Why Did The Public Turn Away From Pump Organs?
There were probably several reasons. First, piano
manufacturing technology in the early 1900s improved to such a
degree that people could now afford them. Before that, people
that couldn't afford a piano would buy a pump organ. But then
most song writers were just not writing music for pump
organs.
However, probably the main
reason is that pump organs were simply overtaken by an
industrial age that had no equal.
It was a time when telephones were becoming all the rage.
The crank record player was arriving on the scene in ever
growing numbers. And then there was the player piano which was
almost a "must have" item.
And then there was the radio and then there was the
automobile and then there was flight and then there was . . .
the list kept going on and on.
At some point, the public simply viewed the pump organ as
being "old fashioned" and that was the end of that.
Some people describe the brief era of the pump organ to that
of a comet crossing the night sky. It burned brightly for a few
moments and then it was gone. The pump organ's popularity was
only about 30 or 40 years -- basically from around1865 to about
1895. But much beyond that, time had pretty much passed them
by.
You have to remember that by the time of World War One, a
very large number of the 653 pump organ companies in this
country had already gone out of business. And even before the
turn of the century sales for bump organs were in a
free-fall.
It's probably true that just about any story dealing with
the demise of the American pump organ could be written in
several ways, but for the most part, they wouldn’t be that far
apart from one another.
Sadly, many of these once prized, beautiful, musical
instruments, once so admired, have been turned into
landfill.
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