Regina Music Box Serial Number Lookup

(Redirected from Regina company)
Regina Music Box (ca.1890)

Regina Music Box Company Description This music box was made by Regina Music Box Co. In Rahway, New Jersey, around 1897-1899. It is an Orchestral model No. 5, serial #30836. The music box has a double comb of 86 teeth. This music box plays 27” diameter perforated metal discs. The music box has a lower cabinet for disc srorage. World atomic clock sync for mac. Any owner of a Regina disc music box can obtain the pedigree of their Regina in the form of a certificate showing the date it was shipped and to whom. Send the serial number of the machine, together with a $5 check made payable to the M.B.S.I., to MBSI, PO Box 10196, Springfield, MO.

The Regina Company was a manufacturer of mechanical musical instruments before it became a major vacuum maker.

History[edit]

In 1889, Gustave Brachhausen, the foreman of the Symphonion music box company based in Leipzig, created the polyphon Musikwerke in partnership with a Symphonion engineer Paul Riessner. Three years later, at the age of 35, Brachhausen expanded his enterprise to America by establishing the Regina Music Box Company. After sailing to America in September 1892, he leased some space in Jersey City, and with financing from Knauth, Nachod & Kuhne in Leipzig, Brachhausen set up shop in partnership with Riessner and Johannas J. Korner.

Initially, Regina imported their boxes from Polyphon, selling 11 and 15.5-inch models. Gradually, the movements were imported and assembled into American-made boxes. After a year of immediate success, Brachhausen purchased a 25,000-square foot building at 54 Cherry Street in Rahway. In a few years, Regina was manufacturing their products entirely in America, as Brachhausen accumulated patents.[1] Regina established a nationwide distribution network by offering a 50% wholesale price to department stores and other retailers. He also lured one of Symphonion's arrangers, Octave Felicien Chaillet, to America, where he composed and arranged thousands of discs for Regina. In 1897, Brachhausen patented an automatic disc changer, and Regina established a service for installing and maintaining their coin-operated music boxes.

Regina boxes were seen as strong profit drivers partially because they created a steady revenue stream, as consumers would buy new discs to play on boxes they had already purchased.[2] For a machine that cost $500, this was a relatively novel idea.[3] Regina shipped 100,000 music boxes between 1892 and 1921, with sales topping out over $2 million a year. The company had 325 employees, and even as Symphonion established an American branch, Regina thrived as the market leader. Competition from the phonograph jeopardized the company in the early years of the 20th century, and in 1902, it dropped 'Music Box' from its name and started to diversify. Its first vacuum cleaner was a two-person hand-pumped pneumatic model which sold poorly. In 1903, Knauth and company overtook the company to protect its investment, relegating Brachhausen to factory manager. New products continued to flood the market from the Regina company, everything from player pianos to copying presses. Eventually, the company went bankrupt in 1922.

The company introduced canister vacuum models in the 1930s. In 1952, Regina introduced its more familiar stick model, the ElectrikBroom. During World War II, the company made bomb fuses. In the 1980s, CEO Donald D. Sheelen led a group of employees who purchased Regina for $38 Million in a leveraged buyout. Don Sheelen’s inventions cross the vacuum sphere from the basic vacuum cleaner to the steam cleaner. During the 90s, the Peanuts character Pig-Pen appeared in commercials. The “tools on board” idea, “cyclonic” vacuum technology, and the modern easy to use steam cleaner were all the brainchild of Don Sheelen, who pled guilty to fraud in 1989 for falsifying company financial records. The Regina Company declared bankruptcy shortly thereafter and was eventually acquired by Philips Electronics in 1995. Oreck bought the company in 1997, and in 2000, it was sold to the Royal Corporation, the owners of the Dirt Devil brand, which sold the vacuums under the Home Depot brand for a few years.[4] In 2020 Regina Vacuum LLC relaunched the Regina brand.

Major musical products[edit]

Reginaphone

Regina Music Box – Regina's music boxes were their original product, and they had an 80–90% share of the market at the company's peak. Regina music boxes use a flat metal disc, as opposed to a cylinder. Sizes ranged from 8.5 – 27 inches. The boxes were renowned for the rich tone, and they used a double set of tuned teeth.

A Reginaphone

Reginaphone – A response to the competition posed by the phonograph, the Reginaphone was a hybrid machine that played both music box discs and phonographs. Regina used a phonograph mechanism manufactured by the American Graphophone Company, which evolved into Columbia Records.

Coin Piano – Regina sold player pianos which were manufactured by other companies, sometimes putting German-made mechanisms into their own cases. One model was branded the 'Reginapiano'.

Concerto – The concerto used a 32-inch music box disc to control a player piano.

Phonograph – Regina branded several lines of phonographs, including the Hexaphone, Corona Talking Machine and Princess Phonographs.[5]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^US Patent Office. Annual report of the Commissioner of Patents, 1896. p. 37]
  2. ^The Menorah, Volume 22, p. 382
  3. ^Billboard Magazine, July 20, 1846, p. 121.
  4. ^'Regina Vacuum Cleaners Product Line'. Geyser Vacuum Cleaner. Archived from the original on December 3, 2013.
  5. ^Bowers, Q. Encyclopedia of Automatic Musical Instruments. Vestal Press, 1972. p. 170-173.

External links[edit]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Regina Music Box Company.
  • Regina Music Box Co. History With Photos.
  • 'New York March' by Chaillet
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Regina_Company&oldid=975849318'

By Maristella Feustle

Collection Overview

Title: Regina Music Box Records
ID: 06/ 039
Primary Creator:Ozier, Whit (1919-2004)
Extent: 6.0 Boxes
Arrangement: Items are arranged alphabetically where a title could be determined.
Subjects:
Languages:English
Lookup

Scope and Contents of the Materials

The collection consists of six boxes of metal Regina Music Box records of popular songs, folk songs, and excerpts of well known classical works.

Biographical Note

Subject/Index Terms

Access Information

Access Restrictions:

Access to this collection is provided only by special arrangement. Please contact the Music Library for more information.

Use Restrictions:

Reproduction and publication of materials in this collection are subject to the policies of the UNT Music Library. Copyright restrictions may apply.

Physical Access Note:

Collection is housed in the UNT Music Library. Advance notice for use is required. Please contact the Music Library for further information.

Reading Room or Duplication Requests

Depending on any access restrictions noted above, you may be able to request items be delivered to our reading room, or that we make reproductions for you. Just click on either the or icons in the listings below to be routed to our request form.

Administrative Information

Repository: Music Library
Acquisition Source: Whit Ozier
Acquisition Method: Gift.
Finding Aid Revision History: February 8, 2021: Whit Ozier creator information expanded.

Regina Disc Music Box

Loading..

Some finding aids are quite large and may take a minute or more to load. This message will dissapear when the page has fully loaded.

Box and Folder Listing

Symphonion Music Box History

The listing below is a partial representation of this finding aid's total contents. To see other series/containers, select an option in Browse by Box, above.

Regina Music Box Serial Number Lookup Tool

  • Box 5

    • Item 1: The Pennsylvania Special March

    • Item 2: A Ragtime Classic - Berliner

    • Item 3: Silver Threads Among the Gold

    • Item 4: Spring Song - Mendelssohn

    • Item 5: Sylvia Pizzicato - Delibes

    • Item 6: To Morrow

    • Item 7: Turkey in the Straw

    • Item 8: When the [illegible]

Comments are closed.