In a dark corner of my cellar I found this old music box
I have not looked inside it for decades. So my curiosity was great. How old is it and does it still work?
The spring motor, regulator and pick-up transportation was all right. Only the needles were gone.
Taking a closer look at the maker's plates ought to show a bit of the origin and age.
All those patent dates do give quite a bit of interesting information.
The origin was a brainchild of Thomas A Edison’s in 1877. But the vast improvements in Charles Tainter and Chichester Bell’s patents from 1886 to 1897 were most important. Together these three gentlemen founded the North American Phonograph Co. Edison kept to his original idea of the phonograph as a dictating machine. The subsidiary Columbia Co however got the rights to market it as a music machine with lots of entertaining cylinders.
An uncle of my fathers who owned this Graphophone managed to engrave a few songs on some of the wax cylinders in the 1920’s. Many years ago I took those short sound recordings to our National Library where they preserved them electronically.
The brittle brown or black wax cylinders played for 2 minutes on this machine and were more or less worn out over time.
Edison’s last attempt to compete with Emile Berliner's Gramophone was the Blue Amberol as late as 1912. They were “indestructible” celluloid cylinders with twice the playing time. A new type of machine was introduced to fit the slower feeding of the pickup. The increasing development in high quality sound made the Amberolas popular for yet another decade.
Already in 1901 the inventor of Gramophone records Emile Berliner had this huge hit with a recording of President McKinley's last public speech at the opening of the Buffalo Exposition September 6th 1901, the same day he was assassinated.
Several gramophone companies competed in the beginning of the century. Victor was one of them. This 7 inches copy of the record seems to be from 1904.
So in the long run the market for Phonograph Cylinders decreased. The flat gramophone records were easier to produce, store and handle. They became the future of acoustic sound recording.