Music & Musical Instruments

The Museum's music collections contain more than 5,000 instruments of American and European heritage. These include a quartet of 18th-century Stradivari stringed instruments, Tito Puente's autographed timbales, and the Yellow Cloud guitar that belonged to Prince, to name only a few. Music collections also include jukeboxes and synthesizers, square-dancing outfits and sheet music, archival materials, oral histories, and recordings of performances at the museum. The vast Sam DeVincent Collection of Illustrated Sheet Music is a remarkable window into the American past in words, music, and visual imagery. The Duke Ellington and Ruth Ellington Boatwright collections contain handwritten music compositions, sound recordings, business records, and other materials documenting the career of this renowned musician. In various ways, our collections find expression in performances of the Smithsonian Chamber Players, the Smithsonian Jazz Masterworks Orchestra, and in other public programs.

This violin was made in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania around 1940-1950 by an unknown maker. The violin’s table and back are made of fibreboard, a type of engineered wood.Currently not on view
Description
This violin was made in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania around 1940-1950 by an unknown maker. The violin’s table and back are made of fibreboard, a type of engineered wood.
Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1940-1950
ID Number
1987.0055.08
catalog number
1987.0055.08
accession number
1987.0055
This violin was made by the Kiso Suzuki Violin Company Ltd. in Fukushima, Kiso, Japan in 1973. The earliest makers of violins in Japan were Sadajiro Matunaga and Masakichi Suzuki (b.1859–d.1944).
Description

This violin was made by the Kiso Suzuki Violin Company Ltd. in Fukushima, Kiso, Japan in 1973. The earliest makers of violins in Japan were Sadajiro Matunaga and Masakichi Suzuki (b.1859–d.1944). Both were trained as shamisen makers and began making violins based on instruments brought to Japan toward the end of the 19th century from Western sources, using Japanese pine and maple and sometimes sycamore. In 1880, proceeding with a Westernization policy, the Japanese government had instituted teacher training programs for lessons in piano, organ, and violin. There is a printed label inside the instrument:

Kiso Suzuki Violin Co., Ltd
Copy of Antonius Stradivarus 1720
Anno 1973 ¾ No.7 Japan
[Kiso Suzuki Trademark]

Masakichi Suzuki established the Suzuki violin manufacturing firm in Nagoya in 1887, adding guitars and mandolins to the firm's production in 1903. The firm received an award at the Japan-British Exhibition in London in 1910, and Masakichi was further cited in 1917 by the Japanese government with a Medal of Honor for his accomplishments in the violin industry. At this time his company was producing thousands of violins each year.

The “S” logo is employed in the label of this ¾ violin with semi-transparent, dark reddish-brown varnish and ink representation of purfling. The fittings are of dark hardwood, with the fingerboard also stained black to give the appearance of ebony. The spruce and maple are probably local Japanese woods, with interior linings and blocks of a light material similar to basswood.

Location
Currently not on view
date made
1973
maker
Suzuki Violin Co., Ltd.
ID Number
1987.0583.06
catalog number
1987.0583.06
accession number
1987.0583
This Violin was made by Felipe Fruman in 1911, possibly in Buenos Aires, Argentina. The violin is made of nickel, and is etched "March 30 1911/FRUMAN" on the treble side upper bout, and "PATENT/FRUMAN” on the bass side upper bout.
Description
This Violin was made by Felipe Fruman in 1911, possibly in Buenos Aires, Argentina. The violin is made of nickel, and is etched "March 30 1911/FRUMAN" on the treble side upper bout, and "PATENT/FRUMAN” on the bass side upper bout. In Argentina, Fruman was known as a hairdresser and wig maker, but his musician’s business card declares Fruman's nickel violin to be "Patentado por el N.8949.” The patent detailed a process of making violins from bronze, steel, copper, and tin.
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1911
maker
Fruman, Felipe
ID Number
1991.0826.01
accession number
1991.0826
catalog number
1991.0826.01
This violin was made in Schönbach, Germany around 1870. This instrument, along with many others, was probably made in Schönbach on contract to George and August Klemm, members of the well-known Klemm family of instrument and string makers in Markneukirchen. John G.
Description
This violin was made in Schönbach, Germany around 1870. This instrument, along with many others, was probably made in Schönbach on contract to George and August Klemm, members of the well-known Klemm family of instrument and string makers in Markneukirchen. John G. Klemm and his brother, Frederick August Klemm immigrated to Philadelphia and established Klemm & Brother’s in 1819. From then until 1879 the company acted as instrument importers and music publishers to the American musical public. In addition to instruments of the violin family, Klemm & Brother’s also sold strings, wind instruments and even pianos. This commercial Schönbach violin, without corner blocks, is constructed with the neck and top block of maple in one piece. The long, square corners are beveled, as are the f-hole wings and the button. The violin is accompanied by an arched wooden trapezoidal case. This violin is made of a two-piece table of spruce, one-piece back of maple cut on 45o with mild irregular figure descending slightly to the left, ribs of similar maple, plain maple neck (with top block), pegbox and scroll, and a semi-transparent orange-brown varnish.
Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1865-1875
ID Number
MI.388697
catalog number
388697
accession number
182022
collector/donor number
466
This violin was made by the Aluminum Musical Instrument Company, Inc. in Ann Arbor, Michigan in 1932. In the last decade of the 19th century Neil Merrill, president of the Aluminum Musical Instrument Co.
Description
This violin was made by the Aluminum Musical Instrument Company, Inc. in Ann Arbor, Michigan in 1932. In the last decade of the 19th century Neil Merrill, president of the Aluminum Musical Instrument Co. in New York City, began incorporating aluminum in the manufacture of mandolins, fiddles, banjos, guitars and zithers. Fitted with spruce soundboards, the bodies of these instruments were pressed from one piece of aluminum.
Unrelated to Merrill's efforts, on March 24, 1932 the Buffalo plant of ALCOA (Aluminum Company of America) joined with Dr. Joseph Maddy, a music teacher from Ann Arbor and director of the National High School Orchestra Camp at Interlochen. They redesigned a 1928 aluminum double bass model in order to market aluminum violins, with bow and case for $50.00. The Buffalo plant assembled and finished the violins to resemble wood and Dr. Maddy provided the set-up work and sales from Ann Arbor. ALCOA records indicate the Buffalo Fabricating Plant provided a total of 435 violins to Dr. Maddy and about 500 double bass instruments to other dealers.
This 1932 model is molded with half-height ribs and back pressed from a single piece of aluminum joined at the center height of the ribs to a similarly molded aluminum table with half-height ribs. It is fitted with an aluminum neck with wood core, and an aluminum pegbox, scroll, bassbar and endpin. The exterior aluminum surfaces are painted to imitate wood grain.
Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1932
maker
Aluminum Company of America
ID Number
1988.0311.01
accession number
1988.0311
catalog number
1988.0311.01
serial number
356
This violin was made by Carl Schulz in Bismark, North Dakota in 1954. Carl Schulz was born in Germany in 1878, trained as a professional trumpet player and performed in New York under Walter Damroschand John Philip Sousa.
Description
This violin was made by Carl Schulz in Bismark, North Dakota in 1954. Carl Schulz was born in Germany in 1878, trained as a professional trumpet player and performed in New York under Walter Damrosch
and John Philip Sousa. He later turned to farming, moving to North Dakota in 1921. After retirement in 1945 he became interested in violin making, and by 1956 had completed 18 violins and one cello, all of imported European wood. This violin is made of a two-piece table of spruce, one-piece back of maple with fine horizontal figure, ribs of similar maple, moderately figured maple neck, pegbox and scroll, and a bright transparent orange-red varnish.
Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1954
maker
Schulz, Carl
ID Number
MI.79.04
catalog number
79.04
accession number
1978.2376
This violin was made by Robert Weber in Milwaukee, Wisconsin in 1930. Robert Weber was born in Germany in 1865 and was exposed to the craft of woodworking through his father, a carriage maker. He later received formal training in violin making.
Description
This violin was made by Robert Weber in Milwaukee, Wisconsin in 1930. Robert Weber was born in Germany in 1865 and was exposed to the craft of woodworking through his father, a carriage maker. He later received formal training in violin making. In 1888 Robert Weber immigrated to the United States, setting up his violin shop in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, where he remained until his death in 1947, at the age of 82. A quartet (two violins, one viola, one cello) of his instruments was displayed at the Chicago Exposition of 1893. This violin is made of a two-piece table of spruce with irregular medium grain broadening toward the flanks, two-piece back of maple cut on the quarter with irregular medium ascending figure, ribs of similar maple, original neck, pegbox and scroll of mild medium figured maple, and a golden orange-brown varnish.
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1930
maker
Weber, Robert
ID Number
1984.1133.01
catalog number
1984.1133.01
accession number
1984.1133
This violin was made by Gustav Henning of Miami, Florida in 1919. Born in Karlstad, Sweden in 1876, Gustav Henning immigrated to America in 1895 and worked for the piano firm of Chickering and Sons in Boston for ten years.
Description
This violin was made by Gustav Henning of Miami, Florida in 1919. Born in Karlstad, Sweden in 1876, Gustav Henning immigrated to America in 1895 and worked for the piano firm of Chickering and Sons in Boston for ten years. In 1905 he established himself as an independent violin maker in the Boston area. He moved his business to Miami, Florida in 1914, then to Denver, Colorado in 1920 and finally settled
in Seattle, Washington in 1927 at the age of 51. Henning marketed his violins by mail order and advertised nationally by magazine, describing his instruments to be “deep, mellow and soulful violins.” At the end of 1947 he had produced violin No. 557, indicating he had produced an average of 17 violins a year since 1919 when this violin, #84 was made. At the age of 71 he was marketing his instruments at $350-$500. He had earned a respectable reputation, shipping instruments to clients internationally as well as throughout the United States. After retiring from violin making, Gustav Henning returned to Sweden, where he died around 1962. This violin is made of a two-piece table of spruce, back of American maple in one piece cut on the slab with broad irregular horizontal figure, ribs of deeply figured American maple, neck, pegbox and scroll of similar maple, and a semi-opaque yellow-brown varnish.
Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1919
maker
Henning, Gustav
ID Number
MI.71.08
catalog number
71.08
accession number
292441
This violin was made by an unknown craftsman in Mittenwald, Germany around 1880.
Description

This violin was made by an unknown craftsman in Mittenwald, Germany around 1880. Violins in this ornamented style made in Mittenwald in the late 19th century have long been popular with country and folk musicians, who value them for their decorative inlaid edges and geometric mother-of-pearl designs on the back.

With a very flat bridge for chordal playing and machine tuning pegs for steel strings, the violin is preserved as used by Tommy Jarrell until his death in 1985. Like many country fiddlers, Tommy never cleaned or repaired the gradual elements of wear to his violin, choosing to use it as seen in the photos, believing that the wear and buildup of rosin on the varnish enhanced the musical quality of the instrument. The instrument also has two rattlesnake rattles placed inside and a string tied to the soundpost to make it easier to adjust. The original neck is quite short and shows, with the fingerboard marks, evidence of his playing style and intonation. This violin is made of a table of spruce with medium grain broadening toward the flanks, and a back of maple in two pieces with even, medium descending figure, ribs of similar maple, an original neck, pegbox and scroll of plain maple, and a dark reddish-brown varnish.

Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1878-1882
ID Number
1988.0426.01
accession number
1988.0426
catalog number
1988.0426.01
This three-quarters size violin was made in Mittenwald, Germany around 1900. This is an instrument of commercial Mittenwald manufacture.
Description
This three-quarters size violin was made in Mittenwald, Germany around 1900. This is an instrument of commercial Mittenwald manufacture. As the classic tradition of violin-making waned during the first half of the 19th Century, makers like Ludwig Neuner (1840-1897) collaborated with other Mittenwald workmen to meet the demand for new instruments. Neuner, a gifted craftsman who spent six years in Paris working for J. B. Vuillaume, returned to Mittenwald in 1884 and enlarged the commercial firm of Neuner & Hornsteiner. Under his leadership, over 200 employees were used to meet the international demand for commercial as well as finely crafted instruments. This violin is made of a two-piece table of spruce, back of maple in two pieces with mild, irregular horizontal figure, ribs of similar maple, neck, pegbox and scroll of mildly figured maple, and a shaded opaque yellow-brown varnish.
Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1898 - 1902
ID Number
MI.65.0750
catalog number
65.0750
accession number
182022
This quarter-size violin was made by an unknown maker in Milan, Italy around 1700-1725. This violin is made of a two-piece table of spruce, two-piece back of maple, hardwood ribs, maple neck, beechwood pegbox and scroll, and a golden orange-brown varnish.Currently not on view
Description (Brief)
This quarter-size violin was made by an unknown maker in Milan, Italy around 1700-1725. This violin is made of a two-piece table of spruce, two-piece back of maple, hardwood ribs, maple neck, beechwood pegbox and scroll, and a golden orange-brown varnish.
Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1700-1725
ID Number
1993.0153.01
catalog number
1993.0153.01
accession number
1993.0153
This violin was made in Markneukirchen, Germany around 1890. This instrument with 7/8-size normal violin rib outline is open, without table or back, to limit sound volume. A central strip supports the bridge and provision is made for a “chinrest” area at the lower left bout.
Description
This violin was made in Markneukirchen, Germany around 1890. This instrument with 7/8-size normal violin rib outline is open, without table or back, to limit sound volume. A central strip supports the bridge and provision is made for a “chinrest” area at the lower left bout. A normal violin neck allows the instrument to be used for technique development. This violin is made of a “table strip” of walnut, ribs of laminated walnut with walnut body bracing system, maple neck, pegbox and scroll, and a transparent yellow varnish.
Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1885 - 1895
ID Number
MI.215410
catalog number
215410
accession number
39298
This aluminum violin was patented by Alfred Springer of Cincinnati, Ohio and received U.S. Patent number 451,863 in 1891. It is a violin in traditional form with a body of aluminum, bearing etchedrepresentation of purfling and figure.
Description
This aluminum violin was patented by Alfred Springer of Cincinnati, Ohio and received U.S. Patent number 451,863 in 1891. It is a violin in traditional form with a body of aluminum, bearing etched
representation of purfling and figure. This violin is made of aluminum ribs joined to aluminum table and back with aluminum pins, plain maple violin neck, pegbox and scroll, and an unvarnished body.
Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1891
patent date
1891-05-05
patentee
Springer, Alfred
ID Number
MI.251412
accession number
48889
catalog number
251412
patent number
451,863
This violin was made by Ernst Heinrich Roth of Markneukirchen, Germany in 1936. The violin is a reproduction of a Stradivari violin made in 1700. The violin has an electric pickup attachment.Currently not on view
Description
This violin was made by Ernst Heinrich Roth of Markneukirchen, Germany in 1936. The violin is a reproduction of a Stradivari violin made in 1700. The violin has an electric pickup attachment.
Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1936
referenced
Stradivari, Antonio
user
Williams, Claude
maker
Roth, Ernst Heinrich
ID Number
2005.0235.01
accession number
2005.0235
catalog number
2005.0235.01
This “Hollow Back Violin" was invented by William S. Mount of Stony Brook, New York. The patent model was made by Mount’s friend James H. Ward in 1852 and received U.S. Patent number 8,981. William Sidney Mount is best known as an important American genre painter.
Description
This “Hollow Back Violin" was invented by William S. Mount of Stony Brook, New York. The patent model was made by Mount’s friend James H. Ward in 1852 and received U.S. Patent number 8,981. William Sidney Mount is best known as an important American genre painter. He also invented a steamboat paddle wheel, a two-hulled sailboat and a painting studio on wheels. Mount studied folk music, was fascinated by the violin and believed that a concave shape and a short soundpost would result in a fuller, richer, more powerful tone. He displayed his instruments in the 1853 New York World’s Fair Crystal Palace, demonstrating the hollow back model himself. The instruments were praised by contemporary musicians. This violin is made of a one-piece table of spruce, one-piece back of maple with irregular broad horizontal figure, ribs of slab-cut maple with faint irregular figure, neck of mildly figured maple with pegbox and scroll with attached black ears, and a yellow-brown varnish.
Date made
1852
maker
Mount, William S.
ID Number
MI.251397
catalog number
251397
accession number
48889
This violin was made by Antonio Mariani in Pesaro, Italy around 1650. Believed to be a student of Giovanni Paolo Maggini in Brescia, Mariani probably worked in Pesaro between 1635 and 1695. This instrument with single purfling is in an excellent state of preservation.
Description
This violin was made by Antonio Mariani in Pesaro, Italy around 1650. Believed to be a student of Giovanni Paolo Maggini in Brescia, Mariani probably worked in Pesaro between 1635 and 1695. This instrument with single purfling is in an excellent state of preservation. Historians and scientists have long sought an analytical method to verify dates of manufacture and the age of wood art objects. In contemporary times, these efforts have lead to investigating practical applications of dendrochronology, an experimental technique of dating wood by comparison to growth rings of similar woods. In 1987 this violin was submitted for study in this infant science, with the interesting results that suggest the instrument was made sometime after 1768, or nearly 100 years after Mariani's working life. This vilin has a reproduction label of the Brescian violinmaker Zanetto and is made of a two-piece table of spruce with even medium grain, two-piece back of quarter-cut maple with gently descending irregular fine figure, ribs of plain quarter-cut beech, grafted maple neck with original plain maple pegbox and scroll, and a yellow-brown varnish.
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1640-1660
maker
Mariani, Antonio
ID Number
MI.79.08
catalog number
79.08
accession number
1978.2531
This violin was made in Eastern Europe in the 18th century by an unknown maker. It has a dark, semi-opaque, reddish-brown/black varnish associated with Romany instruments.
Description
This violin was made in Eastern Europe in the 18th century by an unknown maker. It has a dark, semi-opaque, reddish-brown/black varnish associated with Romany instruments. The archings are of
squarish “hour-glass” form with powerful but tasteful edges and roughly wrought purfling. The scroll is spontaneous, in character with the craftsmanship of the body. The ribs are quite high and hastily bent to shape. These f-holes appear similar to classical Bohemian instruments but lack seriously studied symmetry. Over all, the impression of this instrument is not unlike formal Czech- Hungarian workmanship executed with a very free and casual spirit. This violin is made of a two-piece table of spruce of dissimilar wood with very fine to broad grain, two-piece back of maple cut on the quarter, wholly lacking in figure or strong medallary ray, ribs of similar plain maple, reset original neck of plain maple terminating in a pegbox and closed scroll, three period (original?) pegs of chestnut without figure, and a semi-opaque reddish-brown/black varnish.
Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1700-1799
ID Number
2016.0031.16
catalog number
2016.0031.16
accession number
2016.0031
This violin was made in Schönbach, Germany, around 1790. The instrument retains the original neck and top block of maple in one piece with a slot in the pegbox to accommodate a nut. The original bass-bar is unusually long.
Description
This violin was made in Schönbach, Germany, around 1790. The instrument retains the original neck and top block of maple in one piece with a slot in the pegbox to accommodate a nut. The original bass-bar is unusually long. The instrument bears extensive repairs and retouching of the varnish. This violin is made of a two-piece table of spruce, two-piece back of maple cut on 45o with even medium-fine gently ascending figure, ribs of similar maple, original top block in one piece with maple neck, pegbox and scroll, and a semi-opaque dark reddish-brown varnish.
Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1785-1795
ID Number
MI.76.14
catalog number
76.14
accession number
322697
This violin was made by an unknown Scandinavian maker around 1869. There is a handwritten pencil inscription on the back that reads: “Joh. Traxler(t).
Description
This violin was made by an unknown Scandinavian maker around 1869. There is a handwritten pencil inscription on the back that reads: “Joh. Traxler(t). 1869.” Having never been opened since it was built, this violin provides an opportunity to study one maker’s intentions and techniques. The violin is made of a two-piece table of spruce cut on the quarter, a back of slab maple in one piece with mild, horizontal figure, ribs of similar maple, plain beech wood neck, pegbox and scroll, and a stained pear wood fingerboard.
Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1845-1855
1869
ID Number
1989.0654.01
accession number
1989.0654
catalog number
1989.0654.01
This violin was made by the Virzi’s in New York, New York in 1924. The violin was accessioned with an original 1926 Virzi catalog.
Description
This violin was made by the Virzi’s in New York, New York in 1924. The violin was accessioned with an original 1926 Virzi catalog. The Virzi’s became a well-known New York company, introducing a patent for a “Tone Producer,” which was an extra soundboard inserted inside instruments such as guitars and violins to amplify volume and improve sound.
Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1924
maker
Virzi
ID Number
2006.0155.01
accession number
2006.0155
catalog number
2006.0155.01
This violin was made by George Gemünder in Astoria, New York around 1868-1872. This Guarneri model violin, while worn from years of use, shows many elements of George Gemünder's talent in creating direct copies of old instruments.
Description
This violin was made by George Gemünder in Astoria, New York around 1868-1872. This Guarneri model violin, while worn from years of use, shows many elements of George Gemünder's talent in creating direct copies of old instruments. In the book that was both written and published by him in 1881, The Violin: George Gemünder's Progress in Violin Making (with Interesting Facts Concerning the Art and Its Critics in General), he related the experience of submitting one of his Guarneri model violins to the 1873 Vienna Exhibition:
“In the Exhibition of Vienna, my violin was mistaken for a genuine Cremonese violin, not only for its tone, but for its outer appearance which was so striking an imitation according to Joseph Guarnerius
that a newspaper of Vienna made the observation “George Gemünder cannot make us Germans believe that the violin sent by him is new. A bold Yankee, only, can put his name in a genuine instrument in order
to make himself renowned.”
This violin is made of one-piece table of spruce, two-piece back of maple cut on the quarter with an irregular broad ascending figure, ribs are of similar maple, the maple neck-graft terminates in the original maple pegbox and scroll, and a golden-orange varnish.
Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1869-1872
maker
Gemunder, George
ID Number
1980.0906.01
catalog number
1980.0906.01
accession number
1980.0906
This violin was made by the Suzuki Violin Company Ltd. in Nagoya, Japan in 1982. This 1/16 size student violin with ebony fittings has a plastic molded scroll and ear relief applied to the plain maple pegbox.
Description

This violin was made by the Suzuki Violin Company Ltd. in Nagoya, Japan in 1982. This 1/16 size student violin with ebony fittings has a plastic molded scroll and ear relief applied to the plain maple pegbox. Very plain spruce and maple have been used in this instrument with transparent reddish-orange varnish and inked representations of purfling

The characteristics of Suzuki violins are varied through a range of targeted production quality. Usually the instruments are built on an outside mould, but the archings may either be pressed or carved into their final shape depending on the quality grade of the instrument. Originally the woods employed in production were from Japanese sources, but since 1960 have been imported from Germany. A scroll-carving machine invented by the founder, Masakichi Suzuki, as well as other cutting and shaping machines are utilized in the contemporary mass production process. This violin has two printed labels inside the instrument:

SUZUKI
Established 1887 in Nagoya
No. 220 Size 1/16 Anno 1982
SUZUKI VIOLIN CO. LTD.

Supplied and Adjusted by
C. Meisel Music Co.
To Meet the Most Exacting
Requirements of Music Educators

As per the original price tag, this violin was sold by Dale Music Co. in Silver Spring, Maryland for $435.00.

Location
Currently not on view
date made
1982
maker
Suzuki Violin Co., Ltd.
ID Number
2014.0181.04
accession number
2014.0181
catalog number
2014.0181.04
This violin is made by K. Lothar Meisel in Owatonna, Minnesota in 1992. The violin has a one-piece back made from European mountain maple with an intense curl of medium width slanting downward from left to right. The ribs and scroll are made from similar European maple.
Description (Brief)
This violin is made by K. Lothar Meisel in Owatonna, Minnesota in 1992. The violin has a one-piece back made from European mountain maple with an intense curl of medium width slanting downward from left to right. The ribs and scroll are made from similar European maple. The two-piece table is made from quarter-cut spruce with pronounced grain of medium to wide width. The reddish gold-brown varnish is lightly shaded. The violin is missing its bridge and strings.
Location
Currently not on view
date made
ca 1992
maker
Meisel, Kurt Lothar
ID Number
1997.0264.01
accession number
1997.0264
catalog number
1997.0264.01
This instrument was patented (English Patent #9418) by John M.A. Stroh in London England on May 4, 1899 and manufactured by George Evans & Co. from 1909–1942.
Description (Brief)
This instrument was patented (English Patent #9418) by John M.A. Stroh in London England on May 4, 1899 and manufactured by George Evans & Co. from 1909–1942. John Matthias Augustus Stroh was born in Frankfurt am Main in 1828, and was an apprentice watch and clock maker, who immigrated to England in 1851. In this instrument, the Stroh patent for amplifying a vibrated string is adapted to the violin. Stroh invented many acoustical devices, and the concept of this patent originated from work on the mechanical sound-box of the gramophone. This violin is made of a solid cylindrical body built of two pieces of half-round mahogany, an aluminum shoulder rest, diaphragm and horn, traditional violin neck, pegbox, and scroll of maple, and a dark red-brown varnish.
Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1909-1942
maker
George Evans & Co.
patentee
Stroh, John M. A.
ID Number
1986.0858.01
catalog number
1986.0858.01
accession number
1986.0858

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