Baldwin Organ Serial Numbers

  • BALDWIN FANTASIA MODEL 230 SERIES ORGAN. LEON BALDWIN MINING ENGINEER. BALDWIN PIANO SERIAL NUMBERS.
  • In 1889–1890, Baldwin vowed to build 'the best piano that could be built' and subsequently formed two production companies: Hamilton Organ, which built reed organs, and the Baldwin Piano Company, which made pianos. The company's first piano, an upright, began selling in 1891.

Find out the year of production for your piano with the help of the serial number. In the form below, select your brand and enter your serial number.

Free serial numbers

Baldwin Pianos are a musical legacy that for over a century, continues to live on. Each piano that carries the name Baldwin, is a piece of that legacy which has contributed to American piano history and manufacturing.
Company History
The company was founded by Dwight Hamilton Baldwin in Cincinnati, Ohio in 1862. Also known as D.H. Baldwin, the name has always been one of the most widely renowned names in the American piano industry and history.

The company originally began as a retail enterprise, who sold Steinway and Chickering pianos. They began manufacturing their own pianos in 1889, as 'D.H. Baldwin & Co.' In 1903, shortly after the founder's death, the name became the Baldwin Piano & Organ Co.

Baldwin also manufactured pianos under the names Acrosonic, Chickering, Ellington, Franke, Hamilton, Howard, Kremlin, Manualo, Modello, Monarch, St. Regis, Sargent, Schroeder, Valley Gem, Winton, and Wurlitzer.

Recognition and Design
In 1904, the Baldwin piano was awarded the Grand Prize at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, Mo., and another Grand Prize was also awarded to the Baldwin pianos and Manualos at the Anglo-American Exposition, London, 1914.
The Baldwin piano is recognized as a universal favorite between the leading operatic artists and virtuosos of the pianoforte.

The Baldwin Grand Piano, which was designed, manufactured and guaranteed by the Baldwin Company in Loveland, Ohio, is exclusively enjoyed by top tier of artists in all areas of musical expression – ranging from pianists, composers, conductors, singers, and instrumentalists - as well as outstanding symphony orchestras all over the globe.

Baldwin Pianos:
Modern Times

Baldwin purchased the Wurlitzer and Chickering names in 1988, but in 2008, both names ceased production. Samick (Korea) manufactured pianos with the DH Baldwin name in the 1980s, as pianos were purchased by Baldwin and sold through Baldwin dealers.

Around the decade of the 1990’s, the company was sold and relocated to Arkansas and Missouri. Today, Baldwin is owned by the famous Gibson Guitar Company (in 2001).

The following brands have been in use or are in development by Gibson, since 2003: A.B. Chase, Aeolian, Ampico, DH Baldwin (built in Arkansas since 2004, discontinued in 2008), Cable, Ellington (2003, made in China), Hamilton, Howard grand pianos, Ivers & Pond, J & C Fischer, Kranich & Bach, Monarch, Mozart, Pianola, Pianovelle, Sargent.

Baldwin Organ Serial Numbers

In 2006/2007, Gibson purchased the Dongbei Piano Group, the third biggest Chinese piano maker in the world.

In 2008, Baldwin moved all production of pianos to factories in China (owned by Gibson Guitars, Nashville, TN). Pianos are manufactured there for the US market, the Chinese domestic market, and other international piano markets.

Baldwin ceased piano production at its only remaining U.S. factory in Trumann, Arkansas in December 2008. This facility remains open as a US distribution and service center.

Without any doubt and dispute, from the nine-foot concert grand to the five feet, two inch baby grand, every Baldwin piano demonstrates the most modern ideas of acoustical science and piano making; its manufacture is precision engineered, which gives each instrument the highest degree of excellence. Any Baldwin made piano is worth the time, money and energy to rebuild or refurbish.

Serial Numbers Microsoft

Find the age of your Baldwin piano using the serial number chart found below. The serial number indicates the start of the year shown.

1890 - 1100
1895 - 6000
1900 - 10400
1905 - 12300
1910 - 16400
1915 - 24000
1920 - 35800
1925 - 48000
1930 - 63000
1935 - 74600
1940 - 88700
1943 - 102000
1948 - 105000
1950 - 110243
1955 - 128167
1960 - 145002
1961 - 148635
1962 - 152706
1963 - 156591
1964 - 160868
1965 - 165701
1967 - 175821
1968 - 179702
1969 - 184661
1970 - 190028
1971 - 192401
1972 - 195485
1973 - 199649
1974 - 204113
1975 - 208742
1976 - 213470
1977 - 217853
1979 - 228858
1980 - 236654
1981 - 242984
1982 - 248306
1983 - 253274
1984 - 257293
1985 - 262256
1986 - 266329
1987 - 270416
1988 - 278556
1989 - 284228
1990 - 290656
1991 - 293772
1992 - 301774
1993 - 305110
1994 - 310000
1995 - 313000
1996 - 316000
2000 - 366583
2001 - 377023
2002 - 380584
2005 - 383836
2006 - 384472
2008 - 386496

Baldwin vertical pianos, serial numbers: Models up to 42' tall

1984 - 1343955
1989 - 1453070
1994 - 1521569
1999 - 1556889
2005 - 1575074
2008 - 1577265

Vertical piano serial numbers: Model 248A Pro, 48' tall

1990 - 427993
1991 - 435212
1992 - 440915
1993 - 445623
1994 - See numbers below

Baldwin vertical pianos 44' tall and up: Models 6000, 5050, 248 (after 1993), 243

1984 - 387119
1989 - 416254
1994 - 450198
1999 - 474091
2004 - 485396
2008 - 486686

Baldwin Acrosonic serial numbers

1895 - 2000
1900 - 9000
1905 - 31000
1910 - 57000
1915 - 83000
1920 - 127000
1925 - 172000
1930 - 217000
1935 - 251000
1940 - 304000
1946 - 365000
1947 - 385000
1950 - 450300
1955 - 559490
1960 - 679844
1965 - 784017
1970 - 912986
1975 - 1035719
1980 - 1220374
1985 - 1365505
1990 - 1470443
1995 - 1529416
2000 - 1563029
2005 - 1575074
2008 - 1577265


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Baldwin Piano Company
TypePrivate
IndustryMusical instruments
Founded1857; 164 years ago
FounderDwight Hamilton Baldwin
Headquarters,
United States[2]
James Curleigh (President & CEO)
ProductsPianos
ParentGibson
SubsidiariesWurlitzer
Websitebaldwinpiano.com

The Baldwin Piano Company is an American piano brand. It was once the largest US-based manufacturer of keyboard instruments and known by the slogan, 'America's Favorite Piano'. It ceased most domestic production in December 2008, moving its total production to China. A subsidiary of Gibson Brands, Inc.,[3] current pianos only display the 'Baldwin' name and brand with all of the formerly American made upright models being made in Baldwin's Chinese factory.[4][5]

History[edit]

Share of the Baldwin Company, issued 20. September 1904

The company traces its origins back to 1857, when Dwight Hamilton Baldwin began teaching piano, organ, and violin in Cincinnati, Ohio. In 1862, Baldwin started a Decker Brothers piano dealership and, in 1866, hired Lucien Wulsin as a clerk. Wulsin became a partner in the dealership, by then known as D.H. Baldwin & Company, in 1873, and, under his leadership, the Baldwin Company became the largest piano dealer in the Midwestern United States by the 1890s.

In 1889–1890, Baldwin vowed to build 'the best piano that could be built'[6] and subsequently formed two production companies: Hamilton Organ, which built reed organs, and the Baldwin Piano Company, which made pianos. The company's first piano, an upright, began selling in 1891. The company introduced its first grand piano in 1895.

A 1905 Baldwin ad.
BaldwinBaldwin
A Baldwin Hamilton manufactured in 1968.

Baldwin died in 1899 and left the vast majority of his estate to fund missionary causes. Wulsin ultimately purchased Baldwin's estate and continued the company's shift from retail to manufacturing. The company won its first major award in 1900, when their model 112 won the Grand Prix at the Exposition Universelle in Paris, the first American manufactured piano to win such an award. Baldwin-manufactured pianos also won top awards at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition and the 1914 Anglo-American Exposition. By 1913, business had become brisk, with Baldwin exporting to thirty-two countries in addition to having retailers throughout the United States.

Baldwin, like many other manufacturers, began building player pianos in the 1920s. A piano factory was constructed in Cincinnati, Ohio. The models became unpopular by the end of the 1920s, which, coupled with the beginning of the Great Depression, could have spelled disaster for Baldwin. However, the company's president, Lucien Wulsin II, had created a large reserve fund for such situations, and Baldwin was able to ride out the market downturn.

During World War II, the US War Production Board ordered the cessation of all US piano manufacturing so that the factories could be used for the US war effort. Baldwin factories were used to manufacture plywood airplane components for various aircraft such as the Aeronca PT-23 trainer and the stillborn Curtiss-Wright C-76 Caravan cargo aircraft. While the employment of wood components in military aircraft could by no means be considered a resounding success, lessons learned in constructing plywood aircraft wings ultimately assisted in Baldwin's development of its 21-ply maple pinblock design used in its postwar piano models.

After the war ended, Baldwin resumed selling pianos, and by 1953 the company had doubled production figures from prewar levels. In 1946, Baldwin introduced its first electronic organ (developed in 1941),[7] which became so successful that the company changed its name to the Baldwin Piano & Organ Company. In 1961, Lucien Wulsin III became president. By 1963, the company had acquired C. Bechstein Pianofortefabrik and remained its owner until 1986. In 1959, Baldwin constructed a new piano manufacturing plant in Conway, Arkansas, originally to manufacture upright pianos: by 1973, the company had built 1,000,000 upright pianos. In 1961 Baldwin constructed a new piano factory in Greenwood, Mississippi. Subsequently production of upright pianos was moved from Cincinnati, Ohio to Greenwood.

Baldwin Organ Serial Numbers Chart

The company next attempted to capitalize on the growth of pop music. After an unsuccessful bid to buy Fender Musical Instruments Corporation, Baldwin bought Burns of London in 1965 for $380,000, and began selling the guitars through the company's piano retail outlets. During this time period, Baldwin engineer Robert C. Scherer developed the Prismatone pickup for nylon string guitars.[8] Unaccustomed to marketing guitars, the Baldwin stores failed to interest many guitar buyers, and sales proved disappointing.[9] In 1967, Baldwin also bought Gretsch guitars, which had its own experienced guitar sales force and a distribution network of authorized retail outlets. However, Fender and Gibson continued to dominate, and sales did not reach expected levels. The Gretsch guitar operation was sold back to the Gretsch family in 1989.

Throughout the 1970s, the company undertook a significant bid to diversify into financial services. Under the leadership of Morley P. Thompson, Baldwin bought dozens of firms and by the early 1980s owned over 200 savings and loan institutions, insurance companies and investment firms, including MGIC Investment Corporation. The company changed its name to Baldwin-United in 1977 after a merger with United Corp.[10] In 1980, the company opened a new piano manufacturing facility in Trumann, Arkansas.[11] By 1982, however, the piano business contributed only three percent of Baldwin's $3.6 billion revenues. Meanwhile, the company had taken on significant debt to finance its acquisitions and new facilities, and was finding it increasingly difficult to meet its loan obligations. In 1983, the holding company and several of its subsidiaries were forced into bankruptcy with a total debt of over $9 billion—at that time, the largest bankruptcy ever. However, the piano business was not part of the bankruptcy.[12]

During bankruptcy proceedings in 1984, the Baldwin piano business was sold to its management.[13] The new company went public in 1986 as the Baldwin Piano and Organ Company[14] and moved its headquarters to Loveland, Ohio.[15]

However, difficulties continued as demographic changes and foreign competition slowed sales of keyboard instruments. The company responded by acquiring Wurlitzer to increase market share and by moving manufacturing overseas to reduce production costs.[16] In 1998, the company moved its headquarters from Loveland to nearby Deerfield Township.[15][17] Throughout the 1990s, the company's fortunes improved, and by 1998, the company's 270 employees at its Conway, Arkansas facility were building 2,200 grand pianos a year. However, in 2001, Baldwin was again facing difficulties, and filed for bankruptcy once again, when the company was bought by Gibson Guitar Corporation.[18] In 2005, the company laid off some workers from its Trumann, Arkansas manufacturing plant while undergoing restructuring.[11]

The company, now a subsidiary of Gibson Guitar Corporation, has manufactured instruments under the Baldwin, Chickering, Wurlitzer, Hamilton, and Howard names. Baldwin has bought two piano factories in China in which they are manufacturing grand and vertical pianos. Recreations of the former US built verticals are built at its factory in Zhongshan, China. These include the Baldwin Hamilton studio models B243 and B247 which are the most popular school pianos ever built.[19] The much larger factory in Dongbei is not building pianos at this time. Baldwin grand pianos are being built to Baldwin specification by Parsons Music, China.[1] All new pianos are being sold under the Baldwin name and not Wurlitzer, Hamilton or Chickering.[19]

Baldwin stopped manufacturing new pianos at its Trumann, Arkansas, factory in December 2008. They retained a small staff to build custom grands and to finish numerous artist grands which are ordered.[5] As of October, 2018 the factory in Trumann, AR has been closed and remaining inventory disposed of.[20]

Models[edit]

Grand pianos[edit]

Baldwin Organ Serial Numbers Free

Current Grand Piano Models:[21]

  • BP 148: 4'10' (148 cm)
  • BP 152: 5'0' (152 cm)
  • BP 165: 5'5' (165 cm)
  • BP 178: 5'10' (178 cm)
  • BP 190: 6'3' (190 cm)
  • BP 211: 6'11' (211 cm)
Baldwin organ serial numbers search

Upright pianos[edit]

Current Upright Piano Models:[22]

  • B342/B42 Acrosonic: 43 ½' (110 cm)
  • B442/B42 Acrosonic: 43 ½' (110 cm)
  • B243/B47 Hamilton: 47' (119 cm)
  • B252 Concert Vertical: 52' (132 cm)
  • BP1
  • BPE1
  • BP3
  • BP3T
  • BP5
  • BP-X5

Notable performers[edit]

Evanescence's Amy Lee performing in 2011

Many distinguished musicians have chosen to compose, perform and record using Baldwin pianos, including the pianists Walter Gieseking, Claudio Arrau, Mike Shinoda, Jorge Bolet, Morton Estrin, Margaret Baxtresser (née Barthel), Earl Wild and José Iturbi and the composers Aaron Copland, Philip Glass, Igor Stravinsky, Béla Bartók, Stephen Sondheim, Leonard Bernstein, Lukas Foss, André Previn, and John Williams. Baldwin pianos have been used by popular entertainers including Ray Charles, Liberace, Richard Carpenter, Michael Feinstein, Billy Joel, Cat Stevens, and Carly Simon, and jazz pianists Dave Brubeck, George Shearing and Dick Hyman. Amy Lee, the lead vocalist, pianist and keyboardist of Evanescence also uses this brand in most of her compositions, recordings and live performances. A Baldwin piano was seen nightly being played by Paul Shaffer on the Late Show with David Letterman. Baldwin was the official piano of the television show Glee. Marian McPartland's long-running radio show Piano Jazz was hosted by Baldwin.[23] Baldwin was second only to Steinway in its artist and symphony roster.

See also[edit]

Bibliography[edit]

  • Crombie, David. Piano: Evolution, Design, and Performance. Barnes and Noble, 2000. First printed by Balafon Books, Great Britain, 1995. (ISBN0-7607-2026-6)
  • Baldwin Piano & Organ CompanyEncyclopedia of Company Histories. Answers.com. Accessed March 1, 2007.

References[edit]

  1. ^The Baldwin Story at Taylor Music.com
  2. ^For distribution. Baldwin pianos are manufactured in China.
  3. ^La marca de guitarras Gibson se declara en bancarrota by Oscar Adame on Warp.la, 20 Feb 2018
  4. ^http://www.musictrades.com/top100.html
  5. ^ ab'Baldwin ceases production, lays off workers'. Trumann Democrat. December 8, 2008. Archived from the original on 2012-03-19. Retrieved 2009-02-11.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
  6. ^'Baldwin Pianos'. Baldwin Piano. Archived from the original on 2018-08-30. Retrieved 2014-03-11.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
  7. ^Hans-Joachim Braun (1982). 'Music Engineers. The Remarkable Career of Winston E. Kock, Electronic Organ Designer and NASA Chief of Electronics'(PDF). CHE2004 of IEEE.Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  8. ^'Robert C. Scherer Prismatone inventor'. Retrieved 2014-11-14.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
  9. ^Gjörde, Per (2001). Pearls and Crazy Diamonds. Göteborg, Sweden: Addit Information AB. pp. 35–37.
  10. ^Baldwin Piano & Organ Company History fundinguniverse.com
  11. ^ abKAIT8 News, Jan. 7, 2005, 'Trumann Piano Plant Lays Off Workers While Undergoing Restructuring'Archived 2009-02-21 at the Wayback Machine,
  12. ^Baldwin, A Casualty Of Fast Expansion, Files For Bankruptcy New York Times September 27, 1983
  13. ^'G.E. Credit Signs Deal With Baldwin'. The New York Times. June 19, 1984. Retrieved 2007-12-17.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
  14. ^Rothstein, Eward (September 27, 1987). 'For the Piano, Chords of Change'. The New York Times. Retrieved 2007-12-15.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
  15. ^ abOsborne, William (2004). Music in Ohio. Kent State University Press. p. 492. ISBN0-87338-775-9 – via Google Books. In November 1998 its headquarters had been relocated a bit further north in suburbia, abandoning the location in Loveland it had occupied since 1986 in favor of an office park in Deerfield Township.
  16. ^'COMPANY NEWS; Wurlitzer Sale To Baldwin'. The New York Times (Reuters). The New York Times Company. 1987-12-24. Retrieved 2008-10-25.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
  17. ^'Baldwin to move headquarters'. Cincinnati Business Courier. American City Business Journals. August 24, 1998. Retrieved April 1, 2018.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
  18. ^'Gibson Guitar to Buy Baldwin Piano'. Los Angeles Times. 2001-11-02. p. C2. Retrieved 2008-10-25.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
  19. ^ abFine, Larry (2016). Acoustic and Digital Piano Buyer. Brookside Press. p. 168. ISBN978-192914543-0. Archived from the original on 2016-11-29. Retrieved 2017-01-08.
  20. ^Jean-Pierre Thiollet, 88 notes pour piano solo, Neva Editions, 2015, p.135. ISBN978-2-3505-5192-0
  21. ^'Grand Landing Page v1'. www.baldwinpiano.com. Retrieved 2020-12-11.
  22. ^'Upright Landing Page v1'. www.baldwinpiano.com. Retrieved 2020-12-11.
  23. ^'Marian McPartland's Storied Life, Told 'In Good Time''. Weekend Edition. August 17, 2012. 10:58 minutes in. NPR.

External links[edit]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Baldwin Piano Company.
  • Morley Thompson Interview NAMM Oral History Library (2003)
  • Lucien Wulsin Interview NAMM Oral History Library (2005)
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