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A HAMMOND HISTORY
A
historic view:
The
following article by John Majeski, Jr. appeared in the may 1960 issue
of "Music Trades" magazine and provides a unique insight in
the first 25 years of Hammond history...
(All information in this article is only accurate as far as known at that
time... in 1960!)
Henry Ford's marketing foresight may have been slightly clouded when he
uttered some of his opinions, notably, "The public can have any color
Model T they want, providing it's black." But twenty five years ago
last month when he placed the first order for a Hammond Organ, a week
before it was announced to the public, he displayed a prophetic recognition
of the organ's future market. "In twenty years, there should be one
in every home in America," he declared to Emory Penny. Penny, then
sales manager of Hammond Clock Co. and the man who personally took the
order after a demonstration in Ford's Dearborn factory, was also told,
"you should sell organs at $300 . . . and don't fall into the hands
of those Eastern Bankers." That night enroute to the First and only
Industrial Arts Exposition which opened at Radio City in New York, Penny
wrote Laurens Hammond, "I feel he would lend us half a million dollars."
During the intervening quarter century, Hammond's pioneer organ trail
has developed into a superhighway with no speed limits posted. Almost
one billion dollars worth of electric (and electronic) organs have been
sold since Pietro Yon, famed organist of St. Patrick's Cathedral, demonstrated
the Hammond on April 15, 1935 at a press party. Hammond made news on that
day.
Fritz Reiner and Deems Taylor also played the organ as accompaniment for
Lily Pons, Rosa Ponselle, Giovanni Martinelli and Colette D'Arville. News
reel men and reporters loved it and accorded it an avalanche of publicity.
Unrecognized by most industry seers and merchants, a new era in music
retailing had been launched. In a year still blighted by unemployment,
the first fifty Hammond dealers sold with ease at $1,250 each the scant
1,400 Model A organs shipped. Last year (1959), over four hundred Hammond
dealers sold over sixty million dollars worth of organs at retail out
of an estimated total of approximately one hundred and ten million dollars
worth of organs sold.
"The smart thing for an inventor to do," once observed Laurens
Hammond, "is to put together the old tricks that you have done before."
An historian might add, "and also what others have done before."
Without detracting from Hammond's achievement of inventing and marketing
the first commercially feasible non-pipe organ, what old tricks sired
Hammond's magical box ?Unconsciously, the key elements of the organ were
created in 1920 when Hammond patented a "tickless" spring driven
clock and also marketed a three dimensional movie viewer powered by a
synchronous motor. Neither succeeded commercially, but in 1928, they were
fused into the original Hammond Clock, "tick-less" and synchronous
motor driven.
Clock companies burgeoned and as late as 1931, just before the deluge,
Hammond Clock earned $577,348. In 1932, over 150 electric clock makers
ceased manufacture or liquidated. For the next four years, Hammond Clock
lost over four hundred thousand dollars. The electric clock market had
decayed to .89c premiums given away as Wrigley chewing gum premiums. Staff
was drastically cut. The force of six office boys was cut to two. One
of these was Stanley M. Sorensen, Hammond president since 1955.
In 1934, in Hammond',s annual report which showed a loss of $137,176,
the undreamed promise of a golden era was modestly announced: "We
have continued our development work on new items and plan the introduction
of a new product during the coming year. This item when 'introduced will
substantially augment our sales volume and further improve our operating
results."
Unrecorded save in the patent office and on yellowed newspaper clippings,
since 1890, there had been a steady stream of inventions and technical
papers on pipe-less organs. The achievement of Hammond in synthesizing
a rotating tone generator, synchronous electric motor, keyboard and amplified
speaker is outstanding largely in view of the efforts of scores of contemporaries
who were seeking the same end and had common access to the same generic
elements. None had succeeded with a serviceable instrument, adaptable
to existing organ literature.
At the turn of the century, Thaddeus Cahill had filed five voluminous
patents comprising 322 pages for his Telharmonium. Cahill's Telharmonium
employed rotating magnetoelectric tone generators, each one man sized.
In 1908, he demonstrated his unit, the size of a small powerhouse (see
pictures) in New York City and elicited the praise and support of Mark
Twain. For a time, his organ music was piped over telephone lines to subscribers
like Muzak. Unfortunately, his only source of amplification was the telephone
mechanical diaphragm, a poor source of transmission. When his Telharmonium
interfered with telephone communications, Bell Telephone discontinued
the service. J. P. Morgan reputedly was the source of complaint when during
an important financial transaction on the telephone, the conversation
was drowned out by a flood of organ music.Photoelectric tone production
had been explored with prototypes dating back to 1916 by a number of inventors
including Van Der Bili, Hugonoit, Potter, Toulon, Spielmann, Goldthwaite,
Hardy, Lesti, and Eremeeff. Pure electronic musical tone generation began
with Duddell in 1899 and included Miller, Bethenod, DeForest, Mager, Coupleaux
and Givelet, Vierling and Kock, Langer, Helberger and Lertes, and Theremin,
whose instrument enjoys a tenuous survival.
Telefunken in Germany, marketed the Trautonium. As early as 1931, Richard
H.Ranger's pipeless organ was heard in broadcasts over Radio Station WOR,
Newark, N.J. Hoschke had already developed the windblown harmonium reed
electronic organ, marketed as the orgatron.
George of Thomas Organ
In Cincinnati, OH., Thomas George a young telephone engineer who liked
to play the organ, started building one in 1932 as a hobby. In 1934, he
filed some patents which came to the attention of Hammond, then mid-way
between patents and prototype. John Hanert, Hammond's chief engineer,
visited him in Cincinnati and persuaded him to join his firm. George remained
with Hammond until 1941. In 1955 after unsuccessful attempts with scores
of electronic companies, several of which are now (in 1960) again contemplating
organ manufacture, he succeeded in having Pacific-Mercury use his patents.
His organ is now marketed under his surname as the Thomas Organ.
The principal element in the electric clock manufactured by Hammond Clock
Co. was the small, rugged, synchronous electric motor. Hammond had first
used the motor in his Teleview, a three-dimension motion picture which
closed one month after opening to critical acclaim at the Selwyn Theatre
in New York City on Dec. 27, 1922. The motor powered a special viewfinder
in which a revolving shutter enabled the spectator to view in three-dimensional
form, the screen upon which two projectors simultaneously cast an image.
At that point the only relation of music to the synchronous motor lay
in the orchestral accompaniment composed and conducted by Paul Tietjens,
noted American composer and one time brother-in-law of Hammond. John Borden,
Chicago mining heir, whose daughter later married Adlai Stevenson, cheerfully
lost $120,000 in the venture. Hammond acquired a permanent interest in
the synchronous motor.
A $350 weekly royalty from Ziegfeld for a simplified version of the viewer
used for trick effects in the 1925 Ziegfeld Follies, encouraged Hammond
to work as an independent inventor instead of joining Western Electric
at $64 per week.
The following year he joined E. F. Andrews, as a partner in the Andrews-Hammond
Laboratories. Andrews, a former radio manufacturer, and Hammond invented
the A-Box, a temperamental mechanism with a penchant for exploding that
in quiet, moments enabled a wet cell radio to be played by being plugged
directly into an outlet. Within less than a year, radios without batteries
were on the market and the A-box part boon, part menace was dead.
From his partnership with Andrews who for many year served as a director
of the Hammond Co. and is one of the principal original stockholders,
the tiny company had the rudiments of an engineering research staff. During
its brief A-Box period, it also acquired a sales staff : F. H. Redmond,
vice-president and general manager until his death in 1953; and Emorv
Penny, sales manager until he resigned in 1944 to head Penny-Owsley Music
Co. in Los Angeles.
The clock
market diesPenny met Hammond at the 1926 radio show while he was advertising
manager for a radio company. Hammond met him casually, they liked one
another and he accepted his offer to sell A-Boxes. Penny (see picture)
proved to be an indefatigable salesman who sold A-Boxes, electric clocks
by the thousand, $25.00 Hammond electric bridge tables in the depths of
the depression in 1932, and finally the first Hammond Organ to Henry Ford.
In 1928, the future organ giant was incorporated as the Hammond Clock
Co. Hammond had found a new use for synchronous motor applied to his old
1920 patent for a "tickless" clock. Earnings were substantial
and reached $507,120 after Federal Income taxes of $69,627 in 1931. (In
1959, Hammond paid $4,511,009 federal taxes on income of $8,786,796).
The following year, in addition to general economic woe, 150 clock makers
ceased operations and glutted the market with distressed, below cost,
clock merchandise. A blood red statement of loss on Hammond's earnings
report exercised a coercive inspiration to find new uses for the company's
electric motor.
Depression and bridge tables
In the Fall of 1931 the company marketed its Hammond Electric Bridge Table,
retailing at $25. Powered by an electric motor, the table in its brief
life of one year (none was ever built after 1932) earned revenues of $300,000
and verv possibly saved the company.
Another abortive attempt at utilizing the motor was in the development
of a motor driven record turntable, the first ever proposed in a field
hitherto powered by spring driven units of unstable speeds. The innovation
failed due to chaotic conditions in the economy and in the radio industry
in particular.
By 1933, Hammond's little synchronous electric motor had powered three-D
movie viewers, clocks and clock calendars, and bridge tables. Currently
and without profit, they were helping to produce music from other firm's
records. Thirty years earlier, Cahill in his Telharmonium had empirically
demonstrated Helmholtz's theory of tone: that tonal timbre depends on
the order number and intensity of one of the partial structure of a musical
tone.
In simpler terms. the wave length of any musical tone may be described
mathematically. With the advent of electricity, scores of inventors had
demonstrated that musical sounds could be reproduced by controlled electrical
wavelengths instead of mechanical force. (Organ pipe air column, vibrating
string either struck, plucked or bowed, etc.)
Eremeeff's pipeless organ had already been well received in a concert
given under American Guild of Organists auspices. B.F. Miessner's encyclopedia
patents cast a shadow on many developments not already patented. R.C.A.
in 1930 had paid Theremin $100,000 for his "easy to play" instrument,
envisioning a vast home market.A pre-sputnick beep!Early in 1933 a peculiar
"beep" emanated along with the sound of records being played
on the experimental phonograph turntables in the laboratory of the Hammond
Clock Co. At the end of the day, Hammond asked the firm's ass't treas.
W. L.Lahey, whose office was nearby, if he had heard anything unusual.
Lahey, who also was organist at St. Christopher's Episcopal Church in
Oak Park, Ill., replied that he had heard a flute. "You did?,"
replied Hammond. "Well. I've made an electric flute."
The next day Hammond and his engineers began to explore in earnest the
infinite possibilities of producing conventional musical tones by electric
synthesis. A non-musician, Hammond relied upon Lahey to appraise the qualities
of the tones he produced. Although unconfirmable, it is inconceivable,
that Hammond and his staff were not intimately cognizant of all previous
experiments in the field.
Hammond bought a second hand piano for $15 and threw away everything except
the keyboard. Judging from anecdotes that have filtered down from associates,
Hammond's laboratory experimented upon a wide variety of tonal production
methods. Unlike most of his predecessors in the field. Hammond's concept
of an invention was happily colored by his experience as a manufacturer.
Every product is a theory modified by the exigencies of manufacturing
and marketing. Hammond by his work demonstrated implicitly the ascendancy
of rugged serviceability and ease of manufacture.
By mid 1933, Hammond was concentrating on his own original tone generator,
an invention prefigured by Cahill's Telharmonium three decades earlier.
Instead of being of powerhouse dynamo proportions like Cahill's, Hammond's
original adaptation of the principle were tiny steel wheels, the size
of a half dollar. For rugged serviceability and ease of manufacture, Hammond's
tone wheel surpassed in practicality all previous exploration. The slight
departure from some of partials found in the tempered scale and listed
in Hammond's patent No. 1,956,350 are perceptible only under laboratory
analysis.
On Jan. 19, 1934, Hammond and his organist, Louise Benke, also typist,
filed an application for a patent after demonstrating the new instrument
in the basement of the Patent Office. With unprecedented speed, the patent
was granted on April 24, in the hope that it would create employment in
an economy heavily dependent upon WPA. Throughout the balance of the year,
and according to some reports, virtually until a few days before its public
debut, the organ underwent constant refinements.
Ironically for a company that has pioneered the theory of exposure, more
exposure and still more exposure, the first Hammond organ was bought by
Henry Ford instead of being sold to him. Ford actually beat a path to
Hammond's door before "the better mouse trap" was available.Mr.
Ford orders organEarly in the blustery, snowy morning of Feb. 7, 1934,
two Ford Motor Co. engineers walked unannounced into the Hammond Clock
Co. plant on Western Ave. in Chicago. Embarrassedly they explained to
Redmond and Penny that a few days earlier, Mr. Ford had told them, gesturing
with his hands, to build an electronic organ, "so big, by so big,
by so big." Two months later Penny in demonstrating the organ to
Ford, understood their embarrassment when he heard the industrialist declare,
"I never let people know what I am buying or they will charge me
too much."
The Ford engineers intimated cautiously that Mr. Ford's requests were
instinctively executed immediately in an "or else" atmosphere.
Equally moved by the great man's appeal and their self-preservation reflex,
they had explored the U.S. Patent office and to their intense delight
had found Hammond's patent. It fitted perfectly Ford's specifications
of "so big, by so big, by so big." Could they please buy one
immediately?
Hammond explained that the production prototype would be displayed in
New York City at the first (and only) Industrial Arts Exposition on April
15, and would be available after that date. A few days later, Ford extended
a personal invitation to Hammond to "bring the organ to Dearborn
when ready."
Early in April, 1935, the first Hammond Organ Model A left the plant en
route to Mr. Ford and its New York debut. For economy reasons, it traveled
in a well worn. battered Ford panel truck, chauffeured by Penny, the sales
manager and John Hanert, chief engineer. Penny recalls that he did all
of the driving en route because of Hanert's tendency to doze at the wheel.
Ford's appointment was for 7:30 a.m. and to ensure promptness, Penny and
Hanert drove up to the main gate of the Dearborn plant at 7 a.m. "What
an hour for demonstrating an organ," recalls Penny who now retails
from five plush stores with twelve station wagons for outside selling.
Penny recalls that after bumping over interminable rutted, muddy roads,
an unforeseen field test of the organ's durability, they were waved up
to a building, "with the most beautiful wooden floor I have ever
seen." Penny hesitated to drive in with his gritty, muddied tires
but was hospitably welcomed in. "I certainly hated to drive a truck
over that gorgeous floor."
Some musicians with antique, hillbilly instruments arrived -and finally
at 8 a.m., Ford entered imperiously. At first Ford didn't even look at
the organ. Greatly interested at that time in "Barn Dancing,"
Ford said, "Listen to the musicians, we are going to play for the
kids." Penny listened attentively and recalls in his diary that like
many great men, "Ford had little interest or enthusiasm except for
his own products."
Ford on soybeans and cigarettes
Finally Ford listened to Hanert demonstrate the new organ and expressed
his terse and accurate appraisal of its future: "In twenty years,
there should be one in every home in America." At 11 a.m., with quiet
affection, he announced, "Mother is waiting for me for lunch, these
gentlemen will take care of you." Penny thought, "four hours
of listening and still no sale."
Penny and Hanert were ushered into a sumptuous executive dining room whose
appointments belied the food. The weird assortment on the luncheon plate
defied both palate and analysis. "Soybeans," clarified one of
his tablemates furtively, "Mr. Ford says they're good for you and
you have to like them too." Penny reluctantly downed his first and
last encounter with Ford's ubiquitous soybean and before horrified eyes
restrained him, had almost succeeded in lighting a cigarette. "Mr.
Ford does not permit smoking," chorused his hosts apprehensively.
Ford's advice on buying
After luncheon, Ford returned and showed Penny and Hanert through his
Greenfield Dearborn museum. "See that big beautiful locomotive,"
the mogul gestured, "I bought it for scrap." "I never let
people know that I am buying or they will ask too much." Ford than
asked the price of the organ, learned that it was $1,250, ordered a subordinate
to buy one and said good-bye.
Ford's homey adage, "History is bunk." ironically summarizes
his historic first purchase of a Hammond organ. Publicity myth makers
in official literature attribute the first sale to George Gershwin, pallid
copy compared to the truth of Ford. Several dealers in widely separated
areas also erroneously claim the distinction of the first sale.
Hammond's early organ is still on exhibit at the Greenfield Museum in
Dearborn along, with "firsts" by Ford and Edison. After a quarter
of a century, it plays on with a record of minimal service. Hammond later
accepted a personal invitation to visit Mr. Ford. Ford offered to lend
him money and engineers. Hammond politely demurred. And judging from Hammond's
historic growth and earning pattern, Hammond obviously declined Ford's
advice "to keep the price down and not make more than $20. profit
on each organ."
A fifty per cent chance exists that Ford's correspondence with Hammond
was picked up at the post office, sorted and placed upon his desk by Stanley
M. Sorensen, an energetic twenty-year-old mail clerk of tenacious Norwegian
origin. Sorensen had joined the clock company as a mail boy on August
25, 1931 after graduating from High School that Spring, aged 16. Elected
president in 1955, it was his first job and came only after two months
of haunting employment agencies. While some of the older boys received
only $6 per week, for some unknown reason, Sorensen started at $8. Two
years later, thanks to the NRA (National Recovery Act), he received his
first big raise. The Roosevelt administration had declared certain minimum
wage standards. To meet the requirements, the companies fired four of
their six boys and apportioned the work and pay to the pair that included
the company's future president.Dealing 2,000 hands of bridgeSorensen's
first assignment requiring personal responsibility occurred a few weeks
after he joined the firm. Hammond ordered him to deal out one thousand
hands of bridge manually, and also on his newly invented automatic bridge
table. Each hand had to be tabulated in order to be certain that the mechanical
bridge table shuffled and dealt the hands with no slips. After many long
days of compiling and shuffling, he personally presented his tabulation
to Hammond, elicited the word, "Great" and went back to shuffling
mail bags.
By 1940, Sorensen after night courses in accounting at Northwestern University,
had risen to the accounting department and was earning $30 per week. Like
all employees when he married that year, he felt entitled to a raise.
Company officials, perceiving no appreciation in his value to the firm
because of a change in his marital status, declined his suggestion, although
the following year he was increased to $33.The day Sorensen quit!In 1941
with the economy rising under stimulus of defense contracts, Sorensen
feeling that he "wasn't moving fast enough," negotiated a new
job with a small firm,that considered him a bargain at $60 per week. When
he walked into general manager Redmond's office to ask how soon the Hammond
Co. could release him, "everyone got excited and said you can't do
that."
Since Sorensen became president in 1955, Hammond has shown its greatest
fiscal progress. A steely, soft-spoken individual. he wryly remembers
learning years later that one of the directors in 1941 had recalled his
proposed resignation at that time with the statement, "we should
have fired that blockhead then."
During the War, Sorensen forged ahead rapidly on the strength of his performance
in renegotiating government contracts. In 1946, while Redmond and Merrill,
the two chief administrative executives fell ill, Hammond returned to
active administrative duties and began to rely on Sorensen for administrative
assistance. Later Redmond came back to work half days and Sorensen assisted
him. While chauffeuring him back and forth to work, he became acquainted
with top management policies. When Redmond died in 1953, Sorensen succeeded
him as vice-president and general manager.
In the candid opinion of one of the promoters of the one and only Industrial
Arts Exposition which opened in New York City on April 15, 1935, "the
show was a real flop but Hammond never had it so good." The promotion
of a product without parallel or precedent is a challenge that fortunately
rarely faces a publicity agent (in recent years more mellifluously termed
a public relations counselor). Erwin, Wasey, Hammond Clock's advertising
agency, fortunately dumped the problem into the cunning bands of Constance
Hope whose clients included Fritz Reiner, Martinelli, Lily Pons, Jascha
Heifetz, and Rosa Ponselle.
Hope solved the problem of blending the image of a serious musical instrument
with one of popular music appeal by staging a press party with a surfeit
of famous musicians. All were front page copy for family newspapers of
the period and the pictures gleaned from the party could pass for contemporary
advertising messages captioned, "Have Fun at the Organ."
Pietro Yon, organist at St. Patrick's Cathedral, and Fritz Reiner, now
Chicago Symphony conductor, demonstrated the organ and later Martinelli,
Melchior, Lily Pons and Rosa Ponselle broke into contrived, spontaneous
solos, duos and trios. Newsreels featured the organ in separate screenings
as a musical instrument with Martinelli singing Easter music and also
as a scientific wonder.
Hope was initially engaged on a one time basis but Penny and Redmond were
so pleased with her work that they engaged her on annual contract until
Pearl Harbor eliminated consumer production. In recalling her initial
introduction to Hamnond, Hope once wrote," If they had only known,
at the fee they named, we would have been willing to carry each Hammond
organ into the customer's house as well."
Hope actually did more than help deliver the 1,400 organs which were shipped
in the first year of production. While stodgy, company institutional advertising
aimed exclusively at the church and institutional market explained the
wonder of Bach on a Hammond, without neglecting the former, razzle-dazzle
Hope promoted skating rink and race track installations to serve as pegs
for sports-page headlines about "Avoir-dupois wins by two measure
of Brahms" and "Skating to the Skater's Waltz."
Roosevelt gets a Hammond
When the Novachord was introduced in 1939, Hope arranged presenting the
first one as a birthday present to Franklin Delano Roosevelt on Jan. 30,
1940. Eleanor Roosevelt. engulfed by reporters and newsreel men, personally
accepted the Novachord at Hammond's own New York studio on 57th St., then
managed by Earl Campbell, now owner of Campbell Music Co.. Washington.
D. C. and a past president of NAMM.
Hope also arranged a special Columbia record of "Happy Birthday,"
sung by Jan Peerce and Bidu Sayao accompanied by the Novachord. The first
disk was presented to Eleanor Roosevelt during a Town Hall engagement
and achieved wide and effective lineage.
Failure on bended knees
After the Industrial Arts Exposition. in late April, 1935, Penny barnstormed
New England and the middle-west with the Organ and the Ford truck, a far-cry
from today's Volkswagen, prospecting for dealers. Hanert and Penny after
being rebuffed in Providence, R. I., personally manhandled the organ into
M. Steinert & Sons' auditorium and won the enthusiastic approval of
Robert Steinert and Jerome Murphy, S., now owner of the firm and a Past
president of NAMM.
Penny recalls one unsuccessful presentation made on bended knees. Venerable
old Kramer of Allentown was so bowed by arthritis in his chair, that Penny
had to get on his knees to look him in the face. Kramer, like many other
merchants during those first months saw no commercial or musical future
for "the gadget." "We are in the music business,"
he said. But the majority of merchants went wild over the organ and Johnny
Jenkins of Kansas City and Perry Chrisler of Aeolian Co.. St. Louis gave
him a hero's welcome. Many confided at that time that the organ was the
product that saved them during those bleak selling years.
An unknown Ethel Smith
Ethel Smith's unrecorded first association with the Hammond Organ occurred
in "39" when she walked into Philpitt's Music store in Miami
to try the organ while Penny was there during one of his cross country
tours. Unknown then, Penny recalls loaning Collins Driggs, then a Hammond
staff organist, five dollars to take her out to dinner. A few years later.
Miss Smith was a celebrity in her own right after becoming firmly ensconced
on George Washington Hill's American Tobacco radio shows. Since then,
Ethel Smith's voluminous publications for the Hammond Organ have been
a major force in Hammond exposure and sales.
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