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 Throughout the majority of the Starr Piano Company’s
history, the Whitewater River Valley Gorge in Richmond, Indiana,
provided a home and headquarters for the company’s myriad divisions,
some located as far away as Australia. Richmond’s Starr Piano
Company began as the small Trayser Piano Company, which was launched
by George Trayser, Richard Jackson, and James Starr in 1872. Building on the piano-building expertise of
George Trayser, a German-born piano craftsman, James and Benjamin
Starr moved operations to the Gorge in the mid-1880s. The Starr
brothers came from one of Richmond's original Quaker families, which
was prominent in Richmond's early development.
As the Company grew, the Starr
brothers began to sell pianos through the Jesse French Company,
based in St. Louis. Henry Gennett, then vice-president of the Jesse
French Company, and his father-in-law, John Lumsden, began merger
negotiations with James and Benjamin Starr that resulted in the 1893
incorporation of the Starr Piano Company, a new incarnation of the
earlier Trayser Piano Company. Starr pianos gained an international
reputation and distribution, winning awards for their quality at
Chicago's Columbian Exposition in 1893, the St. Louis World's Fair
in 1904, and many other international exhibitions.
By 1897, Starr Piano Company stock had doubled in
value, and operations continued to grow exponentially. The Starr
Piano Company was part of an elite group of American piano
manufacturers that controlled over 75 percent of the booming piano
market. The Starr Piano Company had stores in nearly every major
U.S. city and frequently shipped pianos overseas. At this point in
American history, the piano held a prominent role in American
culture, which helps explain the development of a flourishing market
for pianos.
During the 1800s, the piano was the primary
medium for the dissemination of popular music. Americans clambered
to buy pianos, the presence of which in one’s home helped to signify
the achievement of middle-class, genteel status. Before the advent
of radio and the spread of recorded music, many Americans chose to
buy popular tunes in the form of sheet music that could be performed
at home on the piano. With the popularization of player pianos in
the early part of the 1900s, the music industry gained another
product to exploit. The Starr Piano Company, eager to profit from
the new player piano technology, began selling player pianos and
piano rolls around 1906.
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