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Musical Instruments

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The Foundation’s musical instrument collection was developed to illustrate the types of instruments known in Williamsburg, the colony of Virginia, and, to a lesser degree, the middle Atlantic and southern states. The collection covers the period from 1700 to about 1830, when musical instruments were on the verge of rapid technological change. The dominance of London-made instruments in the collection accurately reflects conditions in early Virginia. Not until a quarter century after the American Revolution did the great American musical instrument industry begin to flourish.

The more broadly focused collection of folk musical instruments includes American-made examples of all periods. It features banjos, fiddles, zithers, hammered dulcimers, jaw harps, and such related objects as a music stand apparently made for shape-note singing books.

The collection was launched in 1938 when a succession of musicians began their service as musical consultants to the Foundation. This predisposed the collection to its particular strength in keyboard instruments. Thirty-five early keyboards are now in the collection, along with one historic revival harpsichord made in 1908 by Arnold Dolmetsch in the Boston piano factory of Chickering & Sons. Keyboards include spinets, harpsichords, organs, grand pianos, and a vertical piano. Nearly half of the overall keyboard collection is composed of square pianos—a ratio of keyboard types that is not far from what might have been found in Virginia in the latter part of the collection timeframe.

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Record
Dated 1764
DOS2007-PC-046
1780-1820
Record
1788-1821
D2014-CMD. German flute 1953-952,A
1809-1817
Conservation Photograph
Early 20th century
Record
1750-1800
DS2003-0600
1750-1790
D2014-CMD. Spinet 1937-260
1725-1740
1937-286, Oboe
1750-1800
1993-11, Bow
Ca. 1810
1993-10, Bow
Ca. 1760
1998-32, Violin
1760-1770
Conservation Photograph
1750-1850
D2014-CMD. Organ 1954-432,A
1740-1760