Melodeon

From New World Encyclopedia
A Scarlatti Melodeo (courtesy www.321music.co.uk )


Melodeons are very small pressure type reed organs, sometimes called "lap organs," which were built in the United States around 1840 mainly by builders in New England.

The melodeon is the forerunner of the more familiar pump organ reminiscent of an upright piano case, and was built from about the mid-1840s to the early 1870s. Many of the larger ones looked like the small and typical early horizontally arranged square pianos. Some were actually advertised to be in a piano style case. These are wind instruments with brass reeds to create the sound of an organ. One characteristic of this type of instrument is that it only has one pedal to power the bellows system. The other pedal exists to control the dynamic sound volume.

A Hohner Melodeon (courtesy www.321music.co.uk )
A Serenellini Melodeon (courtesy www.321music.co.uk )

Early History

The name "melodeon" was apparently originated by Jeramiah Carhart of Poughkeepsie, New York, in 1835. Being dissatisfied with the bold tone of the wind pressured reed organ that was beginning to become popular, he invented a system whereby the wind could be sucked through the reeds, so that its sounds would project inward into the instrument, rather than outwards. Such a system was also invented by a workman in the Debain shop, around 1835.

In 1846, Carhart sold his patent rights and other secrets to several manufacturers, and among them was George A. Prince of Buffalo, New York. By the 1860s, Prince had become the largest builder in the world of these types of small suction type reed organs, offering an astounding 40 different models, ranging from simple instruments with a single set of reeds and just 49 keys, to double manual organs with a larger compass. Between 1847 and 1866, some 40,000 melodeons had been made. They were sold in all parts of the United States and exported to many foreign countries. The city of Buffalo had become "The Melodeon Capital of the World."

The "improved melodeon," which eventually brought tonal and harmonious music to millions, was invented in Buffalo. Two Yankee artisans, Jeremiah Carhart of Poughkeepsie and Elias Parkman Needham of Delhi, joined the swelling populace of Buffalo around 1835. They immediately found work in cabinet making and carpentry shops in the Washington, Swan and Seneca street area.

The patent of this suction principle was secured by Jeremiah Carhart on Dec. 28, 1846 (U.S. Patent Office No. 4912). After years of experimenting and tinkering, this innovative and historic invention finally materialized while Carhart and Needham were in the employ of George A. Prince, owner and proprietor of the George A. Prince & Co. Music Store at 200 Main St.

Earlier nineteenth-century reed organs had a raspy, snarling quality and excessive dissonant overtones. The very first improved melodeon was created in the upper floor over Prince's music store. Brisk sales immediately followed its introduction.

The Buffalo City Directory for 1847-1948 lists George A. Prince & Co., Music Store, and also "Geo. A. Prince & Co., Manufacturers of Carhart's Improved Melodeons," both at the same Main Street address. Carhart, holder of the patent, had sold manufacturing rights to Prince while in his employment. Carhart and Needham, maintaining their own manufacturing rights, briefly operated a melodeon making shop at 269 Main St, then departed for New York City where, in 1849, they established a melodeon "manufactory" at 77 East 13th St, Manhattan.

They continued as a New York-based melodeon and reed organ manufacturer until 1868, under the trade name Carhart & Needham. Meanwhile, manufacturing activity continued from 1846 onward in Buffalo as Prince and his associates, with bold enterprise, added machinery and skilled hands to meet the demand for the ever more popular, moderately priced, and improved melodeon.

In an interview published in the Buffalo Commercial-Advertiser on Oct. 11, 1886, half a century after his arrival, Prince recalled that the trip from Boston took him by rail to Providence, by sea to New York and riverboat to Albany, by rail to Utica (in 1836 the western limit of train service), then finally to Buffalo by stagecoach. Prince also recalled, "I had previously worked in the melodeon factory of a man named Abraham Prescott at Concord, New Hampshire" (some 100 miles from Boston). There he had obtained from the crude ideas of his employer "the knowledge that later enabled me, in collaboration with Jeremiah Carhart, to construct the first satisfactory (improved) instrument of its kind."

The Carhart-Prince collaboration is now American musical history. Constant experimentation with reeds, bellows, swells and stops led to improved, often patented techniques in Prince's shops. His superintendent of tuning, Emmons Hamlin, developed in 1848-1949 a voicing method that, by twisting the metal reeds, refined the tone markedly. Hamlin later became a founder of the firm of Mason & Hamlin, a large manufacturer of very fine cabinet reed organs and pianos.

America Brings the Melodeon Home

At a Washington patent hearing in 1860, Hamlin and Needham estimated that prior to 1846, fewer than 300 reed organs had been built in the United States. All were handmade to order in small cabinet shops by craftsmen who also built a variety of other instruments.

By the 1850s, reed organs, especially the melodeon, had become a major source of musical entertainment in American homes. As the improved melodeon caught on nationally, the climate for an industry emerged. Newly developed mid-century factory production methods, a widening network of rail transportation to urban markets, relatively low prices, a manageable physical size, plus relative ease of performance, all led to new uses. It found its way into homes, social halls, schools, small churches and even foreign missions and ships at sea. The melodeon went anyplace where pipe organs were impractical.

Unlike the piano, the melodeon seldom needed maintenance or tuning, and it was virtually indestructible in normal use. Its fame spread through sales, news journals and trade periodical advertising, as well as in demonstrations both in the home and in wholesale depots, dealer's stores and showrooms. It was suggested that a melodeon in the parlor provided ready musical entertainment, drawing family and friends together for song and fellowship.

Soon hundreds of thousands of Americans were acquiring melodeons—a phenomenon not unlike the spread of home television sets during the 1950s. By 1852, George A. Prince & Co. had wholesale depots in New York, Chicago, Cincinnati and Boston. There was also a growing network of agent/dealers in St Louis, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Toronto and other major cities. The market expanded each year.

A Place in Musical History

The Prince Co.'s importance as America's pioneer melodeon and reed organ manufacturer is recognized today. American musical instrument historian Robert F. Gellerman, in his 1973 volume The American Reed Organ, notes, "The George A. Prince Co. was the leading manufacturer of reed organs in the United States from the 1850s until the 1870s, and many of the pioneers in the reed organ industry worked for Prince in the early days."

Reed organ historian Horton Presley stated in his 1985 book Antique Reed Organs, "The fact remains that Carhart's efforts, and those of George A. Prince, began the big swing to reed organs throughout America."

The expanded Prince firm numbered in excess of 200 mostly skilled workers including about a hundred of the best cabinetmakers in the country. Prince's 1860 Illustrated Catalogue states: "We are the pioneers and leading manufacturers of Melodeons in the world," and that "24,000 Prince melodeons had been delivered to the public since the firm's 1846 founding." This meant that around six to even organs per day on average were produced. Competitor Carhart & Needham & Co., located in Manhattan, employed 80 workers in its peak years and had produced a total of 15,000 instruments when the firm closed in 1868.

Carhart and Prince developed the pioneering design together and built the first prototype side by side in the same workshop.

Melodeons in Canada

The small reed organs built in Canada about the middle of the nineteenth century were called melodeons or cottage organs. The larger models, introduced after 1860, were known as harmoniums, cabinet organs, parlour organs, and, popularly, pump organs.

Among the first melodeon builders in Canada were William Townsend (Toronto, late 1840s) Hamilton (1853-5), R.S. Williams (Toronto, mid-1850s), and probably Abner Brown (Montreal, 1848-74). The Montreal pipe-organ builder, S.R. Warren, and the Guelph, Ontario brothers, William and Robert Bell, were other pioneer reed organ makers. Their instruments commonly had keyboards of four or five octaves, two small horizontal bellows, and modest foot treadles to pump the bellows. Many came with detachable legs and thus were portable (early versions of the 'missionary' organ); others were larger and heavier, similar in style to the so-called square piano.

Canada

Reed Organ and Melodeon Builders in Canada and the United Kingdom

Acadia Organ Co, Bridgetown, NS, fl 1878-82

C.W. & F.M. Andrus (Andrews?), Picton, Ont, fl 1857

Andrus Bros, London, Ont, ca 1859-74

Annapolis Organs, Annapolis, NS, fl 1880

John Bagnall &Co, Victoria, BC, 1863-85 (harmoniums by 1882)

Bell Organ and Piano Co (name changes), Guelph, Ont, 1864-1928

Daniel Bell Organ Co, Toronto, 1881-6

Berlin Organ Co, Berlin (Kitchener), Ont, fl 1880

G. Blatchford Organ Co, Galt, Ont, fl 1895; Elora, Ont, fl 1896

Abner Brown, Montreal, fl 1848-74

Canada Organ Co, London, Ont, ca 1865-?

Canada Organ Co, Toronto, 1875

Chute, Hall & Co, Yarmouth, NS, 1883-94

Compensating Pipe Organ Co, Toronto, fl 1900-10

Cornwall, Huntingdon, Que, before 1889-95 (see Pratte)

Cowley (or Conley?) Church Organ Co, Madoc, Ont, fl 1890

Dales & Dalton, Newmarket, Ont, fl 1870

R.H. Dalton, Toronto, 1869-82?

Darley and Robinson (see Dominion Organ and Piano Co)

W. Doherty & Co, Clinton, Ont, 1875-1920 (later owned by Sherlock-Manning Co)

Dominion Organ and Piano Co, Bowmanville, Ont, 1873-ca 1935

Eben-Ezer Organ Co, Clifford, Ont, 1935

Gates Organ and Piano Co, ca 1872-82 Malvern Square, NS; 1882-after 1885 Truro, NS

Goderich Organ Co, Goderich, Ont, fl 1890-1910

A.S. Hardy & Co, Guelph, Ont, fl 1874

John Jackson and Co, Guelph, Ont, fl 1872-3, 1880-3?

D.W. Karn Co, Woodstock, Ont, ca 1867-1924

J. & R. Kilgour, Hamilton, Ont, ca 1872-88 as dealers, 1888-99 as piano and organ company

McLeod, Wood & Co, Guelph, Ont, fl 1869-72; later R. McLeod & Co, London, Ont, fl 1874-5

Malhoit & Co, Simcoe, Ont, fl 1875

Charles Mee, Kingston, Ont, fl 1870

John M. Miller (later Miller & Karn and D.W. Karn), Woodstock, Ont, fl 1867

Mudge & Yarwood Manufacturing Co, Whitby, Ont, 1873-?

New Dominion Organ Co, Saint John, NB, fl 1875

William Norris, North York, Ont, fl 1867

Ontario Organ Co, Toronto, 1884

Oshawa Organ and Melodeon Manufacturing Co, 1871-3 (see Dominion Organ and Piano Co)

Pratte, Montreal, 1889-1926 (harmoniums built ca 1912)

Rappe & Co, Kingston, Ont, ca 1871-ca 1887

J. Reyner, Kingston, Ont, ca 1871-ca 1885

Sherlock-Manning Organ Co, London, Ont, later Clinton, Ont, 1902-78 (reed organs built 1902-1950s)

J. Slown, Owen Sound, Ont, fl 1871-89

David W. & Cornelius D. Smith, Brome, Que, 1875-?

Smith & Scribner, Chatham, Ont, fl 1864-5

Frank Stevenson, North York, Ont, fl 1867

Edward G. Thomas Organ Co, Woodstock, Ont, 1875-?

James Thornton & Co, Hamilton, Ont, fl 1871-89

Toronto Organ Co, Toronto, 1880

William Townsend, Toronto, fl late 1840s, Hamilton 1853-5

Uxbridge Organ Co, Uxbridge, Ont, fl 1872-1909

S.R. Warren and Son, Toronto, fl 1878-ca 1910

Elijah West, West Farnham, Que, fl 1860-75

Thomas W. White & Co, Hamilton, Ont, 1863-after 1869

R.S. Williams &Sons, Toronto, ca1854-ca 1952 (reed organs built in 19th century only)

Wilson & Co, Sherbrooke, Que

Wood, Powell & Co, Guelph, Ont, fl 1883-4

Woodstock Organ Factory, Woodstock, Ont, fl 1876 (see D.W. Karn)

Author Tim Classey, Helmut Kallmann

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Ahrens, Christian. Das Harmonium. Frankfurt/M.: E. Bochinsky, 1996. ISBN 3923639058
  • Ahrens, Christian. Pianos solidester Konstruktion / Herausgeber. Frankfurt/M., Germany: E. Bochinsky, 1993. ISBN 3923639961
  • Ahrens, Christian en Jonas Braasch, “Christian Gottlieb Kratzenstein: de uitvinder van de orgelregisters met doorslaande tongen.” München: Katzbichler, c2003. ISBN 3873975823
  • Folk Dance Music. "Melodeon Greats." London: Topic Records, 1994. OCLC 57610809
  • Gellermann, R.F. The American Reed Organ and the Harmonium. 1997.
  • Gellermann,R.F. The International Reed Organ Atlas. 1998.
  • Grossner, Sam. "Melodeon Music." Chicago, Ill: San Grossner, 2003. OCLC 5294332
  • Possumato, Dan. "Land of Sunshine:Irish traditional music on the melodeon and button accordion." Ireland: D. Possumato, 2006. OCLC 71292824

External Links

All links retrieved September 14, 2018.

Credits

New World Encyclopedia writers and editors rewrote and completed the Wikipedia article in accordance with New World Encyclopedia standards. This article abides by terms of the Creative Commons CC-by-sa 3.0 License (CC-by-sa), which may be used and disseminated with proper attribution. Credit is due under the terms of this license that can reference both the New World Encyclopedia contributors and the selfless volunteer contributors of the Wikimedia Foundation. To cite this article click here for a list of acceptable citing formats.The history of earlier contributions by wikipedians is accessible to researchers here:

The history of this article since it was imported to New World Encyclopedia:

Note: Some restrictions may apply to use of individual images which are separately licensed.