Shop

  • A rare, circa 1895 S.S. Stewart “Special Thoroughbred” 5-string banjo, in original condition. Silver plated pot 5-string neck is cherry Ebony fingerboard Carved heel Mother of pearl headstock inlays, with silver wire inserts also Tone ring is nickel plated on a birds-eye maple pot All of the special logos etc, are still on the inside of the banjo. Condition: amazing, original condition. Does have some wear, but it’s still shiny, and in great condition. (It even has its original leather case, not a very practical case, but original.) Tone is very nice, more focused and loud than the typical turn of the century open-back banjo. Price: $2950.
  • This extraordinary guitar, completed by C.T. Beitel in June of 1894, is signed and dated by him on the underside of the top. The guitar is in remarkably original condition. And it plays wonderfully. C.T. Beitel (Clemence T. Beitel, 1869-1916) was closely associated with C.F. Martin & Co. in the 1890’s. The Beitels are well known to have been closely associated with the Martin family in these years, both personally (including through marriage) and in the Martin guitar business. According to some correspondence and background research from family members obtained with this guitar, C.T. Beitel was the first American-born person to serve an apprenticeship at Martin Guitars. C.T. Beitel was a cousin to C.A. Zoebisch– who was of course the famous Martin guitar distributor and sometimes-partner of C.F. Martin & Co. in this period.   Although this guitar is strikingly faithful to Martin specs, this is most likely one of C.T. Beitel’s guitars made by him to market separately from Martin. It is documented that at least one of the Beitel family had an ongoing guitar making and marketing business in the late 1890’s. Is this Beitel guitar one of the first made under the “Beitel” name? Certainly. Are there others remaining today? There are none known of by us–making this a rare and highly collectible guitar. Similar to a Martin 2-27… but not exactly. More like a cross between a 2-27, a “28” style–because of the wonderful Herringbone purfling/binding on the top– and a 30’s or higher style with its very fancy Jerome tuners.
    • No “Martin” stamps anywhere
    • “C.T. Beitel” paper label on neck block (Martin stamp beneath the label? Uncertain)
    • Signed and dated on underside of top: “C.T. Beitel, 6/94, Easton” (i.e. Easton, PA)
    • X-braced top
    • All original finish; no touch-ups etc
    • Pearl inlay around sound hole
    • Herringbone purfling around top
    • Real Ivory binding, top, and back
    • Bound Ivory neck
    • Ebony bridge
    • Ebony fretboard (bound in Ivory)
    • Original Maple bridge plate
    • Size: a just bit bigger at lower bout than a Martin “2” size: 12 1/4 inches
    • Scale length: 24 3/4 inches
    • Body length: 18 3/8 inches
    • String spacing at bridge: 2 3/8 inches - Nut width: 1 7/8 inches
    • Body depth at bottom of guitar: 4 inches
    • Top: Adirondack Spruce
    • Back and sides: solid Brazilian Rosewood
    • Neck: Cedar
    • Headstock: Brazilian Rosewood veneer
    • Tuners: original, German-made Jerome tuners, with fancy flower engraving, and oval shaped Ivory tuner buttons. These tuners are typically found only on the highest model Martin guitars of those years
    • Tuner buttons: Ivory, oval-shaped
    This guitar has very very similar construction, design, and look/feel of a 1890’s Martin, including shape, X-bracing, headstock, pearl inlay, binding, Herringbone, internal braces, bridge, purfling, etc. We do not believe any neck set has ever been done to the guitar. Bridge has never been off. Neck is straight, and action is low/medium. Original bridge plate. All original finish. It plays amazingly well, with robust tone, and some of the best treble Brazilian rosewood ringing tone we have ever heard. (Amazingly accurate intonation: The original saddle is gone. Some previous owner had a great, ingeniously compensated saddle made and installed, so that the intonation of this guitar is excellent– while retaining its original bridge including the original saddle slot on the bridge.) There are three cracks on the top of the guitar. One is close to the center seam, and runs from bridge to the lower edge. The other top cracks are smaller, on the treble side of the top. There are two hairline, finish cracks on back (not visible on inside). Minor pick wear, beneath the sound hole. Tone and playability: superb. Wonderful tone, more full tone than a typical Martin 2-27. The trebles especially are bell-like and clear.
  • Signed by Martin factory foreman, underside of top: “Dec. 8, 1893”, this 0-28 is in wonderful original condition.
    • Instrument is 100% original: finish, bridge, ivory nut, ivory saddle, ivory bridge pins, bar frets
    • Brazilian Rosewood Back and Sides
    • Adirondack Spruce top
    • Shows very little wear
    • Scalloped braces (X-braced)
    • Original maple bridge plate in perfect condition
    • Original French-polish shellac finish throughout
    • 13.5" wide at lower bout, and 4.25" deep at the endpin
    • 24.9" scale length
    • 1-7/8" wide nut
    • Soft-V neck profile
    • A couple small top cracks, professionally repaired and not an issue. Two finish checks/cracks, that due not go through wood, on back
    Plays beautifully, with either silk and steel strings, or the stings I prefer on an instrument like this– Savarez Alliance Composite strings.
  • Signed by Martin factory foreman, underside of top: “6/1886”, this 0-28 is in stunning original condition. 1886 is the last year of the original factory in Nazareth, before Martin built the new factory addition in 1887. It is also the last year before they installed mechanized steam-run equipment to bend sides. So this wonderful 0-28, is one of the last of the totally hand-crafted Martins, built without mechanized equipment, and signed as such, 1886. Instrument is 100% original: finish, bridge, ivory nut, ivory saddle, ivory pins, bar frets, everything.
    • Crack-free
    • repaired center seam on top
    • Shows very little wear
    • Scalloped braces (X-braced)
    • original maple bridge plate
    • original French-polish shellac finish throughout
    • 13.5" wide at lower bout, and 4.25" deep at the endpin
    • 24.9" scale length
    • 1-7/8" wide nut
    • soft-V neck profile.
    Small section of binding and purfling missing from the lower back/side margin, was just seamlessly repaired by Folkway Music, one of North America’s finest Martin restoration shops. On underside of ivory saddle, and also, inside the saddle slot, engraved: "XXVII" This indicates that the saddle is the original to the guitar… It was most likely the way that Martin craftsmen kept matched parts together during the building process. The guitar has been fitted by Folkway with a new saddle, compensated for silk and steel (original ivory saddle in the case), so the intonation is great. Sticklers for correct set-up and skeptics about putting steel strings on a 19 century Martin, Folkway did not decide it could accommodate silk and steel strings, both structurally and with correct intonation, until after careful hands-on study. It can, they said, beautifully.
  • In this period (any Martin guitar made before 1898) there were of course no serial numbers on Martins, and no one signed the instruments inside with a date as they often did in the later 1880’s. But it has all the hallmarks of 1870s to mid-1880’s – and most likely earlier in that period, about 1870, judging by the endstrip material.

    It has the original friction tuners – with the exception of the Low E string tuner that was missing and so has been replaced (probably a hundred years ago) with a tuning peg to match the originals.

    The size 2 is a great size, it’s a larger guitar than the more common size 2 ½ from this era.

    Amazing tone from this guitar. See and hear this guitar being played:

     

    All careful work has been done on this guitar, and it won’t need anything else – it’s a great guitar for the player who wants the best Martin tone and playability – a tonal gem from the 19th century Martin factory in Nazareth.

    • Spruce top over Brazilian Rosewood back and sides.

    • Spanish heel (not the ice cream cone heel of the less expensive Martins)

    • Peg head, with original tuners (with one replacement– the high E string peg)

    • Light overspray on top done ages ago, so it’s not very noticeable.

    A bit more overspray on back and sides, done decades and decades ago.

    • Fan braced – as are most of the best sounding Martins from this era.

    • Original thin maple bridge plate

    • Original ebony fretboard; Original bar frets with some wear but they’re still pretty high.

    • Soft V neck

    • Scale length: 24.5 inches

    • Width at lower bout: 12 inches

    • Nut width: 1 13/16 inch

    Multiple cracks on top, all repaired (see photos); multiple cracks on back, all repaired.

    Heel has a tiny crack – but it looks like there was never any separation, more of surface crack (see photos)

    Two areas by top edge of bridge, either end, where wood was splintered a bit, now repaired and stable. (See photos)

    This guitar has seen multiple crack repairs, but it’s structurally sound now, and needs no work going forward. It’s priced low to reflect the work done. It has marvelous sound and projection, and plays with great low action and great intonation all up and down the fretboard. Strung with Savarez Alliance strings.

    It would be a great addition to a player wanting a superb example of the best Martin sound from the 19th century – at an affordable cost that’s impossible to find in today’s market.

    Ships in a modern hard shell case.

    Price: $4,850. – plus shipping

  • Another all-original pre-war Martin… but you have to go back a few more wars on this one- to just after the Civil War. This guitar even has its original coffin case–necessary in the days when Martin guitars were shipped out by railroad or wagon train. The figured Brazilian rosewood back and sides are unusual– in these decades of the 19th century (and through the middle of the 20th) Martin usually did not use this kind of figured, lovely Brazilian (they preferred the more straight-grained variety). On this guitar, for the sake of originality, we’ve kept its original saddle intact. The original ivory saddle is worn through at the strings, but still functions nicely.
    • Fan braced
    • Adirondack top
    • Ebonized “ice cream cone” style neck
    • Solid Brazilian rosewood back and sides
    • 100% original finish…. No overspray, touch-up, etc. anywhere…wonderful finish
    • Original ebony bridge, and bridge plate
    • Two cracks in spruce top; one is bridge to bottom of top; the other is from near bridge to soundhole; first one described is beneath an internal brace; second is 2mm adjacent to a different brace. Neither need attention and are left alone to preserve originality.
    • Characteristic, three Martin stamps: “CF Martin & Co, New York” ink stamped on neck block; “CF Martin & Co, New York” ink stamped on center strip inside; and “CF Martin New York”, stamped/pressed into brazilian rosewood back of guitar, up near the heel. (note: this guitar is not signed personally by factory foreman, etc, on underside of top…. This fact, and the other details, points to a circa 1870 date, not 1880s or 90’s).
    Label inside original coffin case reads: “L. Grunewalds… Piano, Organ, and Music House, New Orleans, La.” Louis Grunewald (1827-1915), of German birth, immigrated to New Orleans in 1852, performing as an organist in several Catholic churches in that city (Abel 2000, 268; derived from Boudreaux 1977, 72). In 1856 he opened his New Orleans music publishing business on Magazine Street.
  • 19th century Martin parlor guitar. This lovely sounding Martin 2 1/2-17 features solid Brazilian Rosewood back and sides, Adirondack spruce top, and original Jerome tuners. This particular instrument has a beautiful, lyrical voice. It was made probably circa 1867-1870. There are several clues to establish that: the original coffin case with the guitar has attributes of an earlier case: the small brass handle, and the label inside the case has font and other attributes of late a 1860s case. Also, the particular style of the original Jerome Tuners. Kerfing inside is also indicative of an 1860’s Martin. And, the best clue of all: the 1 ¾ inch nut width. Of course, it’s post-1867, because of the “CF Martin & Co” stamps inside. The top is fan braced, typical of this style. Measurements are: body length 17 7/8", lower bout width 11 5/8", overall length 36 1/2"; scale length 24 ½ inches. 4 inch body depth at end pin; 3 3/8 inch boy depth at neck joint. 1 ¾ inch nut width– may have been a custom order, or just a slightly narrower nut width (from the 1 7/8 more common later) from the factory. 12 fret cedar neck/ebonized, with ice cream cone heel. All original finish, everywhere. A fair-to-low amount of playwear (see photos). Original bar frets in fine condition. Several small hairline cracks in back, repaired. Top and sides also have a couple or repaired cracks. Reproduction ebony bridge– just made by Dick Dubois.. Original bar frets. Original bracing. "C.F. MARTIN &CO/ NEW YORK" hot stamped on back strip inside, and heel block. CF Martin New York stamped on back, by heel joint. Original Jerome tuners, with original buttons– note, one of the sun gears (on the G string tuner) has been replaced, with a different 19th century Martin sun gear (see photo). Historical interest aside (these just-post-civil war Martin guitars are more rare than the 1870’s/1880’s/1890’s examples), this guitar plays wonderfully. It projects glassy brazilian trebles, and clear mids and bass notes. It’s just a joy to play, and it just floats in your hands (due to its very light weight). Action is good, and it plays in tune even on the higher frets. (Note: 19th century Martins can be fitted with: gut strings, classical guitar strings, or sometimes silk and steel/tuned down–depending on the guitar. It’s really a case-by-case basis. One size does not fit all. And different 19th century Martins sound better with different strings. In this case, with this particular guitar, our favorite strings if you want a “classical” style string but more brightness and volume than nylon classical strings: Savarez Alliance composite High Tension strings (note, “high tension” by classical standards– fine for this instrument). This instruments sounds wonderful with those strings. In is original coffin case (and case has all the original hardware, as well as its original cloth interior lining).
  • Read the full description below. If you're interested in this guitar, please call 512.922.8596 or contact us here.
  • Out of stock
    Circa 1860 guitar, style 3 built by well known luthier James Ashborn of Wolcottville, CT, for William Hall & Son music store. Brazilian rosewood back and sides; Adirondack top; maple binding. Rare Brazilian rosewood veneered neck. 100% original, including all original finish, and down to original nut, original bridge (and saddle) that has never been off the guitar. From an article in Vintage Guitar magazine: "Ashborn's design for the guitar was quite innovative for the early 19th century. Instead of making guitars fashioned after the typical parlor-style guitars, he made them in the Spanish style, by taking interior bracing cues from the Spanish while retaining the body of the English guitars. This included a fan brace pattern rather than the more common ladder pattern Ashborn guitars have a very complex dovetail V joint for attaching the head to the neck. The headstock was cut in roughly five steps, using some kind of tracing router, as suggested by the chatter marks on the inside ears of the pegbox. In addition to the complex head design, Ashborn made his own tuning machines in-house. They're made of brass, very much like contemporary machines, with worm gears, cog gears, and rollers. … Ashborn's shop was extremely advanced for its time, having a great deal of know-how and technology. Ashborn understood the need to have the technology as well as the skill, but more importantly he discovered a new way of making high-quality instruments that were affordable. He was able to create a factory environment where workers did what they were good at and, with practice, became very fast and consistent. With a new level of consistency in mass production, he created the path followed by other companies such as Martin, Gibson, and Taylor. Using designs ahead of his time, he was able to bring the sound and change to people who otherwise never would have been able to acquire an instrument of this quality."
  • Out of stock
    A rare and amazingly original English, Tunbridge ware fretless 7 string banjo. Circa 1850-60. This instrument is 100% original, and even the tailpiece is the original brass tailpiece. This banjo is also rare in that it has original geared tuning machines, not pegs like other examples from the period. The Tunbridge ware banjo is almost impossible to find in this condition and stage of originality. And Tunbridge’s are rare, period. The history? After Joel Sweeney – born to a farming family in Appomattox, Virginia and claimed to have learned to play the banjo from local African population, and the earliest known person to have played the banjo on stage – embarked on a European tour that included stops in London and Edinburgh. He played there for several months, and raised awareness of the instrument in England. As in the U.S., banjos began to be made by local craftsmen – they were still hand made and came in all shapes and sizes, with 5, 6, 7 and even 12 strings, and with one or more drone strings, sometimes on both sides of the neck. Only a few, best ones, such as this instrument, had an amazing amount of work put into them, none more so than those made by a very few firms centered around Tunbridge Wells in Kent, where the local craftsmen specialized in producing a particular form of Treen ware, made from up to 180 different colored woods. Holly, cherry, plum, yew, sycamore, and even imported lignum vitae were all used. The technique was to bind short lengths together and glue them into bundles so when viewed end on, a pattern or picture could be seen. Instrument length: 34 inches. With a 12 inch pot. Eight tensioners and shoes, all original. Original, rare circa 1850 German brass machine tuners (one bent shaft– but still operates perfectly). Original brass tailpiece. Fingerboard, and pot, consisting of inlaid woods as geometric patterns. All the inlays are intact. $2450. In a modern case.
  • This guitar is the last known guitar in existence, made by Louis Schmidt, the famous contemporary and one-time colleague to the founder of Martin Guitars, the original C.F. Martin. As such, it is a rare example of early American guitar making. And it’s signed by the maker, on the underside of the Adirondack top: Louis Schmidt Wakefield Westchester Cy NY July 9th 1859 U.S. Louis Schmidt worked side by side with CF Martin in the early years. Perhaps the most common misconception about early American guitar history is that C. F. Martin spent his first years in America earning a living as a solitary luthier in his New York workshop. Pay ledgers reveal that as early as 1834 he was paying luthiers to help him make his guitars. Two of these men, Heinrich Schatz and Louis Schmidt, left Martin's employ to make guitars on their own, and each succeeded as top builders. This instrument:
    • Similar features to circa 1860 Martin 17 style... but different purfling, binding, and slightly different body shape
    • All original finish
    • Brazilian rosewood back and sides (solid); Adirondack top
    • In its original coffin case
    • 11 3/8 inches wide at lower bout (a bit larger than a Martin 2 1/2)
    • Body: 3 7/8 inches deep
    • Original mahogany bridge plate (goes almost all the way across the width of the top, slotted under all the braces)
    • Fan bracing pattern
    • Plays beautifully. Good bass tone. Action is perfect.
    • Ebony Bridge has been off at some point, and reglued on. With a lack of similar guitars on the market, it’s not known if this 19th century bridge on the instrument is the original bridge.
    • One repaired crack on top, from bridge to bottom binding; One repaired crack on back. One small crack on top, either top edge of soundhole.
    • Original Jerome tuners, reverse gear, working perfectly
    • Maple and rosewood purfling/binding on top (no binding on back)
    According to all known writings and records about Louis Schmidt in existence prior to the discovery of this guitar, Schmidt was supposed to have "disappeared from the scene in 1858”. This newly surfaced guitar, the last one we know of from his hand, proves otherwise, and is a great example, still in its original case, of the work of this well known and important early American luthier.
  • A rare, wonderfully-preserved, 1854 Schmidt & Maul. It’s signed and dated inside: Louis Schmidt Tompkinsville   Staten Island New York  388 Broadway August 18th  1854 U. S.
    • Adirondack top
    • Ebonized “ice cream cone” style neck
    • solid brazilian rosewood back and sides
    • fan braced
    • marquetry Purfling around top, with Maple binding
    • Maple binding, back
    • Width at lower bout: 11 ½ inches
    • 100% original finish. No overspray, touch-up, etc. anywhere…wonderful finish
    • Not a crack on top, or sides. One small dryness crack on back, near the edge binding on treble side
    • Original bridge plate, in great condition
    • Reproduction, correct, Ebony bridge
    • Bar frets replaced with period correct Bar frets from TJ Thompson