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Lakeside Piano Company: Chicago, IL US Cable-Nelson Lauter Piano Co. Newark, NJ US 1862–1930 Lesage Piano Company [70] Quebec: Canada 1884–1911 Willis & Co. Acquired in 1907. Lester Piano Company [71] [72] Lester, PA US 1888–1961 [73] Also manufactured brands Channing, Alden, Bellaire, Schubert and Leonard. Loud Brothers: Philadelphia: US ...
The walls of the building collapsed, and set adjoining structures on fire. A new factory was built in 1853–54 at 791 Tremont Street in Boston. From 1860 to 1868 space in the building was the location of the Spencer Repeating Rifle Company, who made over 100,000 rifles and carbines for the U.S. Army and sportsmen from 1862 to 1868. [1]
In 1854, he started the Bradbury Piano Company, with his brother, Edward G. Bradbury in New York City. [1] William Bradbury is best known as a composer and publisher of a series of musical collections for choirs and schools. He was the author and compiler of fifty-nine books starting in 1841. [3] In 1862, Bradbury found the poem "Jesus Loves Me ...
February 3 – Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky's Symphony No. 1 ("Winter Daydreams") is first performed in Moscow at a Russian Musical Society concert (having been premièred in Saint Petersburg). April 10 (Good Friday) – The six movement version of Brahms ' A German Requiem ( Ein deutsches Requiem ) is premièred in Bremen Cathedral with Brahms ...
Behr Brothers was a New York based piano company founded in 1880 and hailed as a major contributor to the piano industry of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Henry Behr of Hamburg , Germany initially established a piano company in New York alongside Leopold Peck (of "Hardman Peck Piano Company") in 1877, named "Behr & Peck ...
The Link Piano and Organ Company was an American manufacturer of pianos, orchestrions, fotoplayers, and theatre pipe organs. [ 1 ] During the early 1900s, George T. Link was managing a small firm named Shaft Brothers Piano Company , which manufactured and sold pianos to the Automatic Musical Company of Binghamton, New York .
Wm. Knabe & Co. was a piano manufacturing company in Baltimore, Maryland, from the middle of the nineteenth century through the beginning of the 20th century, and continued as a division of Aeolian-American at East Rochester, New York, until 1982. The name is currently used for a line of pianos manufactured by Samick Musical Instruments
[1] Wood's father was a partner in the Edinburgh piano manufacturing and music publishing firm of Muir, Wood and Company, and later Wood, Small and Company. In 1799 his company won a royal warrant as "Musical Instrument Makers of His Majesty." [2] Wood was named for his father's initial business partner, John Muir (d. 1818). [3]