With its rounded sides and modernistic design, there was never another American
outside horn phonograph that looked anything like this hefty disc Columbia. Its
appearance almost previews the Art Deco craze of 20 years later. Most collectors
would refer to this machine as a Type BD. Picking up the case of the earlier front
mount AY-AR, the rear mount BD was introduced in 1905 with a triple spring motor
for extended playing time. (There was also a version sold with double spring motor,
designated the BJ.) The BD was an expensive, upscale, top of the line machine, as
one might suspect from its appearance and the use of mahogany rather than oak. Price
at its introduction was $100. This example has as beautiful a cabinet as I have
ever seen on one of these machines, gorgeous original finish and decals. The nickel
plating on the arm and bracket are quite good. There are no dents or scratches.
There is just the slightest hint of Columbia veneer lift on one edge of the motorboard.
The reproducer has been rebuilt, with a new needle chuck, and plays very strong.
Click on the 'Listen' button and hear it for yourself. The motor is playing smoothly.
I had pulled, cleaned and adjusted the governor on this machine to get a steady
speed for you. The large nickel horn, with 21.5 inch bell, is the correct horn for
this machine. The horn has some typical corrosion, weathering, and push back at
the end of the petals. There is a very small crease between two of the petals. There
are no large dings or dents, and the threaded end of the horn is not damaged as
you sometimes see. This horn is fairly hard to find, and we were happy to get it
with the machine. As impressive as it was in 1908! $3000
More about The Columbia Graphophone and Grafonola....
A Graphophone was a phonograph made by the Columbia Phonograph Company under one
of its myriad of corporate identities. Graphophones played both cylinder and 78rpm
records. A Grafonola was an internal horn phonograph made by the Columbia Phonograph
Company that played 78rpm records.
For many of the years we are interested in the American Graphophone Company, with
factories in Bridgeport, Connecticut, was the manufacturing arm of the enterprise,
and the Columbia Phonograph Company was the sales and distribution arm. The Columbia
Phonograph Company, General was a sort of holding company. There were other corporate
incarnations, but modern collectors don't pay much attention to such things and
just lump everything together as 'Columbia'. In 1921, facing bankruptcy, Columbia
was taken over by its British branch, but although these later years are of great
interest to record collectors they are only peripheral to our story, which begins
in 1880.
In 1880 Alexander Graham Bell was awarded the Volta Prize, $20,000, from the government
of France. Bell used the funds to set up a research laboratory in Washington, D.C,
headed by his cousin Chichester Bell and Charles Sumner Tainter, a distinguished
scientist and instrument maker. Bell and Tainter had set out to do sound reproduction
experiments involving the telephone, but their attention soon shifted to the phonograph,
whose development had languished while Edison busied himself with other projects
such as the electric light.
Edison's phonograph had employed a strip of tin foil, indented by a needle. Bell
and Tainter employed a cardboard cylinder coated with ozocerite, a type of wax,
incised by a needle. Of such a fine semantic distinction, indented versus incised,
was over a decade of litigation to be born. Bell and Tainter patented some of their
inventions and then went to Edison with a proposal to merge their forces. Edison
turned them down flat.
The Bell-Tainter patents came under the control of the Volta Graphophone Company,
later the American Graphophone Company. These companies were controlled by a group
of men primarily in the Washington area, most prominent among them Edward Easton,
a lawyer and Supreme Court reporter, who was to become the president of Columbia.
In 1888 Jessee Lippincott, a Pittsburgh businessman who had made a lot of money
in the glass business, sought to create a monopoly of the phonographic trade by
analogy to the telephone system. Regional territories were to be created and rights
sold. Lippincott bought out Edison and Columbia, although Columbia cut him a much
harder deal. Columbia was also established as a regional territory of Lippincott's
North American Phonograph Company. This era is known to phonograph collectors as
the Consolidated Period.
By 1894 Lippincott was dead and the North American Phonograph Company was a failure,
as it had become evident that the telephone system was not the proper business model
for the phonograph. Edison was forced to throw the North American Phonograph Company
into bankruptcy in order to reclaim his patents, and because of this for legal reasons
there was around a two year span during which Edison could not manufacture many
phonographs. This allowed Columbia to jump into the market. Philip Mauro, the brilliant
attorney of the Graphophone Company, attacked Edison with litigation and tried to
sow doubt about the validity of the Edison patents. The end result of this was a
cross-licensing of patents.
The Bell-Tainter machines had never performed as well as the Edison models. Thomas
Macdonald, Columbia's factory manager, scrambled to to fit some of the machines
with Edison type wax cylinders cut to the now standard 100 threads per inch. Before
long Columbia introduced a series of spring-motor cylinder Graphophones, several
of them designed and patented by MacDonald. One of the first to achieve popular
acceptance was the Columbia A, followed by the N, C and others. These machines employed
a floating reproducer, of black gutta percha at least on the earlier models. This
reproducer, although acceptable, was acoustically inferior to the Edison reproducer
with overhanging weight, which wasn't emulated until later, probably for patent
reasons. An improved spring-contact reproducer was introduced with the B series
of cylinder Graphophones, featured at the 1906 St. Louis World's Fair.
The best selling cylinder Graphophones were probably the Model Q, an openworks machine
which sold for $5 without lid, and the Model B,. another openworks machine which
sold for $10 and was nicknamed the Eagle, the stamping on a $10 coin. By 1902 it
was becomming apparent to insiders in the phonograph trade that the long term prognosis
of the cylinder phonograph was not healthy. Berliner's Gramophone, which had evolved
into the Victor Talking Machine, was stealing sales from the cylinder machines as
the flat disc records became louder and more lifelike, a development particularly
irksome to Columbia in urban areas where it was dominant. Columbia had tested the
waters with a Toy Graphophone in 1899 (using a center-start record for patent armor),
but it wasn't until sometime in 1902 that they jumped into the market in a major
way. They acquired some patents originally belonging to Joseph Jones, a former Berliner
employee, and these patents and the reputation of Columbia's legal department were
sufficient to eventually intimidate Victor into a cross-licensing agreement. The
first Disc Graphophones, the AH and AK, were introduced in 1902 and 1903.
Most cylinder Graphophones play a record two minutes in length. (I show you how
to distinguish record speed in another posting.) Shortly after Edison introduced
his improved gold moulded records Columbia came out with a moulded black wax record
of their own. These records do not have the quality of the Edison product and are
especially susceptible to mildew, a defect that became embarassingly apparent even
when the records were new (although of course you can play Edison records on your
Graphophone). By 1908, when Edison introduced his four minute records, Columbia
was only marginally participating in the cylinder trade. A few late cylinder Graphophones
were equipped with a switch and a reduction gear to accomodate four minute records,
and a universal stylus midway between two and four minute cut was fitted to Columbia
reproducers. In 1908 Columbia committed to buy the entire production of the Indestructible
Record Company of Albany, New York, a maker of celluloid cylinders; these were marketed
as Columbia Indestructible Records.
Unlike Edison, who manufactured a relatively limited range of models, Columbia produced
a vast panopoly of machines covering every available niche in the market. I'll mention
some here, and show you some pictures of them in the next section of this article,
although unfortunately I don't have pictures of every Columbia Graphophone to display
for you. There were cylinder machines on the order of the Edison Standard, such
as the AZ, AT, and BK. There was a series of cylinder machines designed for an extra
long six inch cylinder, the BE, BF, and BG, also introduced at the St. Louis fair.
A cylinder machine which made use of frictional amplification via an amber wheel,
the Twentieth Century or BC. Machines to play the five inch cylinders -- Concerts
in Edison nomenclature or Grands in Columbia parlance: the AG, HG, and the powerful
GG or Graphophone Grand. Inexpensive trivet type cylinder machines without feedscrew
such as the AP. And of course all the Disc Graphophones, an A series of front-mounts
and a B series of rear-mounts.
The Bell-Tainter machines are so rare that their identification is best left to
the province of a small group of experts, much as in the same manner that only a
professor of dead languages can translate ancient Etruscan. Most of the regular
cylinder Graphophones are marked either by a name tag, or by a stamping on the left
of the upperworks. The disc Graphophones aren't that easy to identify, you have
to match them up against a catalogue. Columbia advertising copywriters worked overtime
to concoct glorious names for most of these models, such as the BI Sterling or the
BD Majestic, but I've almost never heard modern collectors refer to them by anything
other than their alphabetical designation.
Masters of disguise: Grafonola as gaming table The Grafonola, an internal horn disc
Graphophone, was introduced in 1907, around a year after Victor begat the first
Victrola. Only a few have great appeal to contemporary collectors. There are the
early Grafonalas such as the Symphony Upright and Symphony Grand, which resembled
a Chinese pagoda and a small, upright piano, respectively. There was a series of
expensive Grafonola art case or period machines, in the styles of Hepplewhite, Sheraton,
Adam and others. There was the Viva-Tonal, Columbia's equivalent to the Orthophonic
Credenza, the apex of the development of acoustic reproduction. According to many
collectors the Viva-Tonal surpassed the Victor Orthophonic in acoustic fidelity.
There was a series of Grafonolas in which the Grafonola was disguised as an article
of household furniture, such as a desk or an end-table. Other than this, there isn't
much collecting interest in the great run of Grafonolas, although this may change
with time.