Music & Musical Instruments - Overview

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. Several of these rare instruments can be heard in performances of the Smithsonian Chamber Players and in other public programs. 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.
"Music & Musical Instruments - Overview" showing 2 items.
Fruman Nickel Violin
- Description (Brief)
- 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
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center
Henning Violin
- Description (Brief)
- 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.
- Description
- This violin has its original printed and handwritten label:
- G. Henning (logo)
- #84 G. Henning Miami Florida 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.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- Date made
- 1919
- maker
- Henning, Gustav
- ID Number
- MI*71.08
- catalog number
- 71.08
- accession number
- 292441
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center

