bend, Indiana.[Presto 7]

1935 friendly receivership

Sales of pianos and player pianos, industry-wide, began to slip in the early 1920s, due partly to the rising popularity of radio as an alternative for home entertainment[20] and due partly to the rising popularity of automobiles, which cost about the same as premium Straube pianos ($325; equivalent to $5,939 in 2018). And, like pianos, automobiles were commonly purchased on installment. After the Wall Street Crash of 1929 and into the Great Depression, sales declined further and Straube began to struggle financially. In 1925, 80% of pianos sold by the retail trade were done so on installment plans.[MTR 14]

In an attempt to survive, the Straube Piano Company sold its Hammond factory in 1931 to the J.L. Metz Furniture Co. for $125,000 (equivalent to $2,059,354 in 2018) and leased back a large portion of the building. In May 1934, the Straube Piano Company went into a friendly receivership. Roy Francis McPharlin (1893–1980) was appointed as receiver.[21] On January 4, 1935, McPharlin distributed a 'first and final' dividend of 8/10 of 1 cent of one dollar (i.e., 86¢ for $100) to the creditors.[Presto 8] During the summer of 1935, the company reorganized. By then, it was still producing pianos, but occupied only a portion of the factory it once owned. The remainder of the plant was occupied by J.L. Metz Furniture Co. In 1935, the Straube Piano Company was being operated by the Fidelity Security Company, John Leonard Keilman (1867–1946), president. Fidelity Security was the finance arm of Straube Piano – dealing in piano paper and other securities.

When Straube went into receivership, all of its officers departed, including E.R. Jacobson, president; C.H.J. Thorby, vice-president; and Alfred Theodore Schuldes (1892–1981), secretary-treasurer.[21] Also, in 1935, William G. Betz (1871–1957), longtime superintendent with over 50 patents, left the company. In the interim, after the departure of Betz and before the appointment of Charles Henry Bartolomee as plant superintendent, Alvin Detloff Meyer (1879–1970), a Straube purchasing agent and longtime employee, took charge of manufacturing.

Around June 1936, Straube Piano Company moved its offices from the First Trust Building in Hammond to the Straube factory at 5049 Columbia Avenue in Hammond. And its board of directors elected Lemuel (Lem) Kline (1868–1945) as secretary-treasurer.[Presto 9][22]

1937 adjudicated bankruptcy
On January 19, 1937, the Straube Piano Company was adjudicated bankrupt in United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, Hammond Division. In March 1937, the receiver for the Straube Piano Company sold all remaining assets for $4,655 (equivalent to $81,128 in 2018) to individuals who planned to continue the business. The dividend amount is not known. The assets consisted of the name and goodwill of the business, unfinished pianos – about twenty in process of construction – thirty piano cases unassembled, and various supplies of finished and unfinished materials and parts used in the construction of pianos, along with piano strings and wire and other parts for piano manufacturing.[Presto 10]
Reorganization

A new company was formed in Indiana on March 27, 1937, as Straube Pianos Inc. located at 5049 Columbia Avenue and production of Straube pianos resumed in the leased portion of the Hammond factory that the former company once owned. The 1937 executives were

Walter Ernst Schrage (1912–1982), president, whose father, William Ernst Schrage (1884–1941), was president of the Bank of Whiting, Hammond, Indiana
Max B. Pattiz (1890–1979), vice-president and general manager (former president of Lauter Piano Company, maker of the Lauter-Humana player piano, Newark, New Jersey)
Harry E. Powers (1899–1954), secretary and treasurer;[Presto 11] Powers was a lawyer from nearby Whiting, Indiana
1940 move to Chicago

On May 1, 1940, Straube Pianos Inc. moved to Chicago Heights to occupy 48,000 sq. ft. of a warehouse owned by National Tea.[23]

1940 executives
Walter Ernst Schrage, Jr., president
Charles Henry Bartholomee (1874–1960), who began as superintendent in 1935 and became Vice President of Straube Pianos Inc. in July 1940[MTR 15]
Penfield Emory Mason (1875–1963), sales manager (sales manager many years with the Haddorff Co.)
Charles Roy Arnold (born 1900), Atlanta manager (later, president) of Continental Music Inc., a division of C.G. Conn
1941 executives
Charles Henry Bartholomee, vice president Straube Pianos Inc.
Herbert A. Koehlinger (1902–1955), vice president and New York manager (Eastern Manager of the Continental Music Co.); Koehlinger later was sales manager of the Fred Gretsch Manufacturing Company
Paul M. Gazlay (1896–1966), president of Continental Music Inc.; Gazlay was president of C.G. Conn from 1949 to 1958
Sale of Straube to C.G. Conn

C.G. Conn acquired Straube Pianos Inc. in October 1941. For the previous two years, Continental Music Co. of Chicago – a subsidiary of Conn – had been the sales representative for Straube, with P. E. Mason as sales manager.[24][25][26][27][28] Mason, in the mid-1920s, had been vice president of the Cable-Nelson Piano Company before it had merged with the Everett Piano Company in 1926. C.G. Conn extended the relationship with Continental and kept Bartholomee as the head of manufacturing.[MTR 16] Mason, who for many years had been the sales manager for the Haddorff Piano Co., Rockford, Illinois, joined Continental when C.G. Conn acquired Haddorff in November 1940.[MTR 17]

World War II

Sometime before May 12, 1942, the U.S. War Production Board restricted piano production by C.G. Conn, Ltd., to 120 pianos a month. On May 12, 1942, C.G. Conn, Ltd., announced that it would consolidate its piano manufacturing by moving its Straube manufacturing from Chicago Heights to its Haddorff Piano manufacturing plant in Rockford, Illinois, at Railroad Avenue and 9th Street—a leased facility that Haddorff shared with the Rockford Chair and Furniture Company. Haddorff had sold its original Rockford plant on Harrison Avenue in 1940. In December 1940, a month after C.G. Conn's acquisition of the Haddorff Piano Company, Conn moved the Haddorff's manufacturing operations into the Railroad Avenue plant, which it had modernized.

On May 30, 1942 – a few weeks after C.G. Conn consolidated the manufacturing of Haddorff and Straube pianos at the Haddorff plant in Rockford – the War Production Board (WPB) ordered that manufacturing of pianos at the Rockford plant cease by July 31, 1942. Under a war contract between C.G. Conn, Ltd., and the U.S. War Department, the Rockford plant produced parts for gliders and trainer planes from 1942 to 1946.[29]

Cessation of production of Straube pianos

The last published reference to the sale of a Straube piano was in July 1946, when the Haddorff Piano Co. of Rockford, Illinois, exhibited a complete line of Haddorff and Straube grands and spinets at the Palmer House in Chicago during the Convention of the National Association of Music Merchants.[MTR 18] Production of Straube pianos ceased in 1949.

Dissolution of the Straube corporate entities

C.G. Conn retained ownership of Straube Pianos Inc. until 1969, when C.G. Conn was acquired by the Crowell-Collier MacMillan Company. The assets of Straube Piano Inc. included those acquired from the March 1937 receivers sale of the former Straube Piano Company. The Indiana corporate charters of (i) Straube Pianos Inc. (incorporated March 25, 1937), (ii) Straube Piano Company Inc. (incorporated November 14, 1941), and (iii) Struabe Piano and Music Company (incorporated October 24, 1922) expired January 1, 1970.

Straube Piano & Music Company[edit]

The Straube Piano & Music Company was the retail division and subsidiary of the Straube Piano Company. It was launched around 1920.[Presto 12] Also, in 1920, the retail division purchased a two-story building on S Hohman Street in Hammond, Indiana for $75,000. The building housed four stores and six office suites yielding rental income of about $9,000 a year. The building was made of brick and terra cotta and had frontage of 100 feet on South Hohman Street. The directors of Straube Piano Company incorporated its retail division in 1922.[30]

Brands and models[edit]

Straube brands[edit]

  • Straube
  • Hammond – Hammond pianos and players were an outgrowth of the Hammond Piano Co., organized in Hammond, Indiana, in 1904, by James F. Broderick. The Straube Piano Company held a controlling interest in the company. The objective was to produce medium grade pianos, with comparable quality, at lower prices than the premium Straubes.[MTR 19] The Hammond Piano Co. launched its first two pianos in 1905, Style 21 and Style 23, both full uprights. Hammond pianos were made in the same factory as Straube and Gilmore pianos, but the Hammond Piano Co. business was kept separate. The Hammond Piano Co. was originally chartered in 1903 Illinois as the Chicago Electric Piano Co. by the Straube Piano Company. The incorporators were James T. Broderick, E. R. Jacobson and W. G. Martin, all of the Straube Piano Co. The purpose was to market a nickel-in-the-slot piano player known in the East as the Autoelectra.[MTR 20] The name-change to Hammond Piano Co. was filed in Indiana in February 1905.[MTR 21]
  • Gilmore – Gilmore pianos began production in 1904 as a private label for a retail customer in Philadelphia, the customer being Gustave Herzberg (1835–1924), father of Edward Herzberg (1870–1931), who ran the piano department at the Snellenburg Store. Edward left Straube as vice president in 1904 to join his father. The Gilmore line ran until about 1927.[31] Earliest reference to a Gilmore Piano is 1900[32]
  • Woodward – manufactured after 1910

Straube models[edit]

Straube models and prices (f.o.b.) Hammond
Grands
  • The Conservatory – (1926 – $950; equivalent to $13,445 in 2018)
  • The Artist – (1926 – $795; equivalent to $11,251 in 2018)
  • The Italian (1926)
  • The Sonata Florentine (1926)
Reproducing
  • Model C – (1926 – $2,575, equivalent to $36,442 in 2018, and up) – 'An instrument which recreates with absolute fidelity the playing of the world's master pianists, a combination of the superb Straube Conservatory model grand with the famous Welte Mignon (Licensee) reproducing action. Its amazing range of expression imparts a realism which makes it impossible to distinguish the reproduction from the personal playing of the artist. A library of more than 4,000 rolls puts the world's greatest music at the disposal of the owner of a Straube Model C. R.'
Players
  • Style A (introduced in 1912) – Louis XV casing
  • Style B (introduced in 1917 or prior)
  • Style E
  • Style 15 (introduced in 1917 or prior)
  • Style T (introduced in 1922 or prior) – with Artronome Player Action
  • The Arcadian – (1926 – $750; equivalent to $10,614 in 2018)
  • The Imperial – (1926 – $675; equivalent to $9,553 in 2018)
  • The Colonial – (1926 – $625; equivalent to $9,553 in 2018)
  • The Puritan – (1926 – $595; equivalent to $8,421 in 2018)
  • The Dominion – (1926 – $550; equivalent to $7,784 in 2018)
  • Style 20 (1914)
Uprights
  • (1926 – $395, $425, $525)
  • Style J – Cabinet Grand (introduced in 1901 or prior)
  • Style K – Cabinet Grand (introduced in 1901 or prior)
  • Style L – Cabinet Grand (introduced in 1898)
  • Style M – Cabinet Grand (introduced in 1898)
  • Style B – Cabinet Grand (introduced in 1906) – 'Elegant double veneered case, in fancy mahogany, Italian walnut, American burl walnut or oak; heavily cross banded with y8-inch stock; all carving hand work; all moldings cross veneered; hand carved trusses of natural woods; new cabinet grand scale with Capo 'dAstro bearing bar in bass section; patent improved double repeating action with brass capstan regulating screws in keys; improved double roll fall board; nickel-plated hammer rail and continuous hinges; ivory keys, noiseless pedals; nickel-plated tuning pins, fully bushed, copper wrapped bass strings. The inside of this case is lined throughout with bird's-eye maple, finished in keeping with the balance of the instrument. Dimensions: 7 1-3 octaves; height, 4 feet 8 inches; with, 5 feet 3 inches; depth, 2 feet 4 inches.
  • Style C (introduced in 1905 or prior)
  • Style I (introduced in 1905 or prior)
  • Style D (1914)
  • Style O (introduced 1912) – double veneered case, with full extension music desk, new grand scale with capo D'Astro bearing bar on bass section, nickel plated tuning pins, brass strings wrapped with copper, patent improved double repeating action with brass capstan regulating screws in keys, bushed tuning pins, nickel plated hammer rail, continuous hinges, improved double roll fall board, ivory keys and patent noiseless pedals. It is 4 feet 8 inches in height
  • Style S – similar to the Style O
  • Style F (introduced on or before 1925)
  • Style G (introduced on or before 1925)
  • Style H (introduced on or before 1925)
Pin block, hammer rail
Full console
Pedals, treble bridge, bass bridge, metal frame, hitch pins, soundboard

Hammond models[edit]

Players
  • Hammond Style 10 (1914), made of mahogany & oak
  • The Artronome player action, introduced on Straube player pianos in May 1921,[MTR 22] included patented pendulum valves, one for each note, a tenpoint customized motor, and an automatic ball-bearing roll adjuster for the tracking.[MTR 23]
The valve, according to the company, became the heart of the Artronome action. According to Straube literature, it was frictionless, non-corrosive, and eliminated 90 percent of all player problems caused by friction and corrosion in the mechanism. By 1922, over one million Straube pendulum valves had been installed in player pianos of various makes.
The valves were three-tier and horizontal, but not the more common type found in horizontal valve actions, which were usually the wire i-pin variety. Each valve pivoted between two ears that extended from each metal plate.
Each valve was a wood disc with leather facing on both sides. One face had a center hole leading to a pocket of a larger diameter in the wood. The valve was supported only by a lever between the valve plate pivot and the pouch lifter disc, with a right angle dowel extension that 'plugged in' the center hole of the valve button. The pivotal lever is easily removable because it was not cemented to the valve, rendering a loose valve button in the valve well behind the valve plate that was screwed onto the valve chest with white sealing compound.[33]
  • The Straube Style L was a short upright – only 3 ft 7 inches tall, introduced in 1926 – that incorporated Straube's patented Duplex Overstringing. Straube claimed that the Duplex Overstringing enabled the piano to produce the sound of a full upright.
  • The Melo-Harp was a patented pneumatic-controlled attachment for Straube pianos.
  • The Straube Grands[34] offered in 1927 included lengths four-foot-four, five-foot-two, six-foot, and six-foot-two in various styles.
  • Straube Reproducing Grands were automated player pianos that used a Welte-Mignon action manufactured under license by the Auto Pneumatic Action Co. of Manhattan, New York.

In 1924, Straube introduced individual names for its players rather than alpha letters in an effort to stimulate retail sales. A year earlier, Straube introduced a uniform national pricing policy. In 1923, Straube also launched a national advertising campaign.

Explanation of the term Studio Grand: A tall upright piano – 50 inches or taller, one that a person of average height can't see over when seated at the bench – is sometimes referred to as an 'upright grand'. Straube branded it as a 'Cabinet Grand'. Use of the word 'grand' with uprights should not be confused with concert grands. Upright grands can be of high quality and – short of concert grands – are often the choice of serious pianists, recording studios, and performance venues. A mid-high upright – one that one can barely see over – is often used in dance studios, where an accompanist can see the dancers. A short upright, one that rises less than a foot above the keyboard, is referred to as a spinet. Serious pianists typically regard spinets as inadequate because the soundboard is too short to produce a full sound with full overtones.

Sample Straube serial numbers[edit]

Straube serial numbers run from 1895 to 1949[35]
SN: 6692 (1896–1897) – upright
SN: 7370 (1898) – upright
SN: 7371 (1898) – upright (engraved wood casing)
SN: 7381 (1898) – upright (exported to Liverpool, England)
SN: 8311 (1898–1899) – Gabriel W, grand
SN: 9058 (1900) – upright
SN: 9547 (1901) – upright
SN: 9577 (1901) – upright
SN: 9788 (1901) – upright
SN: 10028 (1901) – upright
SN: 10606 (1902) – upright
SN: 11271 (1903) – upright
SN: 11428 (1904) – upright
SN: 11552 (1905) – Cabinet Grand (upright) ('Est 1878')
SN: 13962 (1907) – upright
SN: 13992 (1907) – baby grand
SN: 18629 (1912)
SN: 19051 (1912) – upright ('double repeating action')
SN: 19373 (1912) – upright
SN: 19382 (1912) - Upright
SN: 23588 (1915)
SN: 26145 (1916) – upright
SN: 23588 (or 45756) (1919) – Melo-Harp, full upright
SN: 25077 (1916) – Cabinet Grand (upright)
SN: 28336 (1917) – player
SN: 29582 (1918) – Upright Grand
SN: 33346 (1919) – upright
SN: 34619 (1920) – upright
SN: 37784 (1921) - player - w/French Repeating Action. Manufactured for the Wm.H.Elsinger stores in St. Paul Minnesota.
SN: 38173 (1921) – player
SN: 39876 (1922) – upright
SN: 41441 (1923) – upright
SN: 41953 (1923) – baby grand
SN: 44412 (1923) – player
SN: 45813 (1924) – player
SN: 46026 (1924) – player
SN: 47555 (1925) – upright
SN: 47715 (1925) – player
Patented vertical Grand French Repeating Action Piano'
'new improved'
'scale with patent double repeating'
SN: 49041 (1925) – upright
SN: 49339 (1925) – upright
SN: 50066 (1925) – baby grand
SN: 50224 (1925) – upright
SN: 50839 (1925) – full upright
SN: 53477 (1926) – player, French Repeating Action
SN: 54624 (1927) – player
SN: 54873 (1927) – upright
SN: 55030 (1927) – baby grand
SN: 55857 (1927) – upright (National Piano Manufactures Assc. Certicificate #858800)
SN: 56002 (1928) – grand
SN: 57098 (1928) – Sonata, baby grand video on YouTube
SN: 57447 (1928) – player, style H, ID 58558
SN: 59314 (1938) – upright
SN: 59384 (1929) – Vertical Grand French Repeating Action
SN: 59577 (1930) – Vertical Grand French Repeating Action ('Est 1878') ('CW Lindsay, Montreal, Quebec, Canada)
SN: 60001 (1931) – upright
SN: 61593 (1938)
SN: 61953 (1938) – spinet, 38' x 59' x 23
SN: 62937 (1939) – spinet
SN: 63593 (1941) – upright
SN: 63703 (1941) – upright
SN: 64165 (1941) – upright
SN: 64232 (1941) – spinet
SN: 64396 (1941) – spinet
SN: 65065 (1949) – upright
SN: 66090 (1949) – Sonata, baby grand

National Music Museum No. 14434. Upright piano with player mechanism (Hammond Melo-Harp) by the Straube Co., Hammond, Indiana, manufactured 1916, serial no. 26494. AAA-c5 (7+ octaves). Three pedals: half blow, 'Melo-Harp' (tabs with staples for a jarring, 'honky-tonk' tone), dampers. Purchased by Perry Fulton Pinkerton (1873–1952) for his wife, Isadora Edna (née Rouff; 1876–1923), in 1918. Delivered by train and wagon to the family farmhouse in Quimby, Iowa, where it remained until coming to the NMM, this player piano filled family events with music and provided accompaniment for dancing. Gift of Edward and James Pinkerton, grandsons, in memory of their parents, Ross Cavanaugh Pinkerton (1913–2009) and Arlene Jane (née Bugh; 1919–2009) late of Quimby, Iowa.

Woodward
SN: 16170 (1910) – upright
SN: 16298 (1910) – upright
SN: 21937 (1914) – Cabinet Grand (upright)
SN: 22883 (1915) – Cabinet Grand (upright)
SN: 26096 (1916) – upright
SN: 35355 (1920) – player
SN: 36715 (1921) – upright
SN: 41441 (1923) – player
SN: 57908 (1929) – upright
Hammond
SN: 8743 (1900) – upright
SN: 15972 (1909) – Cabinet Grand (upright)
SN: 17868 (1911) – upright
SN: 20401 (1913) – Cabinet Grand (upright)
SN: 22759 (1915) – upright player
SN: 23414 (1915) – upright
SN: 23707 (1915) – Cabinet Grand (upright)
SN: 24488 (1915) – Cabinet Grand (upright) (price in gold lettering $650)
SN: 25340 (1916) – Cabinet Grand (upright)
SN: 27297 (1917) – full upright
SN: 28895 (1917) – Cabinet Grand (upright)
SN: 29761 (1918) – Cabinet Grand (upright)
SN: 41297 (1923) – upright
SN: 43381 (1923) – upright player Melo-Harp with Artronome player action
SN: 43908 (1923) – upright (vertical grand French repeating action)
SN: 44689 (1924) – upright player
SN: 49853 (1925) – upright player
SN: 58809 (1946) – upright (vertical grand French repeating action, about 52' high)
Playtona mfg by Straube for Grinnell Brothers
Straube Piano Company & Straube Pianos Inc. serial numbers
1895: 6500
1900: 8700
1901: 9400
1902: 10300
1903: 10900
1904: 11400
1905: 11900
1906: 12600
1907: 13500
1908: 14300
1909: 15100
1910: 16000
1911: 17200
1912: 18400
1913: 19600
1914: 21000
1915: 22500
1916: 24500
1917: 27000
1918: 29500
1919: 31700
1920: 34000
1921: 36900
1922: 38400
1923: 41200
1924: 44600
1925: 47000
1926: 51000
1927: 54000
1928: 56000
1929: 57800
1930: 59400
1931: 59995
(no data for 1932–35)
1936: 60000
1937: 60500
1938: 61000
1939: 62000
1940: 62500
1941: 63500
1942: 64500
1949: 65021[35]

Notes: In 1954, the Hammond Organ Co. acquired the Everett and Cable Nelson names and also started building Hammond pianos. These Hammond Pianos are of no relation to those once produced by Straube. Hammond pianos were discontinued around 1965.

Selected owners, executives, and managers[edit]

James Francis Broderick

James (Jim) Francis Broderick (19 August 1854 Philadelphia – 17 November 1920 Chicago) became president on January 1, 1898,[Presto 1] and served in that role until March 1911. Before joining Straube Piano, Broderick had been a traveling salesman for Steger & Company and the B. Shoninger Co.[MTR 8]

Ernfrid Reinholdt Jacobson

E.R. Jacobson was the son of Charles Frithiof Jacobson (1852–1906), and Helena (née Nicholson; 1845–1910). Ernfrid Jacobson, with his parents, immigrated to the United States in 1882 and settled in Chicago. Jacobson received his public school education in Chicago. He began his career as an office boy, then a bookkeeper and general office utility man for various concerns until August 1898.

In addition to being president part owner with his brothers of Straube Piano Company and Straube Piano & Music Co., which operated several music stores; E.R. Jacobson also was president of the Fidelity Security Co., dealers in piano paper and other securities, and treasurer of the Hammond Machine and Forge Works.

Politically, E.R. Jacobson he was a Republican. He was a member of the Bethlehem Swedish Lutheran Church of Englewood, Illinois, where he had been a trustee since 1898, and was also the treasurer of the church. He resided at 5754 Fifth avenue.[17]

William Straube

William Straube, before 1894, had been president of the Schaeffer Piano Company,[36] which in 1896, had a sales room on the second floor of 236 Wabash Avenue, Chicago.

After Straube sold his interest in the Straube Piano Company in 1901, he focused on his real estate development business in Downers Grove, Illinois. In 1902, Straube became a director of the Cerro Mojarra Plantation Company, a ranching and agricultural firm operating in Oaxaca, Mexico.[37]

The Schaeffer Piano Company, founded by William Schaeffer (1832–1888) in Württemberg, Germany, around 1872, was established in New York in 1877. Schaeffer had factories at 472 West 43rd Street, and 456 West 37th Street, Manhattan, New York. Then, in 1889, after Schaeffer's death, the company was established in Illinois and incorporated on December 31, 1891, in Illinois, by Charles M. Herman, Isaac Newton Rice (1847–1929), and Samuel Ringgold Huyett (1946–1911).[38]

In 1892, the Schaeffer's piano factory, located in Oregon, Illinois, had 90 employees and was producing 20 pianos a week.[39]

In the fall of 1894, Scheaffer Piano Co. (William Straube, president), moved its manufacturing operations from Oregon, Illinois, to River View – on the Wisconsin Railway, two miles from the Chicago city limit. The new facility had twice the floor space.[40]

Under financial duress in 1896, the assets of Schaeffer Piano were assigned its assets to the creditor, Floyd E. Jennison (1857–1920), in the Cook County Court.[41][MTR 24] The goodwill and patents were sold to Thomas Edwin Dougherty[Presto 13] who, in 1895, re-established and re-incorporated the company as Schaeffer Piano Manufacturing Company.

In 1902, while Thomas Edwin Dougherty (1856–1943) was president, the Schaeffer Piano Company manufacturing plant in River View[42] had a fire. The company subsequently erected a new plant in Kankakee, Illinois.[MTR 25]

In 1891, William Straube went into partnership with Alfred Roland Heckman (1859–1914),[43] a brother of his wife, Jessica Fremont Heckman (1857–1944), both of 8 Heckman siblings. Their firm, Heckman & Straube, sold land lots in Downers Grove beginning 1891.

Martin Straube

The 1910 Census shows Martin living in Oregon, Illinois, perhaps working for the Schiller Piano Company sometime before 1910. In 1940, he was living in Los Angeles, still working in the piano business.

James Frithiof Jacobson

James (Jimmy) Frithiof Jacobson (5 February 1885 Chicago – December 1968 Hammond, Indiana) attended public schools in Chicago. After leaving school worked in a warehouse for two years, then spent eight years with the Crerar-Adams Company, a railway supply firm. Following that, he and his brother, Ernfrid Reinholdt Jacobson, became associated in a music store at Indiana Harbor.[MTR 26]

Others

Clinton Wilson Howe (born 1875), bookkeeper at Straube Piano from 1895 to 1897[44]

Directors and executives[edit]

  • January 4, 1901: Straube Piano Company
James F. Broderick, president
Edward Herzberg, vice-president,
E.R. Jacobson, secretary[MTR 27]
  • 1902: Straube Piano Company
24 Adams Street, Chicago
E.R. Jacobson, Secretary & Director
William Straube, Manager & Director
James F. Broderick, Secretary, Treasurer, Director
Edward Herzberg (born 1859), Vice-President & Director;[45] he left Straube in 1904 to join his brother Harry and father Gustave in Philadelphia to run the piano department of the Snellenburg Store.[MTR 28]
  • 1905: Straube Piano Company
24-26 Adams Street, Chicago (Stevens Building)
James F. Broderick, President, Treasurer, Manager and Director
Mary D. Broderick (1862–1932), Vice-President and Director (wife of James F. Broderick)
Edward Herzberg (43), Vice-President and Director
Ernfrid Reinholdt Jacobson, 43, Secretary and Director
William Straube, President, Manager and Director[46]
  • April 1905
James F. Broderick, president[12][Presto 1]
William P. Parker (1843–1907), vice president[47][MTR 29]
Ernfrid Reinholdt Jacobson, secretary
James Frithiof Jacobson (born 1885), secretary[48]

Superintendents and foremen[edit]

  • 1906–19??: Gunnar G. Lindstrom (1870–1949), became superintendent in 1906.[49] He became the superintendent at the Haddorff Piano Company and in 1923, moved into sales at Haddorff
  • 1917–1935: William G. Betz (1871–1957), superintendent from 1917 to 1935, (over 50 patents), left the company in 1935. After leaving Straube, Betz patented several piano action mechanisms and assigned them to Pratt Read and Company Inc., maker of piano mechanisms.
  • 1935–1942: Charles Henry Bartholomee (1874–1960) began as superintendent and was superintendent in July 1940;[20] in 1940, Bartholomee became Vice President of Straube Pianos Inc.[Presto 14][MTR 15] Before joining Straube, he had been superintendent of the Smith Barnes Piano Factory for several years and superintendent of the P.A. Starck Piano Co., Chicago, also for several years.
  • 1925–1930: William David McIlwrath (1872–1931), foreman, under Bartholomee's direction, of the manufacturer of Straube Grands
  • 1942–1949: Carl Leopold Haddorff (1895–1952), son of Charles A. Haddorff (1864–1928), co-founder of the Haddorff Piano Company
  • Roy Hilmer Olsen (1888–1965), in 1920, was a foreman for Straube; in 1930 he was a clerk for a candy manufacturer in Chicago; and in 1942 he was working for Carnegie-Illinois Steel Company. His father, John Olsen, a Norwegian immigrant, was a piano maker.

Wholesale and retail sales[edit]

  • Charles W. Smith (1861–1932), appointed manager in 1920 of Straube's retail division
  • Alfred Theodore Schuldes (1892–1981)[Presto 15][Presto 16]
  • 1923–1926: James Randolph Adams (1898–1956), 1960 posthumous inductee into the American Advertising Federation Hall of Fame[50] Adams credited his success to his first job, which was with Straube as advertising and sales promotion manager.[51]
  • William S. Robertson (1860–1924), joined Straube around 1913 and was its Eastern representative until he suffered a stroke in October 1923[MTR 30]
  • W.J. Robertson (born approx 1898), nephew of William S. Robertson, joined Straube at the end of 1920
  • James Newton England (1882–1956), Atlanta sales representative
  • Roy Solomon Dunn (1877–1932), joined Straube at the end of 1920; on January 1, 1927, Dunn became Western sales manager of Brinkerhoff Piano Co. of Chicago; Dunn became the Western sales manager for Splitdorf Radio Corp. in January 1928,[MTR 31] the year that Thomas A. Edison, Inc., acquired the firm[52]
  • James Alfred Terry (born 1889) – After working with Straube, Terry co-founded the James A. Terry Piano Co. in 1913 in Duluth, Minnesota, operating as a piano retailer under the name of Terry-Gulliuson Piano Co.
  • Leroy Jovst Viersin, Sr. (1878–1959)
  • J. Roy Huckins, traveling salesman – central and northwestern wholesale representative from 1922 to 1926[MTR 32]
  • Henry Anthony Erikson (1884–1949) – salesman, Straube Music Store
  • Armon C. Harper (born 1894) – salesman, Straube Piano Company
  • Oscar Andrew Lindholm (1884–1932) – piano salesman, Staube Music Store
  • George Burl Simpson (1887–1954), based out of Chillicothe, Missouri, started May 1921 as a traveling salesman for Straube, covering Missouri and Eastern Kansas[53]
  • Hugh Alexander Stewart (1890–1963), began as a sales, advertising, and promotion manager in September 1927[MTR 33] In 1936, Stewart was sales manager for Rudolph Wurlitzer Company, and in 1938 he ascended to vice president. He retired from Wurlitzer in 1958.
  • David Lord Sterling (1882–1949), formerly a traveling salesman for Poole Piano Co. of Boston
  • R.A. Rasmusson
  • William H. Rasmusson (born 1883)
  • Charles A. Clinton (1902–1986), sales manager at Straube from about 1939 to 1942[54]
  • Lemuel (Lem) Kline (1868–1945), general sales manager beginning around 1936
  • Robert Edward Lauer (born 1891) joined Straube's traveling sales force in 1927 to cover Ohio and West Virginia.
'In the retail piano business today, conditions have changed materially from what they were a few years ago. Instead of simply considering old names and traditions as an asset, we are now obliged to treat with modern forms of merchandising, both buying and selling. We have to think in terms of dollars and cents and it is from this angle that the Straube line is particularly interesting. Any merchant who adopts the Straube system of retail piano business operation is bound to make money with it.'[Presto 17]
  • Joseph Edward Albineau (1886–1961) became general representative for Straube in 1927, covering Wisconsin, Minnesota, North Dakota, and South Dakota.[Presto 18]
  • W.E. Gillespie, was a traveling representative in Missouri and Illinois for Straube from before 1915 to 1927, when he moved on to become special representative for W.W. Kimball Co. In 1931, based in Seattle, Gillespie was representative for Starr Piano. In 1934, he was a representative for Haddorff.
  • C.E. West
  • Simien Myers Wessel (1873–1947) had been the treasurer for R.K. Maynard Co. until about 1912, when the company went bankrupt. He then founded a piano company that produced pianos bearing his name, 'S.M. Wessel'. By 1915, Wessel was a wholesale rep for Straube.[MTR 34]

Others[edit]

  • Alvin Detloff Meyer (1879–1970), a Straube purchasing agent and longtime employee who served as an interim superintendent in 1935 after its first reorganization and subsequent departure of William G. Betz, was, in 1928, instrumental in developing a more sustainable solution for fastening legs to the cases of Straube Grands. Blackhawk Foundry & Machine Co. of Davenport, Iowa, designed more sturdy plates in response to a design request letter that Meyer had sent to several manufacturers.[Presto 19] Straube Piano announced the innovation to its competitors and by the end of 1928, Blackhawk was making the plates for 13 of the largest piano manufacturers in the country.[55]

Addresses[edit]

Retail sales[edit]

1898–19??: 24-26 East Adams Street, Chicago
1911: 59 Adams Street, Chicago
1915: 209 South State Street, Chicago
190?–1922 (and longer?): 631 Hohman Street, Hammond
5247 Hohman Avenue, Hammond

Factory: 252 Wildwood Road[edit]

  • 205 Manila Avenue at Havanna Street, Hammond, Indiana (Manila Avenue was renamed Wildwood Road in 1930)[13]
  • Frontage is at 252 Wildwood Rd., service entrance on Kenwood St. (parallel to Wildwood), property is bounded on the north by Wildwood, east by Monon Trail, the south by Kenwood. The property is an L-shape, turn counterclockwise 90 degrees – the most northern border is bounded by Conkey Street. On Kenwood, across the street, is the Oak Hill Cemetery.
  • Factory: Wildwood
  • 1913: Showroom at 59 East Adams Street, Chicago
  • 1919: Straube purchased a 2-story brick and terracotta building on South Hohman Street, where the firm had been located for years.[Presto 12]

Straube photo archives[edit]

  • 'Cutting up' – President Rick Ricketson, Al Young (Peerless Printing), Duke Melody (pianist); (1955); OCLC55122989

Videos[edit]

  • 'Second Hand Rose', Straube Player on YouTube
  • 'The Entertainer', Straube Player on YouTube
  • 'Charleston', Straube Player on YouTube
  • Hammond Mellow-Harp on YouTube
  • (song unknown) Hammond Mellow-Harp on YouTube
  • 'Never On Sunday', Straube Player on YouTube

Other Straube names in music not related to Straube Piano[edit]

J. Straube & Co., Berlin

Straube Piano Company was not related to J. Straube & Co., in Berlin, an organ maker founded in 1869 that endured until 1972. In 1903, its founding owners were Johannes Straube (1843–1906) & Karl Straube (1873–1950), father and son. Johannes, an organist, was the superintendent. Johannes was also the son of J.C.F. Straube, a violin maker. In 1923, Otto Pappe (1882–1972) became the owner. Otto's son, Reinhard Pappe (1908–1972), succeeded him as owner until his death in 1972, when the firm was dissolved. William Straube(de), the German painter, was also a son of Johannes. None of the Straubes from this family were directly related to William Straube of the Straube Piano Co.[56]

William J. Straub, organ builder

William J. Straub (1859–1946), who is listed in the 1901, 1902, and 1904 Syracuse City Directories, was an organ builder. This Straub is unrelated.

Alois Straub, organ builder

Alois Straub (1826 Baden, Germany – 1883) was a manufacturer of reed organs. He learned cabinet making and worked with the manufacturing of musical instruments in Germany before emigrating to the United States in 1849. Straub settled in Akron, Ohio, and, from about 1852 to 1856, made organs for H.B. Horton (Henry Bishop Horton; 1819–1885). Straub then worked as a traveling salesman for Horton & Rose (Ira Rose; 1820–1891) from 1857 to 1861. Straub opened Akron's first music store 1861 at 148 (later 163) S. Howard Street. Straub was a manufacturer of reed organs under his own name from about 1870 to 1875.[56][57][58]

Affiliations[edit]

  • National Piano Travelers Association, E.R. Jacobson, et al.
  • National Piano Manufacturers Association, Straube Piano Co.
E.R. Jacobson, past president
  • Hammond Manufacturers Association
E.R. Jacobson, elected president 1925
  • Chicago Piano & Organ Association

Selected patents[edit]

In the mid 1920s, Straube Piano had some patents that influenced the industry. In 1926, Straube introduced its patented Duplex Overstringing system[MTR 35] – US Patent No. 1769284 – claiming that it enabled smaller Straube uprights to produce the sound of full uprights and Straube's smallest grand, the Sonata Grand, to produce the sound of a full concert grand. The Straube Artronome player piano had many patented innovations, including one that improved pumping power from the foot pedals.[Presto 18]

  • Roy Hilmer Olsen:
Patents
1916: US 1205561 A – 'Tone Modulating Device'[a][MTR 36]
Assignments to Straube
1916: US 1205561 A – assigned to Straube Piano Company
  • William G. Betz during his tenure with Steger & Sons Piano Manufacturing Company:
Patents
1907: US 867002 A – 'Piano' (strengthening how an agraffe is mounted)[b]
1911: US 1024174 A – 'Tracking Device for Pneumatic Action'[c]
1911: US 1037584 A – 'Hammer-Rail Construction for Pneumatic Pianos'[d]
1912: US 1023613 A – 'Pneumatic Action'[e]
1912: US 1021502 A – 'Pneumatic Action'[f]
1912: US 1048486 A – 'Pneumatic Action'[g]
1914: US 1197596 A – 'Pneumatic Action for Pianos'[h]
1916: US 1174807 A – 'Pneumatic Action'[i]
Assignments to Steger & Sons
1911: US 1037584 A – assigned to Seger & Sons
1911: US 1024174 A – assigned to Seger & Sons
1912: US 1023613 A – assigned to Seger & Sons
1912: US 1021502 A – assigned to Seger & Sons
1912: US 1048486 A – assigned to Seger & Sons
  • William G. Betz during his tenure with Straube Piano:
Patents
1914: US 1335476 A – 'Pneumatic Action for Pianos'[j]
1917: US 1344574 A – 'Music-Roll-Controlling-Mechanism'[k]
1918: US 1389290 A – 'Piano Action'[l]
1921: US 1444364 A – 'Automatic Music-Roll Carrier and Centering Device for Pneumatic Musical Instruments'[m]
1922: US 1574863 A – 'String Plate for Grands Pianos'[n]
1925: US 1686726 A – 'Grand Piano' (frame construction)[o]
1926: US 1174807 A – 'String Plate' (string mounting construction)[p]
Assignments to Straube
1920: US 1335476 A – assigned to Straube Piano Company
1920: US 1344574 A – assigned to Straube Piano Company
1921: US 1389290 A – assigned to Straube Piano Company
1921: US 1444364 A – assigned to Straube Piano Company
1922: US 1574863 A – assigned to Straube Piano Company

References[edit]

Notes
  1. ^In 1906, W. N. Van Matre and M.F. Van Matre were directors of the Schumann Piano Co. W. N. Van Matre was president; Director of Directors in the City of Chicago, Audit Company of New York (1906), pg. 468
  2. ^Charles (Carl) Herman Jacobson Thorby (11 July 1875 Göteborg, Sweden – 2 September 1946 Saugatuck, Michigan) was a full brother of Ernfrid (Ernest) Reinholdt Jacobson and James Frithiof Jacobson. His surname, Thorby, is a derivation of a longer, discarded Swedish surname (Thorbjornsen?) prior to immigrating with his mother and younger brother, Enifred in 1882. Charles was the oldest sibling. His father immigrated to the U.S. in 1880.
Patents
Official Gazette of the United States Patent Office:
  1. ^Gazette, Vol. 232, November 1916, pps. 770-771
    Roy Hilmer Olsen, assignor to Straube Piano Company
    'Tone Modulating Device for Pianos'
    US 1205561 A, filed June 1, 1915, serial no. 31,402, granted November 21, 1916
  2. ^Gazette, Vol. 130, September 3 to October 29, 1907, pg. 1177
    William G. Betz
    'Piano' (strengthening how an agraffe is mounted)
    US 867002 A, filed January 17, 1907, serial no. 352,703, granted September 4, 1907
  3. ^Gazette, Vol. 177, pg. 909
    William G. Betz, assignor to Steger & Sons Piano Manufacturing Company
    'Tracking Device for Pneumatic Action'
    US 1024174 A, filed June 12, 1911, serial no. 632,586, granted April 23, 1912
  4. ^Gazette, Vol. 182, September 1912, pg. 137
    William G. Betz, assignor to Steger & Sons Piano Manufacturing Company
    'Hammer-Rail Construction for Pneumatic Pianos'
    US 1037584 A, filed June 12, 1911, serial no. 632,585, granted September 3, 1912
  5. ^Gazette, Vol. 177, April 1912, pg. 694–695
    William G. Betz, assignor to Steger & Sons Piano Manufacturing Company
    'Pneumatic Action'
    US 1023613 A, filed April 11, 1910, serial no. 554,850, granted April 16, 1912
  6. ^Gazette, Vol. 176, March 1912, pg. 960
    William G. Betz, assignor to Steger & Sons Piano Manufacturing Company
    'Pneumatic Action'
    US 1021502 A, filed January 7, 1911, serial no. 601,450, granted March 26, 1912
  7. ^Gazette, Vol. 185, December 31 1912, pps. 1064–1065
    William G. Betz, assignor to Steger & Sons Piano Manufacturing Company
    'Pneumatic Action'
    US 1048486 A, filed March 13, 1911, serial no. 614,236, granted December 31, 1912
  8. ^Gazette, Vol. 230, September 1916, pg. 345
    William G. Betz
    'Pneumatic Action for Pianos'
    US 1197596 A, filed May 8, 1914, serial no. 837,130, granted September 12, 1916
  9. ^Gazette, Vol. 224, March 1916, pps. 284–285
    William G. Betz
    'Pneumatic Action'
    US 1174807 A, filed May 20, 1914, serial no. 839,724, granted March 7, 1916
  10. ^Gazette, Vol. 272, March 1920, pg. 841
    William G. Betz
    'Pneumatic Action for Pianos'
    US 1335476 A, filed May 8, 1914, serial no. 837,130
    Divided – US 1335476 A application filed June 1, 1916, serial no. 101,145
  11. ^Gazette, Vol. 275, June 1920, pg. 763
    William G. Betz, assignor to Straube Piano Company
    'Music-Roll-Controlling Mechanism'
    US 1344574 A, filed February 7, 1917, serial no. 147,136, granted June 22, 1920
  12. ^Gazette, Vol. 289, August 1921, pg. 895
    William G. Betz, assignor to Straube Piano Company
    'Piano Action'
    US 1389290 A, filed April 15, 1918, serial no. 228,631, granted August 30, 1921
  13. ^Gazette, Vol. 307, February 1923, pg. 148
    William G. Betz, assignor to Straube Piano Company
    'Automatic Music-Roll Carrier and Centering Device for Pneumatic Musical Instruments'
    US 1444364 A, filed February 12, 1921, serial no. 444,446, granted February 6, 1923
  14. ^Gazette, Vol. 344, March 1926, pg. 111
    William G. Betz, assignor to Straube Piano Company
    'String Plate for Grands Pianos'
    US 1574863 A, filed July 17, 1922, serial no. 575,554, serial no. 51,690, granted March 2, 1926
  15. ^Gazette, Vol. 375, October 1928, pg. 318
    William G. Betz, assignor to Straube Piano Company
    Grand Piano (frame construction)
    US 1686726 A, filed August 21, 1925, granted October 9, 1928
  16. ^Gazette, Vol. 396, July 1930, pg. 215
    William G. Betz
    'String Plate' (string mounting construction)
    US 1769284 A, filed September 30, 1926, serial no. 138, 762, granted July 1, 1930
Citations
Music Trade Review (digital access courtesy of The International Arcade Museum Library, Pasadena, California)
  1. ^'The Name of Straube', Vol. 33, No. 8, August 24, 1901, pg. 12
  2. ^'In The West: New Firm, Straube & Van Matre', Vol. 20, No. 9, March 2, 1895, pg. 1
  3. ^ abThe Straube Piano Co.', Vol. 25, No. 23, December 4, 1897, pg. 23
  4. ^'The Trade in Chicago', Vol. 46, No. 11, pg. 51, March 14, 1908, pg. 51, col. 1
  5. ^'Reorders for Straube Players', Vol. 50, No. 1, January 1, 1910, pg. 35
  6. ^'In The West', Vol 23, No. 3, August 8, 1896, pg. 1
  7. ^'Who's Who in the Piano Industry', Vol. 59, No. 25, December 19, 1914, pg. 18
  8. ^ ab'Broderick's New Move', Vol. 25, No. 26, December 25, 1897, pg. 21
  9. ^ ab'Straube Co. Get Injunction', Vol. 18, No. 21, November 23, 1901, pg. 1
  10. ^'Incorporation of Straube Bros.', Vol. 18, No. 2, July 13, 1901, pg. 28
  11. ^'Straube Piano Co. Win', Vol. 33, No. 25, December 21, 1901, pg. 1
  12. ^ ab'The New Straube Factory Dedicated', Vol. 39, No. 16, October 15, 1904, pps. 23 & 25
  13. ^'New Superintendent Appointed', Vol. 70, No. 8, February 21, 1920
  14. ^'Criticism of Installment Selling Is Because of Abuse of Plan', Vol. 82, No. 9, February 27, 1926, pg. 21
  15. ^ ab'Building Pianos for 55 Years', Vol. 100, No. 9, September 1941, pg. 17
  16. ^'Conn buys Straube Pianos Inc.' Vol 100, No. 10, October 1941, pg. 14
  17. ^'Conn Interests Buy Haddorff', Vol. 99, No. 11, November 1940, pg. 23
  18. ^'Exhibits', Vol. 105, No. 6, July 14–18, 1946, pg. 16
  19. ^'To Make the Hammond Piano', Vol. 39, No. 11, September 10, 1904, pg. 30
  20. ^'Trade Conditions in Chicagio', Vol. 36, No. 8, February 21, 1903, pg. 24, cols. 2-3
  21. ^'Trade Happenings in the West', Vol. 40, No. 5, February 4, 1905, pps. 23 & 25
  22. ^'The Secret of Dependability in Straube-Made Player-Pianos' (illustrated advertisement), Vol. 75, No. 7, August 12, 1922, pg. 10
  23. ^'Straube Piano Co.', Vol. 72, No. 20, May 14, 1921, pg. 101
  24. ^'Hallet & Davis Interest Assign', Vol. 23, No. 1, July 25, 1896, pg. 13
  25. ^'Trade Happenings in the Western Metropolis', Vol. 36, No. 9, February 28, 1903, pg. 25
  26. ^'A Trio of Able Young Men', Vol. 53, No. 11, September 16, 1911, pg. 17
  27. ^'Straube Officers', Vol. 32, No. 2, January 12, 1901, pg. 9
  28. ^'The 'Commission' Question in Philadelphia', Vol. 38, No. 16, April 16, 1904, pg. 13
  29. ^'Death of Capt. Parker', Vol. 44, No. 20, May 18, 1907, pg. 25
  30. ^'Death of W.S. Robertson', Vol. 80, No. 2, January 10, 1925, pg. 28
  31. ^'Dunn Western Sales Manager of Splitdorf', Vol. 86, No. 86, February 4, 1928, pg. 16
  32. ^1928 'Straube Piano Co. Holds Its Annual Sales Meeting', Vol. 86, No. 4, January 28, 1928, pg. 7
  33. ^'H.A. Stewart Joins the Straube Piano Co.', Vol. 85, No. 10, September 3, 1927, pg. 16
  34. ^'Straube Co. Sales Force Meet', Vol. 60, No. 3, January 16, 1915, pg. 45
  35. ^'New Straube Small Upright Piano Offers Radical Scale Development', Vol. 83, No. 13, September 25, 1926, pg. 19
  36. ^'A Tone Modulating Device', Vol. 63, No. 26, December 23, 1916, pg. 25
Presto, Presto-Times, and Presto Music Times (digital access courtesy of The International Arcade Museum Library, Pasadena, California); OCLC29805477
  1. ^ abc'James F. Broderick Has Passed Away', Presto, Issue 1791, November 20, 1920, pg. 11
  2. ^'William Straube Dies', Presto-Times, Issue 2205, November 3, 1928, pg. 9
  3. ^'Straube Piano Co.'s Production Sustained', Issue 2207, November 17, 1928, pg. 11
  4. ^'Straube Piano Co. Occupies New Building', Issue 2027, May 30, 1925
  5. ^'Appointed Superintendent of Straube Grand Factory', Issue 2026, May 23, 1925, pg. 4
  6. ^'Straube Radio Merits', Presto Times, Issue 2225, April 15, 1929
  7. ^'Trade Glances and Observations', Presto-Times, Issue 2246, May 1930, pg. 9
  8. ^'Whew! 86/100 of 1 Per Cent!'Presto-Times, Issue 2275, March–April 1935
  9. ^'Who, What & Why', Presto-Times, Issue 2279, June–July 1936, pg. 18
  10. ^'The Straube Sale and Start Over Again', Presto-Times, Issue 2282, June–July 1937, pg. 22
  11. ^'Straube Piano Prospects Become Decidedly Encouraging', Presto-Times, Issue 2283, November–December 1937, pg. 18
  12. ^ ab'Straube Company Buys Building', Presto, Issue 1749, January 29, 1920, pg. 27; OCLC29805477
  13. ^'Jude Rice Dies at Dallas, a Victim of Pneumonia', Presto, Issue 1751, February 12, 1920, pg. 12
  14. ^'Charles H. Bartholomee Made Vice President of Straube Pianos Inc.', Presto Music Times, Issue 2295, September 1940, pg. 20
  15. ^'Meet the Straube Forces', Presto, Issue 1922, May 26, 1923, pg. 24
  16. ^'Conference of Straube Forces', Presto-Times, Issue 2165, January 28, 1928, pg. 12
  17. ^'Robert E. Lauer Joins Straube Road Forces', Presto-Times, Issue 2152, October 29, 1927, pg. 4
  18. ^ ab'New Representative For The Straube Piano Co.', Presto-Times, Issue, 2150, October 15, 1927, pg. 8
  19. ^'New Straube Piano Improvement Announced', Issue 2202, October 13, 1928, pg. 17
General citations
  1. ^'US Piano Sales History from 1900 to Present', Bluebook of Pianos (2012)
    1900 to 1959
    Piano Shipments reported by the National Piano Manufacturers Association
    1960 to 2012
    Piano Sales reported in MUSIC USA published by the American Music National Piano Foundation and Conference and the National Association of Music Merchants
  2. ^'For More Pianos, Last Note Is Thud in the Dump', The New York Times, July 29, 2012
  3. ^Historical Context, Downers Grove Architectural and Historical Society (1913), pg. 41
  4. ^'Talk of the Town', Rockford Morning Star, June 21, 1895, pg. 4
  5. ^'Straube Pianos', Rockford Morning Star, September 5, 1895, pg. 3
  6. ^Pianos and Their Makers, by Alfred Dolge, Dover Publications (1972 reprint of the original 1911 edition), pg. 362; OCLC1631260
  7. ^Advertisement: 'Straube Pianos', Reading Eagle, August 28, 1924, pg. 14, col.2 (bottom)
  8. ^A History of Midwestern Piano Manufacturing, by Jack Greenfield, Kansas City, Missouri: Piano Technicians Foundation (1996); OCLC57622992
  9. ^'Investigations of Mexican Affairs: Preliminary Report and Hearings – Testimony of William Straube', U.S. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, April 8, 1920
  10. ^Certified List of Illinois Corporations (1902), pg. 229; OCLC3095751, 12015854
  11. ^ abcThe Standard History of Lake County, Indiana, and the Calumet Region: 'Staube Piano Plant' (Vol. 1 of 2), William Frederick Howat, MD (ed.), Chicago: Lewis Publishing Company (1915) (sic) pg. 303; OCLC4145224
  12. ^ abcHammond Historical Society Presents the Famous 1904 Edition of the Hammond Daily News – 'Straube Piano Factory', pg. 41 (1966)
  13. ^ ab'Hammond Street Name Changes', Lake County Times (Hammond, Indiana), January 30, 1930; OCLC15306883, 15538454
  14. ^'Contracts Awarded: Hammond, Indiana', The American Contractor, March 8, 1913, pg. 66
  15. ^'Machinery Markets and News of the Works: Indianapolis', The Iron Age, New York: David Williams Company, Vol. 93, No. 3, January 21, 1915, pg. 226
  16. ^'Incorporations', Hagerstown Exponent, January 14, 1915, pg. 1; OCLC12962155
  17. ^ abThe Swedish Element in Illinois, by Ernest W. Olson, Chicago: Swedish-American Biographical Association (1917), pg. 403; OCLC6656848
  18. ^'Factory Smoke Shows Straube Activity', The Music Trades, December 9, 1922, pg. 18
  19. ^'Begin New Addition to Big Piano Plant', Gary Evening Times, Vol. 18, No. 209, February 23, 1925, pg. 1
  20. ^ ab'Radio Slows Piano Manufacturer, But Now Boosts Demand', The Hammond Times, July 30, 1939, pg. 13
  21. ^ ab'Straube Piano to Reorganize This Summer', Hammond Times, July 15, 1935, pg. 1
  22. ^'My Life in the Furniture Trade', by Jerry Metz, Wood & Wood Products, December 1995
  23. ^'Hammond Will Lose Straube Piano Factory', Hammond Times, April 14, 1940, pg. 3
  24. ^The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians: 'Conn'
  25. ^'Musical Instrument Manufacturing in Elkhart, Indiana', by Dean E. McMakin (born 1948), unpublished typescript (1987), Elkhart Public Library; OCLC24154971
  26. ^'Obituary: C.G. Conn', The Elkhart Truth, January 6–9 & 14, 1931
  27. ^'About Conn-Selmer, Inc.', Conn-Selmer website www.conn-selmer.com
  28. ^Elkhart city directories (available at Elkhart Public Library)
  29. ^'Thayer Action Closes; Waits Plane Orders – Music Goods Ban To Mean Conversion at Haddorffs', Rockford Morning Star, May 31, 1942, Sec 2, pg. 17
  30. ^'New Music Stores and Changes', The Music Trades, November 25, 1922, pg. 24
  31. ^Presto Buyers' Guide to Pianos, Player Pianos, and Reproducing Pianos, Chicago: Presto (1926), pg. 42; OCLC2776045
  32. ^Advertisement: 'Knight-Campbell Music Co.' Colorado Springs Gazette, November 28, 1900, pg. 3
  33. ^'Straube', by John A. Tuttle (born 1948), Brick, New Jersey: www.player-care.com (retrieved August 22, 2014)
  34. ^Straube Grands, Players, Uprights, Straube Piano Company (1922); OCLC41110448
  35. ^ abPierce Piano Atlas, 10th ed., Bob Pierce (ed.), Long Beach, California: Bob Pierce (1997); OCLC36521790; ISSN0733-429X
  36. ^'Purely Personal', Daily Illinois State Register, November 17, 1894, pg. 6
  37. ^'Company Formed', Rock Island Argus, January 21, 1903, pg. 7
  38. ^'New Corporations', Daily Inter Ocean (Chicago), Vol. 19, No. 282, Part 1, January 1, 1891, pg. 3
  39. ^'Oregon', The Morning Star (Rockford, Illinois), August 24, 1892, col. 3, pg. 8
  40. ^'Will Move to Fair View', Rockford Morning Star, August 24, 1894, pg. 3
  41. ^'Schaeffer Piano Company: An Assignment to F.E. Jennison by the Chicago House', St. Louis Republic (St. Louis, Missouri), Vol. 89, No. 19, Part 4, July 19, 1896, pg. 29
  42. ^Chicago: The Book of Its Board of Trade and Other Public Bodies, by George Washington Engelhardt, (1900), pg. 240; OCLC6647651
  43. ^'Tribute to the Memory of A.R. Heckman', Republican-Northwestern (Belvidere, Illinois), May 1, 1914, pg. 2
  44. ^The Book of Chicagoans: A Biographical Dictionary, A.N. Marquis (1911)
  45. ^Directory of Directors in the City of Chicago, Audit Company of New York (1902)
    James F. Broderick: pg. 28
    Edward Herzberg: pg. 111
    E.R. Jacobson: pg. 125
    William Straube: pg. 241
  46. ^Directory of Directors in the City of Chicago, 5th ed., Audit Company of New York (1905); OCLC32971548
  47. ^'Trade Notes: W.P. Parker Obituary', Piano, Organ & Musical Instrument Workers Official Journal Vol. 9, No. 6, May 1907, pg. 8, col. 2
  48. ^(title and author of book unknown) 'Biographical Sketchs of Jacobson, Nicholson, Krochel, and Anderson', transcribed and posted by Lora Radiches (born 1956), Jacksonville, Florida, ancestry.com (2003)
  49. ^'Piano, Organ & Musical Instrument Workers Official Journal', Vols. 9-10 (1904), pg. 15
  50. ^This Fascination Advertising Business, Harry Lewis Bird, The Bobbs-Merrill Company (1947)
  51. ^'News of Advertising and Marketing Fields', The New York Times, February 1, 1953
  52. ^Encyclopedia of Recorded Sound (see entry under Edison, Vol. 1 of 2), Frank W. Hoffmann (ed.), Routledge (2005), pg. 703; OCLC53903601
  53. ^'On the Road for Piano Company', Chillicothe Constitution-Tribune, Vol. 31, No. 95, May 9, 1921, col. 4, pg. 1
  54. ^'C.A. Clinton', Radio News, July 1946, pg. 149
  55. ^'Blackhawk Foundary Expands in 1928', Davenport Democrat and Leader December 30, 1928, pg. 8
  56. ^ abGellerman's International Reed Organ Atlas, 2nd ed., by Robert F. Gellerman (born 1928), Lanham, Maryland: Vestal Press (1998) pg. 233; OCLC882769237, 13181282
  57. ^A Portrait and Biographical Record of Portage and Summit Counties, Ohio, A.W. Bowen & Co. (compiler) (1898), pg. 454; OCLC4120866, 318390955, 318390955
  58. ^History of Summit County (in part 2 of 2), William Henry Perrin (ed.), Chicago: Baskin & Battey (1881), pps. 175–176; OCLC8227777

External links[edit]

  • Straube factory in 1922, in a collection of the Indiana Historical Society
  • Straube player pianos in 1922, in a collection of the Indiana Historical Society


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ACOUSTIGRANDEACROSONICAEOLIANALEXANDERAMERLINGAMPICOANDERSON BROTHERSANGELUSAPOLLOARIA DIVINIAARMSTRONGASTIN WEIGHTAUGUST FORSTERAUTOTONEBACON, FRANCISBAILEYBALDWINBAY, H.C.BECHSTEINBECKER BROTHERSBEHR BROTHERSBENT, GEO. P.BJUR BROTHERSBLUTHNERBONDBOSENDORFERBRADBURYBRAMBACH
BRINKERHOFFBUSH & GERTSBUSH & LANECABARETCABLE CABLE, HOBART M.CABLE-NELSONCHASE & BAKERCHASE A.B.CHICKERING & SONSCHRISTMANCLARENDONCONOVERCONOVER-CABLECROWNCURRIERDAVENPORTDOLL, JACOBDUO-ARTELLINGTONEMERSONESTEYEVERETTFALCONEFAZERFEURICHFISCHER, J & CFRENCH, JESSEGRAND-KINKAIDGROTRIAN-STEINWEGGULBRANSENHADDORFFHAINES BROTHERSHAINES, W.P.HALLET & DAVISHAMILTONHARDMANHARRINGTONHAZLETON BROTHERSHINZEHORGELHOWARDHYUNDAIIRWIN & SONSIVERS & PONDKAWAIKIMBALLKINGSBURYKNABEKOHLER & CAMPBELLKRAKUUER BROTHERSKRANICH & BACHKROGERKURTZMANNLANCASTERLAUGHEAD, GORDONLE SAGELESSINGLESTERLOVE, MALCOMLOWERYMARSHALL & WENDELLMASON & HAMLINMASON & RISCHMATHUSHEKMEHLIN & SONSMELDORFMELODIGRANDMELVILLE CLARKMENDELSOHNMILLER, HENRY F.MINI-PIANOMONARCHMUSETTENELSON N.W.PETROFPIANOLAPLAYTONEPOOLEPRICE & TEEPLEPURCELLSAMICKSCHAEFFERSCHAFER & SONSSCHILLERSCHIMMELSHULTZ .MSCHUMANNSEILERSETTERGRINSHONINGERSOHMERSOJINSOWARDSTARCK, P.A.STECK GEOSTEGLERSTEINWAYSTERLINGSTINGSTORY CLARKVOSE & SONSVOUGHWALTERSWASHBURNWEBERWEGMANWEINBACHWELLINGTONWHITNEYWILLIS & SONSWINTERWURLITZERYAMAHAYOUNG CHANGZIMMERMANN



THE PIANO BOOK ONLINE

The most accurate way to determine a piano's age is by its serial number. Here is how to locate the serial number on your pianofree Click Here>Serial Number Locator,locate the serial number of your piano come back here - If you are unable to find the serial we can research it for you free. Click on following Help Site.

1907-4600 1908-5400 1909-6300 1910-7200
1911-8000 1912-9100 1913-10300 1914-11500
1915-12700 1916-13600 1917-14500 1918-15400
1919-16200 1920-17000 1921-17800 1922-18600
1923-19000 1924-19890 1925-20300 1926-20900
1927-21300

Jesse French Numbers

1904-26900 1905-29400 1906-31600 1907-32500
1908-38700 1909-41600 1910-43750 1911-45500
1912-49200 1913-53000 1914-57000 1915-60200
1916-42500 1917-65200 1918-68300 1919-70500
1920-74200 1921-77000 1922-80000 1923-83000
1924-86000 1925-91800 1926-93500 1927-96000
1928-100000 1929-104000 1930-105000 1931-106000
1932-107000 1933-108000

1900-500 1907-4600 1914-11500 1921-17800
1902-1030 1909-6300 1916-13600 1923-19000
1904-2500 1911-8000 1918-15400 1925-20300
1906-3600 1913-10300 1920-17000 1927-21300

ACROSONIC (Baldwin Uprights and Verticals, Classic, Ellington, Franke, Howard before 1959, Kremlin, Manuelo, Modello, Monarch, St. Regis, Sargent, Schroeder, Valley Gem and Winton). All Baldwin Upright or Vertical Pianos - Does not include Hamilton Studios or Baldwin Grand Pianos.

1895-2000 1917-100000 1935-251000 1955-559490 1973- 979129 1991-1487131
1900-9000 1918-109000 1936-265000 1956-585454 1974-1007687 1992-1501002
1901-12000 1919-118000 1937-275000 1957-610502 1975-1035719 1993-1512277
1902-16000 1920-127000 1938-290000 1958-632951 1976-1067508 1994-1521569
1903-21000 1921-136000 1939-301000 1959-655948 1977-1104802 1995-1529416
1904-26000 1922-145000 1940-304000 1960-679844 1978-1135737 1996-1536461
1905-31000 1923-154000 1941-307000 1961-702806 1979-1180266 1997-1543640
1906-36000 1924-162000 1942-314000 1962-723778 1980-1220374 1998-1550294
1907-41000 1925-172000 1943-333000 1963-743772 1981-1253176 1999-1556890
1908-46500 1926-182000 1946-365000 1964-763143 1982-1286178 2000-1563028
1909-52000 1927-192000 1947-385000 1965-784017 1983-1324487 2001-1568712

1910-57000 1928-200000 1948-401000 1966-803727 1984-1343955 2002-1570652
1911-62000 1929-210000 1949-438000 1967-831583 1985-1365505 2003-1572931
1912-67000 1930-217000 1950-450300 1968-851540 1986-1383187 2004-1573872
1913-72000 1931-223000 1951-466250 1969-881087 1987-1406054 2005-1575075
1914-77000 1932-232000 1952-488364 1970-912986 1988-1430796 2006-1575411
1915-83000 1933-238000 1953-503000 1971-933476 1989-1453070 2007-1573765
1916-91000 1934-247000 1954-535801 1972-953937 1990-1470443 2008-157726

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AEOLIAN/AEOLIAN - AMERICAN Est. 1903 - New York, N.Y.

The manufacturing facilities at East Rochester was comprised of a series of separate and individual factories planned so that manufacturing of the various instruments was carried on in an entirely individual and distinct manner, and by separate organizations, each under direction of men who had been associated with each respective make for many years, thus preserving, unimpaired, the individual and distinctive qualities of each piano. Combined they made a great and powerful contribution to the art of music, for each of the great instruments they produced will continue providing magnificent music for generations to come. Name brands built in East Rochester include Chickering & Sons, J & C Fischer, Wm. Knabe, Mason & Hamlin, and George Steck.

H. B. Tremaine was a business genius who brought about the commercial exploitation of the piano player on a big scale. Tremaine's father had built a successful small business making and cranked table-top-sized mechanical organs, a very popular item in homes in the late 1800's. He founded the 'Aeolian Organ and Music Company' around 1888; the firm achieved considerable success with larger instruments and organs. His son took over in 1899 and immediately set about to apply his own business acumen to the company's affairs. With the newly perfected 'Pianola,' he launched an aggressive advertising campaign which was entirely new to the stodgy piano business. With four page color advertisements (almost unheard of in that day) published in the popular magazines, he literally stunned the piano industry with the message that here, indeed, was the answer to everyone's prayer for music in the home! Tremaine and Pianola built an enormous business empire over the next thirty years. It wasn't long after the turn of the century that it was deemed desirable to 'miniaturize' the clumsy Pianola and other similar, instruments so that they could be built directly inside the pianos. Within a few short years, the push up'players disappeared from the scene. By this time everyone got into the act, and every piano maker so manufactured a player of some sort.

This name is known the world over in connection with musical instruments, It is applied to some of the various products of the Aeolian Company of New York which instruments of renown included the Duo Art Pianola, Weber Pianola, Steck Pianola, Wheelock Pianola, Stuyvesant Pianola, Steinway Duo Art Pianola, Stroud Pianola the Aeolian Orchestrelle and the Aeolian Pipe Organ; it also controlled the Meludee Music Co., Inc., and the Universal Music Co.

1903-1900 1904-3000 1905-5400 1906-9000
1907-12000 1908-15000 1909-19000 1910-23000
1911-27000 1912-31000 1913-35000 1914-39000
1915-43000 1916-47000 1917-51000 1918-55000
1919-59000 1920-30000 1921-70000 1922-70000
1923-73000 1924-76000 1925-78000 1926-80000
1927-82000 1928-85000 1929-88000 1930-91000
1931-94000 1932-97000 1933-98000

AEOLIAN-AMERICAN DIVISION OF AEOLIAN CORP.

Piano lines controlled and manufactured by this Division listed alphabetically include Chickering & Sons, Wm. Knabe & Co., Mason & Hamlin and Weber. The manufacturing facilities at East Rochester consist of over 250,000 sq. ft. of space situated on over eight acres of land occupied and devoted exclusively to the manufacture of only pianos since 1906. Aeolian was one of America's largest producers of grand pianos. Instruments made by Aeolian American Division enjoyed an unquestioned reputation throughout the world

AEOLIAN - AMERICAN CORPORATION - Founded 1932

Aeolian - American was the consolidation of the American Piano Company, Aeolian Piano Company formerly Winter & Company, and Weber Piano Company. Factories were located at East Rochester N.Y., Worchester Ma. and Memphis, Tenn.

Aeolian probably produced more instruments than any other company in the U.S. Founded as Heller & Co. in 1899, later incorporated as Winter & Co. in 1903, the firm became affiliated with Sears Roebuck and Co. In 1941 William G. Heller, Henry R. Heller and associates acquired the Sears interest and devoted the production to defense work during World War II. Faith in the industry and the conviction that the piano industry needed someone to keep the venerable manufacturers in operation, Aeolian has acquired companies which would not otherwise have survived.

During 1960 the work force included only excellent craftsmen under the direction of people who had been associated with these fine makes for many years, thus preserving unimpaired the Individual and distinctive quality of each piano. The affiliation of the various houses that formed this large and powerful contributing force to the art of music, insures for each a wider scope for musical activity in that each of its units was of the highest quality in its grade, which had an extraordinary economy of production. This company's purchasing power contributed immeasurably to the integrity and value of instruments that were made in the various Divisions.

Aeolian Corporation, which in 1982 owned over 40 registered brand names, the product of merger and acquisitions over the years combining 16 domestic piano producers and the largest Canadian producer. Recognition was given by the trade to the various Aeolian lines is the best evidence that Aeolian Corporation pianos manufactured in Memphis and East Rochester, fulfilled every requirement in grands, studios, spinets, consoles and players in a variety of scales and finishes, as well as case designs. Aeolian produced not only the concert and beginners piano, but also for the artist and leisure time musician.

Although production ceased in 1982 and 1985 there are countless thousands of Aeolian -American pianos still in use throughout America, in private homes, schools, churches and rental fleets. They were not always the most expensive, and some of their designs were, while aesthetically correct they weren't always perfect, but they did and still do provide students with the perfect entry level piano ever made at a price that most families could afford.

A B ChaseGablerMusette
AeolianHaines & Co.Normandie
ArmstrongHaines Bros.Pease
Bent, George P.W.P. HainesPianette
BradburyHallet & DavisPianola
BrewsterHardmanPoole
D.S. BuchananHeller & CompanyPrimatone
CableHolmer & SonsRestonic
Cable, Fayette S.Holmes & Co.Rudolph
CarolaHuntingtonSchneider,
ChickeringIvers & PondSchiller
Conover - CableKingsburyGeorge Steck
Cook, J.B.KnabeSterling
CrownKranich & BachSting
Duo - ArtLaffargueStratford
ElbridgeLindemanStroud
EllsworthMarshall & WendellStuyvesant
EmersonMason & HamlinVose & Sons
EuphonaMehlin & SonsR. W. Waude,
J & C. FischerMelodigrandWeber
Foster - ArmstrongMendelssohnWheelock
FranklinHenry F. MillerWellington

See individual names for numbers not listed.

Aeolian distinguished itself as a piano maker, not merely an assembler. Aeolian plants produced pianos that were quality assured, one of the reasons that over the years many of the largest school systems in the United States have selected their pianos exclusively. In addition, broadcasting stations, colleges, music schools, universities, operas, and symphonies have countless Aeolian pianos in constant service, this was during the time that American Institutions purchased pianos on limited budgets, not as commercial endorsements or University and College Piano Sale locations.

IVERS & POND and AEOLIAN NUMBERS

1885-30001918-650001939-796001965-104300
1890-70001919-671001940-790001966-109800
1895-160001920-669001946-800001967-112300
1900-240001921-700001947-803001968-116000
1901-280001922-710001948-820001969-120000
1902-310001923-721001949-830001970-121900
1903-334001924-732001950-840001971-124900
1904-356001925-745001951-851001972-127200
1905-378001926-757001952-856001973-130700
1906-400001927-760001953-859001974-135600
1907-420001928-765001954-862001975-137500
1908-440001929-770001955-863501976-140900
1909-462001930-775001956-865501977-142800
1910-481001931-777001957-878731978-144000
1911-500001932-779001958-869001979-145600
1912-518001933-781001959-887611980-148000
1913-530001934-783001960-910141981-150500
1914-550001935-784001961-922211982-153300
1915-579001936-786001962-943701983-156400
1916-600001937-790001963-970261984-159700
1917-625001938-794001964-100442 1985-Discontinued

POOLE & AEOLIAN NUMBERS

1900-26000 1918-65000 1936-77500 1958-88500
1901-290001919-871001937-776001959-89816
1902-320001920-689001938-777001960-92800
1903-350001921-700001939-778001967-119400
1904-370001922-710001940-779001968-132800
1905-385001923-720001941-780001969-140300
1906-400001924-732001942-782001970-146000
1907-420001925-745001946-783001971-153400
1908-440001926-757001947-784001972-166600
1909-462001927-760001948-785001973-167600
1910-481001928-765001949-788001974-171800
1911-500001929-767001950-810001975-177000
1912-518001930-768001951-820001976-185900
1913-530001931-769001952-834001977-189000
1914-550001932-770001953-846001978-194000
1915-579001933-772001954-853001979-201500
1916-600001934-773001956-884001980-208700
1917-625001935-774001957-874901981-214200
1956-160000 1959-169000 1962-180000 1965-191000
1958-166000 1961-176000 1964-187000 1967-199000
1959-10500 1960-11000 1961-11500 1962-12000
1967-14500 1968-15000 1969-15500 1970-16000
1921-82900 1924-86600 1927-89600 1930-94000
1956-160000 1959-169000 1962-180000 1965-191000
1958-166000 1961-176000 1964-187000 1967-199000
1913-1500 1916-4200 1919-6000 1922-8000
1901-2075 1911-17800 1921-45000 1931-112000
1904-7000 1914-23200 1924-58000 1934-130000
1906-10000 1916-26800 1926-77000 1936-135000
1908-13000 1918-32800 1928-87000 1938-150000
1910-16000 1920-40000 1930-106000
1921-155000 1924-180000 1927-210000 1930-230000
1900-43000 1909-62000 1918-79000 1927-89600
1902-47000 1911-65500 1920-81100 1929-93700
1904-51000 1913-71000 1922-83900 1931-94100
1906-55400 1915-74000 1924-86600 1933-94400
1908-59900 1917-78000 1926-88700 1935-96000
Verticals & Grand Built by Aeolian after 1959:
1960-364200 1966-397700 1972-420500 1978-440000
1962-376900 1968-405200 1974-430300 1980-446900
1964-387900 1970-410900 1976-436900 1982-452400
1959-1000 1968-10000 1977-19000 1987-29000
1961-3000 1970-12000 1979-21000 1989-31000
1963-5000 1972-14000 1981-23000 1991-33000
1965-7000 1974-16000 1983-25000 1993-35000
1967-9000 1976-18000 1985-27000 1995-37000
1880- 1700 1929- 60000 1961-124000 1976-150000
1898-10000 1948- 85000 1968-137500 1980-154000
1910-25000 1952-102000 1972-143500 1996-164200
1961-123400 1967-136000 1973-144700 1979-150300
1963-128500 1969- N/A 1975-147600 1981-151800
1965-132000 1971-141100 1977-149900 1983-153100
1950-408000 1964-570000 1971-643000 1978-722500
1958-521000 1966-589000 1973-660000 1980-754000
1961-542000 1968-611000 1975-695000 1982-780000
1962-551000 1969-621000 1976-708500 1983-795491
1902-2000 1910-1000 1917-17000 1924-24000
1904-4000 1912-12000 1919-19000 1926-26000
1906-6000 1914-14000 1921-21000 1928-28000
1900-10400 1962-152706 1974-204113 1986-266329
1920-35800 1964-160868 1976-213470 1988-278556
1940-88700 1967-175821 1979-228858 1991-293772
1948-105000 1969-184661 1981-242984 1993-305110
1955-128167 1971-192401 1983-253274 1995-313000
1961-148635 1973-199649 1985-262256
1915-4000 1919-9500 1923-15500 1927-20300
1917-6500 1921-12500 1925-18000 1929-23000
1860-8070 1960-151950 1990-184299 1994-185670
1905-33000 1920-52800 1927-57200 1937-59890
1915-46400 1922-54800 1929-58500 1939-62600
1908-17000 1918-33400 1921-40000 1930-75000
1917-31000 1920-20600 1929-68000 1932-81000
1958-521000 1966-589000 1973-660000 1980-754000
1900-15000 1910-50000 1920-72300 1928-94000
1961-370700 1967-401500 1973-424900 1979-444000
1963-383100 1969-407500 1975-433400 1981-449700
1900-10000 1930-266000 1942-300200 1950-408000
1920-50000 1940-289000 1948-403000 1952-416000
by Kohler & Campbell after 1955.
1955-503000 1965-579000 1972-653500 1979-737000
1960-535000 1967-601500 1974-683000 1981-767000
1962-551000 1969-621000 1976-708500 1983-795491
1920-100000 1943-127000 1965-137500 1987-153500
1930-115000 1950-128800 1975-142000 1990-155000
1940-125500 1960-133006 1985-152500 1996-158000
1914-12000 1917-15000 1921-19000 1925-23000
1900-15640 1935-25700 1950-26960 1970-29109
1920-22530 1944-26730 1960-27900 1980-33444
1900-29400 1930-98000 1942-204000 1949-254000
1920-40000 1940-183000 1947-243000 1952-300000
1960-364200 1966-397700 1972-420500 1978-44000
1962-376900 1968-405200 1974-430300 1980-44690
1964-387900 1970-410900 1976-436900 1982-45240
1910-30000 1935-274000 1947-401000 1951-412000
1925-60000 1941-295000 1949-406000 1953-420000
1955-503000 1965-579000 1972-653500 1979-737000
1960-535000 1967-601500 1974-683000 1981-767000
1962-551000 1969-621000 1976-708500 1983-795491
1907-3500 1913-80000 1919-140000 1925-190000

Krakauer Brothers Upright Piano

1909-9000 1915-100000 1921-155000 1927-210000
1911-62000 1917-120000 1923-170000 1929-226000
1900-22000 1920-62000 1931-72200 1939-73600
1915-55000 1930-72000 1936-72900 1942-75000
1905-23000 1921-47500 1924-68000 1929-62000
CABARETPLAYER PIANO
1977-5000 1979-7800 1981-10100
CABLE - PRE-1950
1890-11000 1910-140000 1921-232000 1932-301000
1900-30000 1912-164000 1923-242000 1934-303000
1903-45000 1914-180000 1926-265000 1936-305000
1905-65000 1916-196500 1928-277000 1947-308000
1907-95000 1918-210000 1930-293000 1949-315000
1951-321000 1960-350600 1968-392800 1976-429300
1953-326000 1962-360000 1970-402000 1978-437000
1955-336500 1964-372000 1972-411400 1980-448000
1957-339200 1966-386000 1974-420700 1982-455200
1960-307000 1967-407000 1974-505000 1981-582627
1965-379000 1972-477000 1979-555769 1986-638110
CABLE-NELSONMade by Everett to 1973
1950-221000 1958-281700 1966-360000 1974-417000
1952-235000 1960-300100 1968-372000 1976-424000
1954-247000 1962-321000 1970-390000 1978- N/A
1956-263000 1964-347000 1972-403000 1980- N/A
1900-42000 1910-54000 1920-62000 1930-72000
Vertical & Grand Pianos After 1960 Made by Aeolian
1961-928000 1970-146000 1975-177000 1980-208700
1963-119400 1972-160600 1977-189000 1982-221200
1965-140300 1974-171800 1979-201500
1957-163100 1960-172000 1963-183000 1966-195000
1823-100 1940-167200 1964-219221 1974-235824
1905-105000 1947-187000 1967-224943 1977-240626
1919-130000 1955-204000 1969-228651 1979-244266
1925-139700 1961-214527 1971-231317 1981-247477
1935-155200 1963-217830 1973-234059N/A
1900-11000 1916-25000 1921-34000 1927-39900
1915-23500 1920-32000 1925-39000 1929-41000
1915-64000 1924-102400 1926-109000 1930-117000
1960-350600 1962-360000 1964-372000 1961-355000
1950-318000 1958-342400 1966-386000 1975-425700
1952-323000 1960-350600 1969-398000 1977-434000
1954-333000 1962-360000 1971-407300 1979-443000
1956-338000 1964-372000 1973-415900 1981-451000
Crown pianos by Crown Before 1960:
1900-15000 1920-72300 1930-102500 1940-198000
1910-50000 1928-94000 1936-153000 1948-250000
1961-370700 1967-401500 1973-424900 1979-444000
1963-383100 1969-407500 1975-433400 1981-449700
1965-1000 1968-16000 1971-31000 1974-49500
1967-11500 1970-26500 1973-42500 1976-63000
1955-503000 1965-579000 1972-653500 1979-737000
1960-535000 1967-601500 1974-683000 1981-767000
1962-551000 1969-621000 1976-708500 1983-795491
1920-29200 1924-38000 1927-48500 1930-55000
1922-32500 1926-44500 1929-54000 1932-58000
1961-123400 1967-136000 1973-144700 1979-150300
1963-128500 1969-139800 1975-147600 1981-151800
1965-132000 1971-141100 1977-149900 1983-155500
1921-52500 1923-57500 1925-60500 1930-63000
1965-104300 1970-12190 1975-137500 1980-148000
1967-112300 1972-12720 1977-142800 1982-145300
Alexander Malcome Love Lancaster Chase & Baker
Purcell Wegman Soward Settergren
1900-27800 1910-40000 1930-90090 1950-144000
1907-37000 1920-57000 1940-129300 1960-172000
1930-11000 1937-20700 1941-24000 1948-25800
1960-125700 1969-191000 1978-252000 1987-301000
1962-139000 1971-202000 1980-269000 1989-351000
1964-152000 1973-217000 1982-282000 1992-359000
1966-174000 1975-229000 1984-292000 1994-366000
1968-181000 1977-241000 1986-298300 1996-373000
1983-1004 1986-1027 1989-1201 1992-1560
1965-4510 1972-13705 1979-45105 1986-87510
1967-6410 1974-19610 1981-62000 1988-98116
1969-8005 1976-26505 1983-73055 1990-111644
1971-10605 1978-41520 1985-81860 1993-121810
1910-23800 1935-47500 1960-55150 1975-66300
1920-35100 1944-50500 1967-61000 1985-73500
1900-115000 1950-187000 1969-214239 1975-219100
1910-134000 1965-207741 1971-216700 1977- N/A
1930-159000 1967-211237 1973-217500 1981-219300
1960-158800 1962-169000 1964-183000 1966-207000
GRAND-KINKAIDby Marantz
Superscope Pianocorder Player Pianos
1961-13200 1966-17400 1971-20200 1976-23500
1963-14500 1968-18100 1973-21700 1978-25200
1965-16800 1970-19500 1975-22900 1980-26600
1900-12131 1940-65499 1960-85682 1975-114268
1920-38076 1950-67900 1965-94787 1985-135202
1915-90000 1940-344000 1961-479000 1966-551000
1925-218000 1950-405500 1963-515000 1968-565000
1935-309000 1960-488300 1965-542000
1950-131600 1953-134600 1955-152000 1957-167400
1900-39000 1922-69700 1933-80600 1938-98000
1910-53100 1924-72300 1935-87200 1940-104000
1920-66200 1930-77900 1937-94400 1942-109000
Verticals & Grands By Poole/Aeolian after 1960:
1965-928000 1970-146000 1975-177000 1980-208700
1967-119400 1972-160600 1977-189000 1982-221200
Krakauer brothers upright piano
1969-140300 1974-171800 1979-201500 1984-221500
1965-104300 1970-121900 1975-137500 1980-148000
1967-112300 1972-127200 1977-142800 1982-145300
1965-928000 1970-146000 1975-177000 1980-208700
1967-119400 1972-160600 1977-189000 1982-221200
1902-51000 1916-89000 1930-132000 1945-215000
1904-55000 1918-96500 1932-132000 1947-503000
1906-59000 1920-102000 1935-133000 1949-504900
1908-63000 1922-109000 1937-153000 1951-507000
1910-68000 1924-117000 1939-170000 1953-507550
1912-74000 1926-124000 1941-193000 1955-510270
1914-81000 1928-131000 1943-215000 1957-510500
Verticals & Grands By Winter/Aeolian after 1960:
1960-364200 1966-397700 1972-420500 1978-440000
1962-376900 1968-405200 1974-430300 1980-446900
1964-387900 1970-410900 1976-436900 1982-452400
1900-16000 1922-102200 1935-127500 1960-188249
1910-56000 1924-111000 1947-135000 1973-279076
1920-93000 1930-126000 1955-160686 1982-366819
1905-58000 1923-90000 1940-97000 1966-134300
1915-77200 1925-91500 1952-106400 1980-151100
1900-24500 1922-93000 1935-118000 1956-164200
1910-43000 1924-99000 1947-151500 1958-166000
1920-88000 1930-105300 1955-163200 1960-167125
1905-37600 1923-223000 1940-289000 1952-416000
1915-64000 1925-237000 1948-403000 1955-503000
1905-55000 1919-100000 1934-132000 1948-504000
1905-11150 1923-35200 1933-44000 1949-44630
1920-32500 1930-42500 1940-44000 1952-45100
HORUGEL Samick Korea
1976-00645 1977-00847 1978-30150 1979-32740
1900-9000 1922-145000 1935-251800 1950-443258
1910-57000 1924-162000 1940-300000 1960-496180
1920-12700 1930-217000 1949-431000 1968-106212
1978-30150 1981-31960 1984-50630 1988-114390
1980-29530 1983-53400 1986-75020 1995-500000
1961-163000 1963-176000 1965-195000 1967-219000
1905-37800 1923-72100 1936-78600 1955-86350
1915-57900 1925-74500 1946-80000 1962-94370
1961-92222 1967-112300 1973-130700 1979-145600
1963-97026 1969-120000 1975-137500 1981-150500
1950-14200 1967-251660 1975-785568 1983-1372000
1955-20590 1969-369088 1977-904384 1985-1549000
1960-26000 1971-488834 1979-1067130 1987-1704000
1965-16517 1973-633601 1981-1219355 1989-1850000
1900-71000 1920-322000 1930-383000 1940-442000
1910-211000 1922-336000 1932-389000 1942-444000
1914-267800 1924-352000 1934-399000 1944-WWII
1916-288000 1926-364000 1936-414000 1946-480000
1918-307000 1928-372100 1938-426000 1948-500000
Note: No production during WWII 1943/ 1944 / 1945
Vertical and Grand pianos after 1950:
1950-517000 1957-579000 1964-646800 1971-771000
1952-537020 1959-595500 1966-678500 1973-820000
1954-553000 1961-607400 1968-717900 1975-951000
1956-571300 1963-630500 1970-764200
1905-65000 1918-210000 1926-265000 1934-303000
1912-164000 1920-224000 1928-277000 1936-305000
1914-180000 1922-236000 1930-293000 1947-310000
1916-196000 1924-250000 1932-301000 1949-315000
Aeolian Numbers after 1949:
1950-318000 1958-342400 1966-386000 1975-425700
1952-323000 1960-350600 1969-398000 1977-434000
1954-333000 1962-360000 1971-407300 1979-443000
Krakauer piano prices
1956-338000 1964-372000 1973-415900 1981-451000
1900-47000 1940-124000 1966-172986 1975-185468
1910-68000 1955-154300 1968-176379 1977-188635
1920-88000 1961-169998 1970-179259 1979-192324
1929-106100 1963-168148 1972-180871 1981-195484
1935-114100 1965-171287 1974-183886 1983-197840
Astor Brambach Davenport Hilton Behning Campbell J.C. Hazleton Stratford Behr Brothers Celeste Kohler, Charles Tom Thumb Bacon, Francis Classic Kroger Waldorf
1900-10000 1917-190000 1925-237000 1933-270000
1912-164000 1920-206000 1928-258000 1936-276000
1915-165000 1923-223000 1931-267000 1948-403000
1955-503000 1965-579000 1972-653500 1979-737000
1960-535000 1967-601500 1974-683000 1981-767000
1962-551000 1969-621000 1976-708500 1983-795491
1900-20000 1940-60200 1966-76600 1974-82668
1910-33500 1955-66400 1968-78216 1976-84209
1920-46500 1961-71400 1970-80430 1978-85244
1929-55400 1963-73700 1972-81632 1980-86405
1900-35000 1940-74600 1971-95000 1975-97100
1920-60900 1960-86200 1973-96200 1977-97780
1900-10000 1917-190000 1925-237000 1933-270000
1910-116000 1919-203000 1927-250000 1935-274000
1914-155000 1922-215000 1930-266000 1947-401000
1916-179000 1924-237000 1932-268000 1949-406000
1905-25000 1918-65000 1926-89000 1934-97300
1957-163100 1960-172000 1963-183000 1966-195000
1948-4100 1952-7500 1955-9500 1959-13800
1950-5900 1954-8900 1957-10960 1964-22130
1961-37050 1968-48000 1976-58000 1983-66300
1963-40300 1970-50500 1978-61200 1985-67300
1965-44000 1972-53000 1980-64000 1987-67905
1900-23090 1913-56000 1917-109500 1924-171000
1911-47000 1916-99500 1919-127000 1927-196000
1949-181000 1952-220000 1956-272000 1959-308800
1957-163100 1960-172000 1963-183000 1966-191800
1963-349000 1967-449000 1971-463000 1975-519000
1965-379000 1969-435000 1973-491000 1977-528325
1900-26500 1930-111000 1938-128500 1948-137900
1915-52600 1935-120900 1941-113510 1951-138090
1925-10620 1937-126100 1947-137800 1953-138130
1910-19100 1948-55000 1966-69949 1975-78730
1920-29000 1955-61800 1968-71994 1977-81100
1930-39600 1961-66016 1970-74263 1979-84184
1940-48000 1963-67478 1972-75534 1981-87013
1900-20000 1940-57300 1952-74700 1957-84800
1930-45700 1951-68800 1955-81600 1960-102000
1960-364200 1966-397700 1972-420500 1978-440000
1962-376900 1968-405200 1974-430300 1980-446900
1900-36000 1931-78500 1935-82500 1952-338000
1920-66000 1933-79500 1939-87800 1956-349500
1900-19000 1931-43400 1935-43880 1952-51600
1920-40000 1933-43600 1939-44600 1955-56536
1962-376900 1968-405200 1974-430300 1980-446900
1964-387900 1970-410900 1976-436900 1982-452400
1957-163100 1960-172000 1963-183000 1966-191800
MELODIGRANDAEOLIAN 64 and 73 NOTE PIANOS
1949-1000 1952-6100 1955-9300 1958-12110
1951-4400 1954-8500 1957-11114 1960-14006
MELODIGRAND POOLE/IVERS & POND NUMBERS
1965-928000 1970-146000 1975-177000 1980-208700
1967-119400 1972-160600 1977-189000 1982-221200
1965-104300 1970-121900 1975-137500 1980-148000
1967-112300 1972-127200 1977-142800 1982-145300
1901-2075 1913-22000 1925-63000 1934-134000
1911-17800 1920-40000 1932-130000 1927-150000
1910-17000 1920-27000 1923-30000 1927-34000
1932-106000 1936-135000 1940-183000 1954-315000
1934-118200 1938-163800 1949-254000 1959-356270
1961-370700 1967-401500 1973-424900 1979-444000
1963-383100 1969-407500 1975-433400 1981-449700
1905-35000 1920-49000 1940-56200 1954-60590
1910-38500 1930-53200 1949-60000 1959-78454
POOLE/IVERS & POND NUMBERS
1960-89744 1966-123500 1972-143800 1978-153600
1962-102629 1968-131600 1974-148700 1980-156400
1964-111744 1970-136100 1976-151900 1982-157900
MINIPIANOHARDMAN, PECK
1960-121100 1966-134300 1972-142900 1978-150900
1962-126200 1968-138000 1974-146500 1980-151100
1964-130500 1970-140300 1976-148700 1982-152200
MONARCHBY BALDWIN
1900-9000 1930-217000 1933-238000 1938-282000
1920-127000 1932-232000 1935-251800 1941-302000
1935-125000 1952-290000 1963-383100 1974-430300
1937-136000 1954-315000 1965-392000 1976-436900
1939-153000 1956-333000 1967-401500 1978-440000
1947-231000 1958-342250 1969-407500 1980-446900
1949-256000 1960-364200 1971-415600 1982-452400
1957-163100 1960-172000 1963-183000 1966-191800
1900-5000 1950-67280 1975-211900 1982-340000
1920-10500 1965-103700 1978-302500 1987-380000
1940-58000 1974-208900 1981-325000 1994-440000
1962-20000 1970-32400 1976-35000 1981-36500
PLAYTONEPLAYER PIANOS
1960-121100 1966-134300 1972-142900 1978-150900
1962-126200 1968-136800 1974-146500 1980-151100
1964-130500 1970-141600 1976-148700 1982-152200
POOLEPIANO COMPANY
1900-26000 1915-57900 1935-77400 1952-83400
1910-48100 1930-76800 1949-78800 1959-89816
1961-92222 1967-112300 1973-130700 1979-145600
1963-97026 1969-120000 1975-137500 1981-150500
1965-928000 1970-146000 1975-177000 1980-208700
1967-119400 1972-160600 1977-189000 1982-221200
1969-140300 1974-171800 1979-201500 1984-221500
1962-335000 1969-435000 1976-533000 1983-595226
1964-364000 1971-463000 1978-541325 1985-636890
1966-393000 1973-491000 1980-769807 1987-640771
1957-163100 1960-172000 1963-183000 1966-191800
1978-30150 1981-31960 1984-50630 1988-114390
1900-17000 1919-58300 1922-65000 1925-71000
1915-50500 1921-52400 1924-69000 1931-77900
1978-280000 1982-410000 1986-860000 1990-HG0190
1980-380000 1984-510000 1988-HG0088 1992-HIDG92
1951-321000 1959-345800 1967-393000 1976-429300
1953-326000 1961-355000 1970-401700 1978-437000
1955-336500 1963-365000 1972-411400 1980-448000
1957-339200 1965-379000 1974-420700 1982-455200
1910-9000 1951-23200 1966-88200 1975-152200
1920-12700 1953-26700 1968-103000 1977-168000
1930-19350 1960-50000 1970-118200 1979-192000
1940-22100 1963-66700 1972-131600 1981-216000
1956-160000 1959-169000 1962-180000 1965-191000

Krakauer Upright Piano Value

1958-166000 1961-176000 1964-187000
1911-62000 1917-120000 1923-170000 1929-226000
SEILER, ED.
1900-27799 1940-81100 1960-86100 1975-104000
1915-50755 1950-82526 1963-89000 1977-110000
1925-61632 1952-82700 1965-95000 1981-119200
1935-75503 1955-83000 1974-102000 1985-125200
1957-163100 1960-172000 1963-183000 1966-191800
1950-21000 1952-25000 1954-28500 1958-35200
1905-32300 1950-103240 1967-164700 1976-209100
1920-48100 1961-136700 1970-180000 1979-226250
1930-76500 1963-145260 1972-187800 1981-236570
1940-92100 1965-154500 1974-198900
1960-158800 1962-169000 1964-183000 1966-207000
1983-044668 1985-068207 1987-100560 1989-142058
1983-10201 1985-12693 1987-17757 1989-26269
1956-160000 1959-169000 1962-180000 1965-191000
1958-166000 1961-176000 1964-187000 1967-192000
1910-43000 1955-160600 1968-186884 1977-193200
1920-63300 1961-171689 1970-189389 1979-193350
1930-85000 1963-176576 1972-190900 1981-193600
1940-140600 1965-180876 1974-191900 1983-194000
STEGLERBY SAMICK
1979-790000 1980-800000 1981-810000 1982-820000
1978-30150 1981-31960 1984-50630 1988-114390
1980-29530 1983-53400 1986-75020 1995-500000
1905-105000 1960-366000 1971-423000 1982-478500
1915-170000 1962-375000 1973-431000 1984-488000
1925-230000 1964-385000 1975-439000 1986-498000
1935-279000 1966-395000 1977-450000 1988-507700
1945-317000 1968-405000 1979-463000 1990-516700
1934-114700 1951-278000 1962-376900 1973-424900
1936-133000 1953-310000 1964-387900 1975-433400
1938-148000 1955-324500 1966-397700 1977-438000
1940-167000 1957-341000 1968-405200 1979-444000
1948-250000 1959-356270 1970-410900 1981-449700
1950-265000 1961-370700 1972-420500
STINGPLAYER PIANOS
1977-5000 1979-7800 1981-10100 1982-11300
1960-307000 1967-407000 1974-505000 1981-582627
1962-335000 1969-435000 1976-533000 1983-595226
1964-364000 1971-463000 1978-541325 1985-636890
1966-393000 1973-491000 1980-769807 1987-640771
1910-43000 1955-160600 1968-186884 1977-193200
1920-63300 1961-171689 1970-189389 1979-193350
1930-85000 1963-176576 1972-190900 1981-193600
WALTER,Charles R.
1977-502200 1984-507400 1991-515100 1998-524050
1978-502630 1985-508040 1992-516400 1999-525500
1979-503275 1986-508800 1993-517700 2000-526550
1980-504025 1987-509730 1994-518850 2001-527700
1981-505000 1988-510920 1995-520050 2002-528650
1982-505660 1989-512300 1996-521250 2003-529550
1983-506430 1990-513700 1997-522600 2004-538440

1950-221000 1955-254600 1960-300200 1962-322000
1903-54700 1950-94600 1964-98738 1969-100044
1920-76000 1961-97368 1966-99440 1971-100323
1940-90700 1963-98329 1968-10002 1978-100733
1958-166000 1961-176000 1964-187000 1967-192000
1910-23920 1960-96600 1974-149200 1979-180000
1930-64200 1971-132500 1976-160000 1981-191880
1951-321000 1959-345800 1967-393000 1976-429300
1954-333000 1962-360000 1971-407300 1979-443000
1957-339200 1965-379000 1974-420700 1982-455200
1951-528000 1958-586500 1965-661300 1972-817000
1953-554200 1960-604000 1967-700100 1974-901000
1955-562300 1962-617900 1969-721500 1976-1000100
1900-20000 1940-57300 1952-74700 1957-84800
1930-45700 1951-68800 1955-81600 1960-102000
1960-364200 1966-397700 1972-420500 1978-440000
1962-376900 1968-405200 1974-430300 1980-446900
1900-4000 1940-183000 1952-291000 1957-84800
1930-98000 1951-278000 1955-324000 1960-102000
1961-370700 1967-401500 1973-424900 1979-444000
1963-383100 1969-407500 1975-433400 1981-449700
1960-91014 1966-109800 1972-127200 1978-144000
1962-94371 1968-116000 1974-135600 1980-148000
1964-100442 1970-121900 1976-140900 1982-145300
Apollo-De Kalb-Julius Bauer-Melville Clark-Farney
1902-1430 1911-13000 1920-40000 1929-93000
1904-3000 1913-15000 1922-49000 1931-118000
1906-6000 1915-22000 1924-58000 1933-130300
1908-9000 1917-28000 1926-77000 1935-136000
After 1937:
1938-175000 1953-474451 1970-1105000 1982-1700000
1939-180000 1955-537000 1971-1145000 1983-1725000
1940-195000 1960-657000 1972-1175000 1984-1775000
1941-210000 1961-715000 1973-1205000 1985-1825000
1942-225000 1962-760000 1974-1235000 1986-1850000
1946-330000 1963-815000 1975-1266000 1987-1900000
Krakauer
1947-333000 1964-860000 1976-1296000 1988-2020000
1948-340000 1965-905000 1977-1385000 1989-2055000
1949-370000 1966-945000 1978-1495000 1990-2080000
1950-400000 1967-985000 1979-1550000 1991-2115000
1951-419000 1968-1025000 1980-1595000 1992-2145000
1959-103000 1969-809000 1979-2812000 1989-4650000
1960-122000 1970-978000 1980-3000100 1990-4808000
1961-149000 1971-1169000 1981-3261000 1991-4966000
1962-188000 1972-1317000 1982-3464000 1992-5124000
1963-237000 1973-1510000 1983-3646000 1993-5282000
1964-298000 1974-1743000 1984-3832000 1994-5440000
1965-368000 1975-1943000 1985-3988000 1995-5598000
1966-489000 1976-2144000 1986-4157000 1996-5756000
YAMAHA America, South Haven, Michigan (Letter U.)
1974-101000 1978-117000 1982-150000 1986-186000
1976-107000 1980-132000 1984-167000 1988-210000
1984-501500 1986-504050 1988-102200 1990-119000
Vertical pianos
1979-790000 1982-001000 1985-014700 1988-1300000
Grand Pianos
1979-790000 1982-004700 1985-016000 1988-032000
1960-195001 1965-215001 1970-246001 1980-400001