- 1 21 Guns
- Guitar Alchemist 1 21 Serial Number Location
- Guitar Alchemist 1 21 Serial Number Range
- 1.21 Gigawatts
- Guitar Alchemist 1 21 Serial Number Volkswagen Find
- Guitar Alchemist 1 21 Serial Numbers
Features that make Guitar Alchemist much more than a simple chord dictionary: Explore scales (Major, melodic/harmonic minor, and more) and their modes; find chords you can play over Explore chords (Filter by major/minor/dominant, b5, #5, b9, #9, #11, b13); find scales you can play over. .1976 Serial numbers 220 were also used. Begins using one set of serial numbers for guitars & mandolins.
W.A. Cole, Maker
Serial Numbers andDating
Copyright © by Michael I. Holmes – 2002, 2010
Last updated – 03/16/2011
This is a work in progress. Any and allinformation or picture contributions are welcome. In this article I haveattempted to assemble whatever information has been collected so far about W.A.Cole and his younger brother, F.E. Cole and bring it all together in one place.Hopefully, it will provide a good start.
History:
1 21 Guns
William A. Cole, the older of the brothers, was a successful performer andteacher in Boston from before 1880-1909. We first hear of him as a maker whenhe joined with A.C. Fairbanks as 'Fairbanks& Cole' in business together from 1880 to 1890. If he made instrumentson his own prior to that, there is no mention in contemporary articles or trademagazines. They split in 1890. Fairbanksstayed at the 187 Tremont Streetaddress where they had moved, and advertised his new company as 'The Only Successors ofFairbanks & Cole.'
Coleestablished his business at 179 Tremont, (a move which caused some publicantagonism between the former partners), where he manufactured mostly banjos as'W.A. Cole, Maker, Boston, Mass.'He also made some guitars and mandolins but it is the Eclipse model banjoswhich are considered to be some of the finest and fanciest banjos ever made.His younger brother, Frank E. Cole, a cabinet maker, supervised most of theproduction work while William travelled as a performer with the 'ImperialQuartet.' William died in 1909.
Frank retained the 'W.A. Cole' name after William's death in 1909.He continued to advertise guitars, mandolins and banjos until he sold thecompany to Nokes & Nicolai in March, 1922. Frank had agreed to stay on tosupervise the operation, but he died in June of that same year.
The total output of the W.A. Cole Company's 32 years in business appears tobe fewer than 10,000 serial numbered instruments (the highest reported is#8555, a tenor Eclipse). In the early years, 5 string banjos, banjorines, andvariants dominated. Around the turn of the century, banjo mandolinsproliferated, and by the teens almost all of Cole's output was banjo mandolinsand tenors. The guitars seen have been beautifully made, most from Brazilianrosewood with typical Cole style engraved inlays. Whether the guitar andmandolin bodies were actually made in the Cole workshop, or purchased elsewhereand decorated there, is not known. Frank Cole's patent for mandolinconstruction suggests he intended to make them, but no pictures of the workshophave surfaced yet. Few instruments were made in the last years before the salein March, 1922, but there must have been something worthwhile left to spur thepurchase of the company by Nokes & Nicolai.
Patents:
- In 1885, William A. Cole was issued one patent, with A.C. Fairbanks, for a peg support.
- No patent for the tailpiece marked 'F&C - Patented Sept. 21, 1886' has been found. There was a tailpiece patent issued on that date to Frederick H. Hodges, Newport, RI, but it looks quite different. Even so, its design may form the basis for the F&C claim. Click the tailpiece photo for a comparison of the two.
- Frank E. Cole received 3 patents, a mandolin in 1891, the Eclipse tone ring in 1894, and one for a banjo bridge in 1899, all of which show up in Cole products and advertisements.
- No patent for the heavy neck collar has been found. Some have a screw to hold them in place, but most are just a tight, friction fit. I believe there is no pattern to the use of the screw, but instead is simply a means to correct a loose fitting collar. Eclipses seldom have a collar screw. This one has all three, neck adjuster, collar and screw. (I am calling it a 'neck collar' because I believe that best describes it. It isn't a 'neck brace' or a 'neck adjuster' as has been used in the past. And besides, there already exists a Cole 'neck adjuster' at the other end of the strut.)
- Likewise, no patent issued to Cole has been found for the adjustable neck ferrule seen on higher end instruments, but patent number 457996 issued on 8/18/1891 to Victor Kraske looks to me like it is the one. Both the adjuster and the collar appear on banjos built in the first year Cole was in business alone, 1890, and simply may have come from Kraske's workshop. Compare the Cole adjuster to one found on an Imperial banjo on which can be seen the patent date. Cole's neck adjuster is found with and without the small set screw that can be seen in the photo; it's not just that it gets lost, there is no hole for it in some adjusters.
- In 1894, John Barrows (Waldo Mfg. Co.) filed for and was issued a patent for a neck adjuster, but it worked on a different principle. It is not the source of the Cole adjuster as some have suggested.
- Weymann banjos have been found with neck adjusters on some high end models, but while similar, they are not the Cole adjusters.
Logos and markings:
- Instruments marked 'Fairbanks & Cole' date from the 1880-1890 partnership.
- Fairbanks & Cole banjo models were Clipper, Expert, Imperial, and Acme.
- After the split, they each eventually started over with a new series of serial numbers, probably beginning with 1, although Fairbanks seems to have continued the numbering for a while before starting over. They each produced un-numbered banjos, too.
- Instruments marked 'A.C. Fairbanks' or with ACF's trade mark, plus a wavy 'Fairbanks & Cole' stamp are the 'Fairbanks & Cole model' made and sold by Fairbanks after the split, presumably to capitalize on the old name.
- Instruments marked 'W.A. Cole' date from 1890 to 1926. When they bought Cole's in 1922, Nokes & Nicolai, primarily drum manufacturers, continued to make banjos and some ukuleles, presumably with the W.A. Cole name, until they, in turn, were bought out in 1926 by the Liberty Musical Instrument Co. of Chicago, IL.
- W.A. Cole models included Eclipse Banjos, Imperial Mandolins, and Boston Guitars. Each model was sold in a variety of styles and decorations.
- The Man-In-The-Moon inlay is found on the pegheads of some Eclipse banjos and some Cole guitars, but rarely on instruments labeled for others.
- Cole made instruments, particularly banjos, and labeled them for other companies to claim. These seem to have serial numbers in the regular order of his own branded banjos.
- Guitar and mandolin serial numbers are often stamped on the very end of the peghead. They apparently had a separate serial numbering scheme -- the serial numbers on known instruments are too low to correspond to the banjos or be part of a single series. Cole stamped many guitars '1898 Model' even into the 20th century.
Interesting information about the Cole Company:
Guitar Alchemist 1 21 Serial Number Location
- 1904 Cole ad showing style 5000 Eclipse and listing Imperial mandolins and Boston guitars.
- 1908 Cole ad comparing the Cole Workshop with the Crypt of Capuchin in Rome.
- Banjos made by Cole have been seen labeled Charles Bobzin, George Washburn (Lyon & Healey), Stratton & Handley (others were made for them by Haynes), and Superbo (Elias Howe). There are probably others.
- One circa 1909 Bacon FF Professional has been seen looking very much like the Vega-made models, but this one had Cole hardware -- shoes, nuts, and patent neck attachment yoke.
Note: Cole banjo serial numbers are frequently on the top of thestrut, on the side towards the head; to see them you must first remove the heador use a mirror. Often the same number is stamped somewhere on the inside ofthe rim, too. It can be faint, and sometimes it was painted over, makingidentification even more difficult. Occasionally, the rim number is between thehead and the strut. Sometimes there are only 2 digits, which match the last 2digits of the serial number. Guitar and mandolin serial numbers are generallystamped on the end of the peghead (see above).
Guitar Alchemist 1 21 Serial Number Range
ID | Model | Serial | Style | Heel | Fer'l | Collar | Rim | Hooks | Nuts | Notes |
WAC | - | 11 | 5 string | Flat | - | - | - | - | - | 11 x 26' earliest reported WAC. |
WAC | - | 17 | 5 string | Boat | - | Yes | - | Round | SBE | fancy w/heelcarving |
Elias Howe Superbo | 66 | 5 string | - | - | - | FS | Round | - | - | |
WAC | Eclipse | 174 | 5 string | Boat | Adjust | w/s | - | - | - | - |
Eclipse patent applied for March 30, 1893. | ||||||||||
WAC | - | 224 | 5 string | Boat | Adjust | w/s | - | - | Hex | Earliest 'Patent App For' Eclipse |
WAC | Eclipse | 228 | 5 string | - | Adjust | - | - | - | - | - |
WAC | Eclipse | 337 | 5 string | - | Adjust | - | - | - | - | Earliest bird inlay |
Charles Bobzin | 499 | Banjorine | - | - | - | FS | Round | - | - | |
WAC |
- 1 21 Guns
- Guitar Alchemist 1 21 Serial Number Location
- Guitar Alchemist 1 21 Serial Number Range
- 1.21 Gigawatts
- Guitar Alchemist 1 21 Serial Number Volkswagen Find
- Guitar Alchemist 1 21 Serial Numbers
Features that make Guitar Alchemist much more than a simple chord dictionary: Explore scales (Major, melodic/harmonic minor, and more) and their modes; find chords you can play over Explore chords (Filter by major/minor/dominant, b5, #5, b9, #9, #11, b13); find scales you can play over. .1976 Serial numbers 220 were also used. Begins using one set of serial numbers for guitars & mandolins.
W.A. Cole, Maker
Serial Numbers andDating
Copyright © by Michael I. Holmes – 2002, 2010
Last updated – 03/16/2011
This is a work in progress. Any and allinformation or picture contributions are welcome. In this article I haveattempted to assemble whatever information has been collected so far about W.A.Cole and his younger brother, F.E. Cole and bring it all together in one place.Hopefully, it will provide a good start.
History:
1 21 Guns
William A. Cole, the older of the brothers, was a successful performer andteacher in Boston from before 1880-1909. We first hear of him as a maker whenhe joined with A.C. Fairbanks as 'Fairbanks& Cole' in business together from 1880 to 1890. If he made instrumentson his own prior to that, there is no mention in contemporary articles or trademagazines. They split in 1890. Fairbanksstayed at the 187 Tremont Streetaddress where they had moved, and advertised his new company as 'The Only Successors ofFairbanks & Cole.'
Coleestablished his business at 179 Tremont, (a move which caused some publicantagonism between the former partners), where he manufactured mostly banjos as'W.A. Cole, Maker, Boston, Mass.'He also made some guitars and mandolins but it is the Eclipse model banjoswhich are considered to be some of the finest and fanciest banjos ever made.His younger brother, Frank E. Cole, a cabinet maker, supervised most of theproduction work while William travelled as a performer with the 'ImperialQuartet.' William died in 1909.
Frank retained the 'W.A. Cole' name after William's death in 1909.He continued to advertise guitars, mandolins and banjos until he sold thecompany to Nokes & Nicolai in March, 1922. Frank had agreed to stay on tosupervise the operation, but he died in June of that same year.
The total output of the W.A. Cole Company's 32 years in business appears tobe fewer than 10,000 serial numbered instruments (the highest reported is#8555, a tenor Eclipse). In the early years, 5 string banjos, banjorines, andvariants dominated. Around the turn of the century, banjo mandolinsproliferated, and by the teens almost all of Cole's output was banjo mandolinsand tenors. The guitars seen have been beautifully made, most from Brazilianrosewood with typical Cole style engraved inlays. Whether the guitar andmandolin bodies were actually made in the Cole workshop, or purchased elsewhereand decorated there, is not known. Frank Cole's patent for mandolinconstruction suggests he intended to make them, but no pictures of the workshophave surfaced yet. Few instruments were made in the last years before the salein March, 1922, but there must have been something worthwhile left to spur thepurchase of the company by Nokes & Nicolai.
Patents:
- In 1885, William A. Cole was issued one patent, with A.C. Fairbanks, for a peg support.
- No patent for the tailpiece marked 'F&C - Patented Sept. 21, 1886' has been found. There was a tailpiece patent issued on that date to Frederick H. Hodges, Newport, RI, but it looks quite different. Even so, its design may form the basis for the F&C claim. Click the tailpiece photo for a comparison of the two.
- Frank E. Cole received 3 patents, a mandolin in 1891, the Eclipse tone ring in 1894, and one for a banjo bridge in 1899, all of which show up in Cole products and advertisements.
- No patent for the heavy neck collar has been found. Some have a screw to hold them in place, but most are just a tight, friction fit. I believe there is no pattern to the use of the screw, but instead is simply a means to correct a loose fitting collar. Eclipses seldom have a collar screw. This one has all three, neck adjuster, collar and screw. (I am calling it a 'neck collar' because I believe that best describes it. It isn't a 'neck brace' or a 'neck adjuster' as has been used in the past. And besides, there already exists a Cole 'neck adjuster' at the other end of the strut.)
- Likewise, no patent issued to Cole has been found for the adjustable neck ferrule seen on higher end instruments, but patent number 457996 issued on 8/18/1891 to Victor Kraske looks to me like it is the one. Both the adjuster and the collar appear on banjos built in the first year Cole was in business alone, 1890, and simply may have come from Kraske's workshop. Compare the Cole adjuster to one found on an Imperial banjo on which can be seen the patent date. Cole's neck adjuster is found with and without the small set screw that can be seen in the photo; it's not just that it gets lost, there is no hole for it in some adjusters.
- In 1894, John Barrows (Waldo Mfg. Co.) filed for and was issued a patent for a neck adjuster, but it worked on a different principle. It is not the source of the Cole adjuster as some have suggested.
- Weymann banjos have been found with neck adjusters on some high end models, but while similar, they are not the Cole adjusters.
Logos and markings:
- Instruments marked 'Fairbanks & Cole' date from the 1880-1890 partnership.
- Fairbanks & Cole banjo models were Clipper, Expert, Imperial, and Acme.
- After the split, they each eventually started over with a new series of serial numbers, probably beginning with 1, although Fairbanks seems to have continued the numbering for a while before starting over. They each produced un-numbered banjos, too.
- Instruments marked 'A.C. Fairbanks' or with ACF's trade mark, plus a wavy 'Fairbanks & Cole' stamp are the 'Fairbanks & Cole model' made and sold by Fairbanks after the split, presumably to capitalize on the old name.
- Instruments marked 'W.A. Cole' date from 1890 to 1926. When they bought Cole's in 1922, Nokes & Nicolai, primarily drum manufacturers, continued to make banjos and some ukuleles, presumably with the W.A. Cole name, until they, in turn, were bought out in 1926 by the Liberty Musical Instrument Co. of Chicago, IL.
- W.A. Cole models included Eclipse Banjos, Imperial Mandolins, and Boston Guitars. Each model was sold in a variety of styles and decorations.
- The Man-In-The-Moon inlay is found on the pegheads of some Eclipse banjos and some Cole guitars, but rarely on instruments labeled for others.
- Cole made instruments, particularly banjos, and labeled them for other companies to claim. These seem to have serial numbers in the regular order of his own branded banjos.
- Guitar and mandolin serial numbers are often stamped on the very end of the peghead. They apparently had a separate serial numbering scheme -- the serial numbers on known instruments are too low to correspond to the banjos or be part of a single series. Cole stamped many guitars '1898 Model' even into the 20th century.
Interesting information about the Cole Company:
Guitar Alchemist 1 21 Serial Number Location
- 1904 Cole ad showing style 5000 Eclipse and listing Imperial mandolins and Boston guitars.
- 1908 Cole ad comparing the Cole Workshop with the Crypt of Capuchin in Rome.
- Banjos made by Cole have been seen labeled Charles Bobzin, George Washburn (Lyon & Healey), Stratton & Handley (others were made for them by Haynes), and Superbo (Elias Howe). There are probably others.
- One circa 1909 Bacon FF Professional has been seen looking very much like the Vega-made models, but this one had Cole hardware -- shoes, nuts, and patent neck attachment yoke.
Note: Cole banjo serial numbers are frequently on the top of thestrut, on the side towards the head; to see them you must first remove the heador use a mirror. Often the same number is stamped somewhere on the inside ofthe rim, too. It can be faint, and sometimes it was painted over, makingidentification even more difficult. Occasionally, the rim number is between thehead and the strut. Sometimes there are only 2 digits, which match the last 2digits of the serial number. Guitar and mandolin serial numbers are generallystamped on the end of the peghead (see above).
Guitar Alchemist 1 21 Serial Number Range
1.21 Gigawatts
Legend | ||
Model | MITM | Eclipse w/Man In The Moon |
Hooks | Round | Cobra |
Fer'l | Ferrule | None, Plain, Screw adjustable |
Collar | See picture | Screw, No Screw |
Nuts | Square, ball end | Hex, ball end |
Rim | FS=full spun | HS=Half Spun |
Notes | PAF | Patent Applied For |
Guitar Alchemist 1 21 Serial Number Volkswagen Find
Acknowledgements: Thanks to Brian Kimerer, Stacey Zabolotney, andHank Schwartz for the use of some of their photographs, to Phil Ellis for theKraske neck adjuster picture, and to Jim Bollman for all his help. Moreinformation about Cole, Fairbanks, and others, with a detailed history of thedevelopment of the banjo, and some wonderful photographs, can be found in America'sInstrument, The Banjo In the 19th Century by Philip Gura & JamesBollman, published in 1999.
Guitar Alchemist 1 21 Serial Numbers
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