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Tenor Horn Fellow Regular Member
Joined: 17 Jun 2018 Posts: 41 Location: United States
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Posted: Tue Jun 19, 2018 12:50 am Post subject: King Cleveland serial numbers |
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I have an instrument made by H. N. White, engraved "Cleveland Musical Instrument Company".
The serial number is "C-20xxx"
I looked it up at
http://www.hnwhite.com/Serial%20Numbers.htm
and at
http://www.hnwhite.com/Cleveland%20instruments.htm
Neither page shows letter prefixes for serial numbers.
Should I just ignore the "C" prefix?
With Conn one should never ignore a letter prefix.
Mark _________________
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1934 H.N. White Circular Alto Horn - Silver - mint
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1961 Conn 9A Cornet - Coprion - mint
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m'pieces:
White Horn #8
Wick Cornet #2
.
photos and audio:
https://tenorhornfellow.imgur.com/
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Shifty Veteran Member
Joined: 23 Feb 2013 Posts: 250 Location: Phoenix AZ
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Posted: Thu Jun 21, 2018 7:43 pm Post subject: |
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https://www.trumpetherald.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=1461074
4th post:
OldSchoolEuph wrote: | This is a very old thread, but I will post this just because Google still finds this for folks looking for info on Cleveland:
Cleveland Band Instruments was incorporated in 1919 by Jas. Sistek Sr. and several partners. (He ran a Cleveland music store and made his own trumpets, later stenciling for many years). It was sold to HN White in 1925, and White added a "C" ahead of the serial numbers to keep the records straight. American Standard was a brand name of Cleveland pre-merger. The Depression forced consolidation with the King plant. The Greyhounds were late-20's/30s peashooter siblings to the American Standard Student Prince. After the war, the "C" disappeared from Cleveland serials. More info is available at www.hnwhite.com or at www.trumpet-history.com |
_________________ Getzen Eterna 700, Eterna 800
Conn Connstellation 28A, Victor 80A, Connqueror (1903)
ACB Doubler Flugelhorn |
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Tenor Horn Fellow Regular Member
Joined: 17 Jun 2018 Posts: 41 Location: United States
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Posted: Thu Jun 21, 2018 10:06 pm Post subject: |
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Shifty wrote: | https://www.trumpetherald.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=1461074
4th post:
OldSchoolEuph wrote: | This is a very old thread, but I will post this just because Google still finds this for folks looking for info on Cleveland:
Cleveland Band Instruments was incorporated in 1919 by Jas. Sistek Sr. and several partners. (He ran a Cleveland music store and made his own trumpets, later stenciling for many years). It was sold to HN White in 1925, and White added a "C" ahead of the serial numbers to keep the records straight. American Standard was a brand name of Cleveland pre-merger. The Depression forced consolidation with the King plant. The Greyhounds were late-20's/30s peashooter siblings to the American Standard Student Prince. After the war, the "C" disappeared from Cleveland serials. More info is available at www.hnwhite.com or at www.trumpet-history.com |
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I thank you with sincerest thanks.
I am half blind, so it is very difficult for me to read long paragraphs.
I have trouble moving my sight right to left and just one line down to continue reading within a paragraph.
Enlarging the text with my computer helps a little bit.
I am 99 percent sure that I read the beginning and the end of that paragraph recently, but I was unable to read the middle of the paragraph.
So I really do appreciate your answer for me.
Mark _________________
.
1934 H.N. White Circular Alto Horn - Silver - mint
.
1961 Conn 9A Cornet - Coprion - mint
.
.
m'pieces:
White Horn #8
Wick Cornet #2
.
photos and audio:
https://tenorhornfellow.imgur.com/
.
Last edited by Tenor Horn Fellow on Fri Jun 22, 2018 9:35 am; edited 2 times in total |
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Dennis78 Heavyweight Member
Joined: 28 Feb 2015 Posts: 673 Location: Cincinnati
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Posted: Fri Jun 22, 2018 7:38 am Post subject: |
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Sounds like a pre-end-of war Cleveland _________________ a few different ones |
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