Music Trade Review

Issue: 1894 Vol. 18 N. 47

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW.
i
^DEALERS OF THE
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ney purchased a location on Griswold street and
put up another magnificent edifice, the present
Whitney Opera House. He is also interested in
many of the leading opera houses throughout
the United States. It was he, together with an-
other Detroit capitalist, who created the first
electric light plant in Detroit and was among
the original promoters of the Bush Electric
Company. He is stockholder in several cor-
porations and is associated with the Masonic
benevolent societies in the capacity of one of the
leading lights.
C. J. WHITNEY.
THE WHITNEY-MARVIN MUSIC CO.,
Detroit.
The name of C. J. Whitney is a familiar one
to all Michiganders. He was one of the pioneers
of the music business in Michigan, his opera-
tions in this line covering a period of over forty
years and aggregating millions of dollars. This
coupled with his extensive theatrical interests and
real estate transactions have made him one of the
widest known business men in the United States.
Mr. Whitney is a native of Michigan and was
born in Avon in 1832. At an early age he left his
C. W. MARVIN.
native town and after one or two business ven-
tures opened up in Detroit. In this he was very
successful. Mr. Whitney has been interested in
many of the leading concerns of Detroit which
are associated with the progress of that city. In
1875 he purchased the site of old Fort Shelby
and erected an opera house which was a credit
to Detroit. The United States afterwards pur-
chased the corner for a post office and Mr. Whit-
C. W. Marvin.
Mr. C. W. Marvin, who with Mr. Whitney
compose the Whitney-Marvin Company, is a
native of Michigan. He has been engaged in
mercantile pursuits since his boyhood and his con-
nection with the music trade dates back thirteen
years when he was located at Ovid and Owasso.
He came to Detroit some five years ago and his
career has been very successful in that city. He
built up an enormous trade in pianos and musi-
cal wares. He is a tireless worker and kind
employer, and a keen judge of salesmanship in
others. He surrounded himself by men who
could readily grasp his methods and work in-
telligently in his behalf. The business of C. J.
Whitney & Co. and C. W. Marvin was consoli-
dated last spring under the name of the Whit-
ney-Marvin Music Co. The consolidation of
these two large houses makes one of the
strongest corporations in the State of Michigan,
and those persons acquainted with the two prin-
cipals need not be told there is nothing lacking
either in capital, hustle, ability and business
reputation to make the new house a greater
power in the world of trade. The pianos which
this firm handle principally are the Chickering,
Hallet & Davis, Chase Bros., Estey and Keller
Bros.
JAHES A. QUEST,
Burlington.
Probably there are few more popular men in
the western music trade than the subject of this
sketch. James A. Guest, the well known music
dealer, of Burlington, Iowa, was born at Lyons,
Wayne County, New York. He is of English
descent, his ancestors coming over in the ship
Delaware in the year 1686, and settling near
Philadelphia. At the age of 17 Mr. Guest
left school and enlisted August, 1862, as a
private in the 160th New York Vols., serving
hi's country faithfully until November, 1865.
He remembers very distinctly before his de-
parture for New Orleans of doing guard duty
where the New York Post Office building now
stands.
He was in the 19th Army Corps, and took
part in many battles, among the number Ft.
Bisland, Siege of Port Hudson, Sabine, Cross
Roads and Pleasant Hill, La., with Grant on the
James and with Sheridan at Winchester, Va.,
where he was severely wounded. He was com-
missioned Lieutenant by Gov. Fenton in 1865.
At the close of the war Mr. Guest found he
had saved about $400. He at once completed a
JAMES A. GUEST.
regular course at Ames Business.College, Syra-
cuse, N. Y. Entered the employ of Remsen &
Redgrave, Lyons, N. Y., as bookkeeper. He
removed to Belle Plaine, Iowa, in the autumn of
1866, continuing in the same business for two
years, at which time he began business for him-
self, as agent for the American Express Com-
pany, and was engaged in the insurance, piano,
organ, sewing machine and real estate business.
In 1874 he removed to Burlington, Iowa, and
succeeded to the old business of Lange & Van
Meter, dealers in pianos and organs.
In June, 1877, his establishment was burned
to the ground. His losses were great, but he
kept right on until now his business extends
over several States. His sales average about one
hundred thousand dollars a year.
Mr. Guest has long been identified with the
Masonic order; was chosen Grand Commander
of the Order of Knights Templar in the year of
1890.
He is now, after ten years of service in
the National Guard of Iowa, Colonel of the 2d
Infantry (twelve companies).
He has a beautiful and happy home, and life
altogether with him is full of sunshine and glad-
ness.
MRS.
W. C. PENFIELD,
Minneapolis.
The subject of our sketch, Mrs. W. C. Penfield,
was born in Cleveland, O., January 31, 1859.
While still a child she removed with her parents
to the prairie lands of Illinois, where they
bought a farm in Bureau County, near the village
of Princeton. There were no schools, except at
some distance, and a teacher was employed and
private instruction was given to her until the
age of ten, by which means she was enabled to
be in advance of pupils of the age of fifteen
years. At that early time the task of support-
ing herself, the race for life, was begun in earn-
est. Arranging for board with an older married
brother in the village, she secured office work,
such as folding papers and holding copy, until
later book-keeping was taken up, at which em-
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW.
IO
MRS.
W. C.
ployment she remained almost constantly for
eleven years. With a view of going into the
mercantile business at some time, private teach-
ers were engaged, and the study of French,
Swedish and German was commenced. The
French teacher being also a salesman of musical
instruments, the feasibility of embarking in the
same business suggested itself. She learned
that very, very few women were ever successful,
nevertheless she decided to make the venture,
and through the kindly advice of a Chicago
firm a location was decided upon. Taking what
earnings she had saved, she started for Minne-
apolis, Minnesota, on November 23d, 1878, an
entire stranger to every person in the place.
From that day to the present writing success has
crowned her efforts. She has acquired a large
trade, and is the Northwestern agent for several
of the first-grade pianos. She is not simply a
seller of instruments, but a dealer in them and
in all manner of musical merchandise, and man-
ages her rather difficult business with as much
ease as any man engaged in the same line of
business.
WILLIAM H. CURRIER,
Toledo.
William H. Currier, was born in Canandaigua,
Ontario County, New York, October 30th, 1840.
His parents were farmers and both musical; his
father taught singing school, and with the use
Michigan, and continued to cultivate a large
farm. In the summer time they would hoe and
plow from morning until noon, have dinners
and then practice brass band music for thirty or
forty minutes, then resume their field work un-
til evening, then spend one hour singing and
one hour practising orchestral music under the
tutorage of a professor from the city, until the
older sons and daughters married and left the
family home for themselves. Mr. Currier com-
menced teaching newly organized brass bands,
composing and arranging music for bands and
orchestras. In 1864 he commenced the sale of
pianos and organs in the city of Cold water,
Mich., and in 1868 came to Toledo and engaged
in the same business on a larger scale, pushing
out in every direction, selling the Chickering,
Bradbury and Emerson pianos and Peloubet and
Blake organs. In 1870 he joined Mr. W. W. Lor-
ing & Whitney, who had been established in
Toledo in the piano and organ business since 1860,
and moved into their present quarters, the new
firm becoming Whitney & Currier. Mr. Whitney
then having poor health, the management of
the new firm devolved upon Mr. Currier, and
to the present time, now 24 years since the
first partnership, finds the Whitney & Currier
Co. a corporation, and continuing with some
of the same lines of instruments which they
were selling at the commencement.
During
the period covered by this sketch the busines of
the house has extended through many States.
All the company's business operations and un-
dertakings have proved financially successful.
In 1874 Mr. Whitney moved to San Diego,
California, where he has since resided, and has
largely withdrawn his holdings in the house,
Mr. Currier being the president and manager.
Within the past year the wholesale department
has been greatly curtailed and the retail de-
partments strengthened. The Whitney &
Currier Co. is now counted one of the old
houses in the West, and enjoys an honorable
record of prompt payment of every obligation
when due, and during the past year, when under
the depressed condition of business which pre-
vailed everywhere, this Company paid all its
obligations promptly without asking renewal
or extension, and is out of debt and make all
purchases with spot cash. The line of pianos
carried by The Whitney & Currier Co. is
Knabe, Boardman & Gray, Briggs, Schubert
and Hale, and organs from Ann Arbor, Palace
D. ROY BOWLBY.
with the W. W. Kimball Co. 's goods for twenty-
five years and have never bought but two organs
outside of the goods which they handle.
We control a territory of 75 miles radius
around Rock Island and do a wholesale and
retail business. For the past thirteen years our
annual expense here has averaged $15,000.00.
We have ten employees, five of whom travel on
the road.
During eleven years from 1880 to 1890, inclu-
sive, we sold goods in 226 towns outside of
Rock Island, and at wholesale and retail the ag-
gregate number of pianos and organs we sold
reached 11,000. We published a pamphlet at
that time giving the names of our customers,
some of whom were dealers who bought a great
many instruments, but their names appear only
once. I think there are about 3,500 names in
the book.
After being identified with the W. W. Kim-
ball Co. and their goods for a quarter of a
century, I think I shall spend the remainder of
my musical career in that connection."
EDWARD NENNSTIEL,
St. Louis.
Edward Nennstiel is a German by birth. He
came to St. Louis in 1850, when a young man,
and has lived there ever since. He was a teacher
of music till 1864, when he went into the piano
and Arcade.
w. H. CURRIER.
of a blackboard, upon which a musical staff was
drawn, taught his children—eleven in number
—the rudiments of music. A few years later a
teacher was hired to come to their house, and
his six boys were instructed in brass and or-
chestral music. In 1852 the family moved to
the village of Grass Lake, Jackson County,
D. ROY BOWLBY
Rock Island.
D. Roy Bowlby was born in a little country
hamlet in Huron County, Ohio, in 1852, and re-
ceived his education in a small country school-
house up to the year 1865. He then came to
Illinois with his father who was engaged in the
manufacture and sale of dulcimers, and traveled
all through Eastern and Central Illinois up to
the year 1869.
He then commenced the sale of pianos and
organs, on commission, in partnership with his
brother, W. W. Bowlby. They handled the
W. W. Kimball goods, the Hallet & Davis
and other pianos and the Smith American
organ, with headquarters at Peoria, and then at
Lacon, Marshall Co., and finally they went to
Wyoming, Stark Co., in the year 1874. In 1877
partnership was dissolved with his brother and
he went on the road for W. W. Kimball Co.
as a general agent, establishing agencies, col-
lecting, etc.
He established their first branch house in
Rock Island in January, 1880, and has been
located there ever since. In the year 1885 he
secured the principal interest in the business and
has since been running it on his own account.
Mr. Bowlby says: " I have been connected
EDWARD NENNSTIEL.
business which has proven successful. He has
handled Ltndeman & Sons, Dunham & Sons,
Boardman & Gray pianos, and Mason & Hatnlln
organs. The store Mr. Nennstiel now occupies
is his own property, where at present he handles
the Chase Bros, and Francis Bacon pianos, and
has a lucrative renting business. He has always
borne a name for honest dealing in all lines.

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