ROBERT E. ELIASON
VISITING POST-DOCTORAL RESEARCH ASSOCIATE, 1970-71
DIVISION OF MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS • NATIONAL MUSEUM OF HISTORY AND TECHNOLOGY
Ml
SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION PRESS • CITY OF WASHINGTON • 1972
SMITHSONIAN STUDIES IN
HISTORY AND TECHNOLOGY: NUMBER 19
For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government
Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 20402 Price 60 cents
Stock Number 4700-0188
COVER: Keyed bugles made by E. G. Wright and Graves & Co. of
Boston. The instrument on the left is from the Rhode Island
Historical Society; the center bugle is from the Henry Ford
Museum in Dearborn, Michigan. Both are by E. G. Wright. The
bugle on the right is by Graves & Co., and is from the collec-
tions of the Smithsonian Institution.
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data
Eliason, Robert E.
Keyed bugles in the United States.
(Smithsonian studies in history and technology, no. 19)
1. Bugle. 2. Bands (Music) —U. S. I. Title. II. Series: Smithsonian
Institution. Smithsonian studies in history and technology,
no. 19.
ML960.E45 788'. 1 77-39883
Origin Page 5 CONTENTS
Arrival in the United States: Richard Willis 9
Other Musicians Take up the New Bugle 13
Keyed Bugles Made in the United States 15
Development of the Smaller e\) Bugle 19
Ned Kendall 23
The Brass Band Era 26
Mechanical Improvements 28
Three Outstanding Examples of Workmanship
in the United States 32
Decline 40
Notes 41
Selected Bibliography 43
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This booklet was prepared under the supervision of Mrs. Cynthia
Hoover, Associate Curator, Division of Musical Instruments,
whose help and enthusiasm were greatly appreciated. The fol-
lowing museums and individuals were most cooperative in
loaning their instruments to the Smithsonian for study and
photographing: The Rhode Island Historical Society; The Chil-
dren's Museum, Boston, Massachusetts; Professor Martin Lessen,
Rochester, New York; and Mr. William Gribbon, Greenfield,
Massachusetts. Photographs are by Richard Farrar, Richard
Hofmeister, and Steve Logowitz.
Keyed bugles are soprano brass instruments with side holes and
keys like a clarinet or saxophone. They flourished for several
decades after 1810 when the Royal Kent Bugle was patented, and
before valved instruments became popular. Their melodic ability
made possible the first brass bands in the United States, and
these instruments remained popular in this country until the
Civil War. During the 1840s and 1850s, many excellent players
including the famous Ned Kendall amazed their listeners with
intricate solos played on the bugle. Fine examples of American
bugles with as many as 12 keys survive in several collections.
A remarkable period of military and municipal band history in
the United States began about 1815 with the arrival in this coun-
try of the newly invented keyed bugle. This instrument, variously
called the Royal Kent Bugle, patent Kent Bugle, or keyed bugle,
was a large-bore brass instrument with side holes and keys similar
to those on clarinets and other woodwind instruments. Without
keys or mechanism of some kind, a brass instrument was severely
limited in the number of notes it could produce. Bands before
this had depended on woodwind instruments for the melody,
using their bugles and trumpets largely for rhythmic and har-
monic parts. The bugle with keys was the first successful soprano
brass instrument capable of playing all of the notes in any scale.
It preceded valved instruments by about five years and rapidly
became the leading melodic voice in bands of the period. It also
became a favorite solo instrument, and successfully competed
with valved brasses in the United States until the Civil War.
KEYED BUGLES
IN THE
UNITED STATES
The keyed bugle was patented by Halliday of Dublin in 1810 and
named the Royal Kent Bugle in honor of the Duke of Kent, then
Commanding Officer of British troops in Ireland.1 The basic
idea of keys or the covered-hole principle as applied to brass in-
struments had been around for at least fifty years and had met
with some success on the trumpet around the turn of the cen-
tury.2 The Kent Bugle was another application of the well-
Origin
known idea, but quite a bit more successful. It was so successful,
in fact, that several others claimed credit for the invention. Two
of the most interesting of these stories are quoted below. The
first is from an interview with Henry Distin, a famous English
brass player and manufacturer whose father was undoubtedly
experimenting along the same lines as Halliday, although a year
or two later.
My father, John Distin, was born in 1J98, in Plympton, Devon-
shire, England. At n years of age he, in company with a brother
two years younger, appeared in public in a flute duet at a concert
given by the band of the South Devon Militia, and not only
achieved a great popular success, but so impressed the band-
master of the regiment that he obtained their enlistment as band
boys under his instruction. Two years later John's ability as a
performer on the chromatic trumpet was already a matter of
public fame, and at the age of 14 he played first trumpet in a
performance of Dettingeu [sic] Te Deum at a grand music festival
in Exeter so successfully that he was presented with £10 as a
reward. That sum, which was a fortune for a boy of his age, in-
directly cheated him out of the honor of being the inventor of
the keyed bugle, and came near losing him his life. Just about
that time the regimental band with which he was connected was
supplied with new bugles, and in the work of testing them, to
which John Distin was assigned by the band-master, he found
one through which a hole had been punched by the careless
driving of a nail in the box inclosing them. That hole gave
another note. Stopping it with his finger, he made the instrument
sound like all the others. That accidentally discovered note sug-
gested to him an idea. The old bugles of the band were auc-
tioned off, and he, purchasing one of them, set to work cutting
holes in it, and fitting them with corks to find new notes. Only
one member of the band, named John Tucker, was taken into
his confidence. Guy Fawke's Day, an anniversary then celebrated
with much explosive demonstration was near, and some of the
band boys who had picked up a lot of blank cartridges after a
review, appealed to John as a capitalist—in view of that gift of
£io—to buy two pounds of powder and join them in getting up a
quantity of squibs and other fire-works for the celebration. He
did so. While they were all at work making their squibs, a mis-
chievous boy touched off a cartridge which exploded all the rest
of the powder, almost under Distin's nose, and injured him so
severely that he was laid up for three months in the hospital.
When he was convalescent, John Tucker came to him and said,
'Ah, I am so sorry John but an Irishman named Halliday has got
ahead of you on your invention while you have been laid up. He
has produced a three-keyed bugle, which has been highly ap-
proved of by the Duke of Kent, and it is already making a great
effect as the Kent Bugle.' The boy's disappointment was very
keen, but he subsequently earned some distinction for himself by
adding two more keys to the Kent Bugle, making a new instru-
ment as far ahead of Halliday's as that when invented, was an
improvement upon the common field bugle, and this perfected
instrument ivas christened the Royal Kent Bugle*
The second is a more dubious account of an American, Nathan
Adams.
And here we make another digression to speak of Nathan Adams
—sometimes called 'Captain Adams.' . . . Previous to coming to
Lowell, on land and sea he had roamed about the world consider-
ably. For several years he was on the United States man-of-war
Constitution, with Commodore Hull, not as a sailor but as a
band-master. Besides being a musician—playing several instru-
ments and singing well—he was a successful composer, but we do
not know that a note of his work in that direction now exists.
He was a veritable jack-at-all-trades, and if alive to-day would
undoubtedly be regarded as a first-class crank. He was a bachelor,
and while in Lowell he slept in his little shop, took his food there
or wherever he happened to be when hunger came upon him,
if convenient, and if not went without for the time being; it
seemed to make very little difference whether his stomach was
full or empty. . . . Adams was a good man to work when in the
right mood, but entirely indifferent in the matter when not. He
was generally socially inclined, full of music and anecdotes, well-
informed for a man of his standing in society, and a favorite
among those who knew him best.
While on the Constitution (as we have already intimated) he
conceived the idea and really invented the diatonic or natural
scale for, and was the inventor of, the bugle (superseded in later
years by the cornet), which was the precursor of all the valve
musical instruments. It came about in this way: In an idle mo-
ment on one occasion, while handling a seahorn (so called at the
time—an instrument used in the daily routine exercises of the
ship), it occurred to him that it might be improved and made
useful for another purpose. He proceeded to cut a proper hole in
it, near the mouth or bell end, and experimented by opening and
closing the hole with the palm of his hand, and thus he got a
modulated tone. The result was encouraging, and he proceeded
to cut other orifices until he had scaled the instrument off for
seven keys or valves. In this way he satisfied himself that he could
make a new and valuable instrument. When in the course of
time he reached London he went to a musical instrumentmaker
named Kent and made known his invention to that gentleman.
The result was that Kent constructed an instrument, brought it
before the musical world, and in the end received the credit of
both inventing and making it, while its real inventor was never
recognized as having anything to do with its production, conse-
quently no credit has heretofore been accorded to him. Those
who knew Adams well, had the best of reasons for believing this
story of the origin of the bugle, which came from his own lips,
entirely true, and thus have we found warrant for telling the tale
as 'twas told to us.4
Unfortunately, both of these claims were a bit late; Distin's in
1812, and Adams' about 1824. The Distin story of having added
the fourth and fifth keys is also in error, since the patent of 1810
described five keys.
The arrival of this instrument in the United States, at least by
1815, occurred with little fanfare. An advertisement in the New
England Palladium of Boston offered "... patent Kent Bugles,
with keys . . ." on October 27, 1815. Whether they were preceded
here by the keyed trumpet is not known, but likely.
Although a few of these instruments were undoubtedly im-
ported earlier, the event that firmly established the Kent Bugle in
the United States was probably the arrival from Dublin of
Richard Willis, arranger, composer, and performer on the keyed
bugle and several other instruments. The following account of
his arrival and a performance on the double flageolet appeared
in the New York Evening Post of April 18, 1816.
R. Willis, from London, professor of Music, arrived in this city,
a few days since, and has brought with him that new, elegant,
and sweet toned instrument, called the double flageolet—Bain-
bridge, London, inventor, 1812. He was the first that performed
a Rodondo [sic] on that instrument in the Dublin Theatre, which
was received with unbounded applause. He will perform this
evening a concerto duetto, with some Irish and Scotch airs, and
Rondoe's at Scudders Museum, 21 Chatham St.
Tuesday, May 28, 1816, is the earliest mention found of a per-
formance by Willis on the Kent Bugle. It appeared in the same
newspaper.
// we are correctly informed, there will be a chorus of nearly 200
fine voices, aided by upwards of yo instruments. These will con-
sist first, of a patent Kent Bugle of the finest and most command-
ing tones which will be played upon by a Mr. Wyllis lately from
Ireland.
Arrival in the
United States:
Richard Willis
Two performances had been planned, but these were so well re-
ceived that a third and then a fourth performance was necessary.
More of Willis' background was presented in the following
article from Boston's Euterpeiad of September 1, 1821. 9
Mr. Willis received his musical education in Ireland, and when
quite a youth, was employed by Sir John Stevenson to travel the
several counties in search of original Irish airs from the peasan-
try, whom he would hire to sing, and from this species of oral
performance, he obtained a very large portion of those exquisite
melodies which Sir John Stevenson and Mr. Moore have pub-
lished in several elegant editions. Mr. Willis's acquirements are
numerous, he performs with much execution upon every instru-
ment in his band, and the facility with which he executes the
chromatic passages on the Kent Bugle is the result of many years
practice under the celebrated Mr. Logier of Dublin, whose im-
provements have brought this useful and much admired instru-
ment into general use.
Mr. John Bernhard Logier, under whose instruction Willis is
said to have mastered the keyed bugle, is perhaps best known for
his invention of the chiroplast, a controversial apparatus for
developing proper hand position on the piano. Probably around
1820, Mr. Logier published a Complete Introduction to the
Keyed Bugle, one of the earliest method books for the instrument.
Shortly after his arrival, Willis became master of the band at
the United States Military Academy at West Point, for the fol-
lowing theater bill appeared in the New York Evening Post of
September 17, 1816.
Point of Honor or The School of Soldiers
The band of the Military Academy at West Point will play the
new grand battle piece of the Siege of Ft. Erie composed by Mr.
Willis, the master of the Band. Mr. Willis will likewise, in the
course of the evening, play a solo on the patent six keyed camp
bugle.
The official appointment of Willis as professor of music and in-
structor of the band is given by Dr. Sidney Forman as June 16,
10 1817, nine months after the above performance.5
By September of 1817, two Kent Bugles had been purchased
for the West Point Band—one for $70, the other for $40—and no
doubt Willis had begun to instruct some of his band members on
the instrument.6
The efforts of Richard Willis with the band were well received
and appreciated by many who heard them. The following is
from the West Point papers of Sylvanus Thayer, commanding
officer at the Academy at that time.
In 1817 an act of Congress established the position of teacher of
music at USMA and appointed Richard Willis, a well known
civilian composer and arranger as well as a "celebrated performer
on the Kent Bugle." He was paid $50 per month. One of his
compositions, "The Grand, Canal March," written for the open-
ing of the Erie Canal, is still played by the USMA Band for
special occasions. At the time he took charge of the band, that
group numbered 14 players. For the first time musical affairs
took on an increased stature, not only on the post, but for many
miles around. Crowded Packets from New York to Poughkeepsie
used to drop anchor off West Point to give their passengers an
opportunity to listen to Willis and his band as they played eve-
ning concerts from a prominent position overlooking the Hudson
River.7
Willis also found time to take the band to Boston, New York,
Philadelphia, and probably other cities on the east coast. Many
advertisements and announcements for concerts appeared in
newspapers and music magazines of those cities during Willis'
tenure (Figure 1).
Compositions performed on the keyed bugle by Willis included
orchestral trumpet parts, obligatos to songs and choruses, and
popular airs with variations. Following are some of the composi-
tions known to have been played by Willis from published
programs. 11
New York, May 28, 1816
Air and Chorus, "Strike the Cymbal" Pucitta
accompanied by the 6-keyed patent bugle
Grand Double chorus, "The Horse and His Rider" Handel
(with keyed bugle)
Philadelphia, November 14, 1820
Solo on the Kent Bugle, "Jessy the Flower
o' Dom Blane" Mr. Willis
"Eveleen's Bower' with variations and embellishments
Kent Bugle obligato by Mr. Willis
"The Hunter's Horn in the Morning," Phillips
Kent Bugle, Mr. Willis
Philadelphia, December 29, 1825
"Dolce Concento," with variations for Nicholson
the Bugle
Polonaise for the Bugle Stumph
Finale—Yankee Doodle with variations
for bugle and orchestra Willis
Philadelphia, January 4, 1826
Polacca Stumph
Song, "At Morning's Dawn," bugle accompaniment
Philadelphia, December 27, 1826
"Di Tanti Palpiti," with variations Rossini
The following compositions were often played by Willis, but
it is not certain if he used the keyed bugle or played them on the
trumpet.
Boston, August 18, 1821
"Let the Bright Seraphim," trumpet Handel
accompaniment by Willis
Philadelphia, January 4, 1821
Concerto for the Common Trumpet, Winter
12 full orchestra accompaniment
In addition to his many other accomplishments, Richard Willis
is also known to have tried his hand at inventing. A program of
December 29, 1825, published in the Philadelphia National
Gazette of that date included a "Solo on the Vox Humana, an
instrument invented by Mr. Willis." Also in the same paper of
December 27, 1826, the following note appeared on a program:
"Mr. Willis will perform on a small pocket bugle of his own in-
vention; its tone is superior to his Vox Humana." The United
States Patent Office records a patent awarded to R. Willis of West
Point, New York, for a Kent Bugle on November 10, 1827, num-
ber 4923X. To date, however, a copy of this patent has not been
found.
Soon other musicians began to take up the new instrument. In Other Musicians
Boston a young man with the unlikely name of George Frederick Take up the New B u
Handel Plimpton began playing publicly late in 1820. It was re-
ported in Boston's New England Palladium of December 22 in
that year that ". . . Master George Frederick Handel, a son of Mr.
Plimpton, will accompany the Apollino with the Kent Bugle and
French horn." The Appollino was a mechanical music instru-
ment inspired by the devices of Johann Maelzel of metronome
fame.
In the following year, the Palladium of July 27 noted that an-
other Kent Bugle player, a Mr. Campbell from London, had
joined Mr. Plimpton's family for several concerts.
In Philadelphia, Willis' concerts in 1820 stirred unusual in-
terest in the new instrument.
. . . performances of Mr. Willis surpassed in effect and in power-
ful execution every expectation . . . and on the bugle particularly
surprising, as well as from the compass or range as from the truth
of his notes. It would scarcely be conceived that on the bugle
there should be distinctly and harmoniously performed the sharp
and flat notes.8
Keyed bugles in quantity were available there at least by late
1821. In an advertisement in the Philadelphia Franklin Gazette 13
Ot.TH OF »
vVlii.s i c Com pu.si' (I by
¥ m\ f] £ 'Jc> J vl) >J W<3 ® ?h
Jliist'cMH <'/7'/////u,/,,/x,/ //■//>///< ofn-sfwtiftfiis
ri/n//<>////, nt/itstoil' o/t,I ///,/ ,///,////,>// /,>////// in
■fiHWtmtititj'hm in ,i fot<>i\i;/,/<- f/ffuit tin,' ,/tiJ m,n/i,it
ittxtrnmrnt', ///,• \\vnt Rmole.MAv/ first /////,>,///,,,/in
thi.\' ii'untrtf.
M
R. WILLIS, of West Point, respectfully in-
forms his friends and the citizens of Phila-
delphia, that he will give a Concert in (be Grand
Saloon at Washington Hall, on Thursday evening,
Nov. 16, assisted by Mrs. De Luce and most of the
principal professors of this city.
Leader of the Orchestra, Mr. De Luse
PART I.
Overture to Lodoiska.'Tiumpet obliga-
to by Mr. Willis, - - Kreu'zer
Solo on the double flageolet, Mr. Wil-
lis; "The Blue Bells of Scotland,"
with variations, - - - Willis
Song, Mrs. De Luce—"Let Fame sound
the Trumpet," accompanied on the
trumpet by Mr. Willis, - Shield
Solo violin, Mr De Luce, - - Krcutzer
Kent Bugle Solo, Mr. Willis. "Jessy
the fluw'r of Dunblane."
Echo Song, Mrs De Luce, accompa-
nied by Mr. Blondeau, - - Bishop
"O Dolce Concento," and Pollacca,by
Mr. Willis on the Kent bugle, with
which he will lead the orchestra; ar-
ranged by - Mr. Willis
PARI II.
"Eveleen's Bower," with variatrons and
embellishments; Kent Bugle Obliga-
te, by Mr. Willis Composed by Mr. Willis
Flute Solo, Mr. Blondeau.
Song, Mrs. De Luce—"The Solcier
Tir'd " accompanied on tbe trumpet
by Mr. Willis, .... Dr.Arne
Solo double flageolet, Mr Willis; -'Oh
Nanny wilt thou gang with me," Scotch Air
"The Hunter's Horn in the Morning,"
Kent Bugle, Mr. Willis, - - Phillips
Song, Mrs. De Luce—"At morning
dawn," accompanied on the Kent
Bugle by Mr. Willis, - - Rimbault
Finale, Solo, Kent Bugle, "Yankee
Doodle," with variations, accompa-
nied by tbe orchestri, tbe variations
composed and arranged by - Mr. Willis
Concert to commence at 7 o'clock.
Ticket at one dollar; to be had at Mathew Ca-
rey's bookstore; Mrs Phillips's Circulating Libra
ry; Messrs; Bacon & Hart's music store; of Mr.
tvjllis, No. 10, Sarsom street, and at the door of
the hall on the evening of performance.
NOT IS—d4t
Figure i. Program of a concert by Richard Willis in Phila-
delphia published in The Franklyn Gazette, November 14,
1820.
Vp i' IV a vv r\ 11 r n D n I h p 11 P n I h o I'
iij£JiAja2> "wxt
_ V F
ifcTirst Puuit/}m IliirU
<£T* V&j&ifdSft &3Q$
PH'lLADlBlfFH'ilA,
i'lot., i»l^ii»:iiw»in fie (!"?N?*M7(/os/wt,»>/>•*•/.
£r,.//;„,//i ;■
Figure 2. The title page of "The Death of Willis" by Francis
Johnson. (Photograph courtesy of the United States Military
Academy library, West Point, New York.)
of December 15, 1821, it is stated that G. E. Blake "has just re-
ceived from Holies' Manufactory, Dublin, a case of Patent Kent
Bugles, octave bugles with keys. . . ."
About 1821, a talented, young, Negro bandleader, Francis
Johnson (Figure 3), began playing the keyed bugle. His band,
associated with the Philadelphia State Fencibles from about that
time, played for all sorts of parades, drills, and celebrations in
Philadelphia, and for many of the most fashionable balls. Gen-
eral Lafayette's visit to Philadelphia in 1824 was climaxed by a
Grand Ball in his honor with music provided by Francis John-
son's band.9 For several years beginning in 1825, Johnson's band
was featured at the popular resort areas around Saratoga Springs.
He rapidly gained renown as a keyed-bugle player equal to
Willis, and in 1837 visited Europe with his band.10
Johnson was also a prolific composer and arranger with many
published songs, marches, quicksteps, and other popular dance
pieces to his credit. He acknowledged his long friendship and
admiration for Richard Willis by composing a song in his honor
after his death in 1830. The title page (Figure 2) has the fol-
lowing inscription:
THE DEATH OF WILLIS
Verses written on the death of Richard Willis of West Point,
New York by J. Tranor Esqr. of Albany/Music composed by
Francis Johnson,!Musician of Philadelphia, as a tribute of respect
to his/memory for the unusual and kind attention to him in/
forwarding him in a knowledge of that fine and martial/instru-
ment, the Kent Bugle, when first introduced in/this country.11
Figure
1792
Francis Johnson, about
A recently discovered
drawing used with the permission
of Arthur La Brew.
It is not surprising that as the keyed bugle's popularity spread,
its construction tempted Yankee ingenuity. The earliest evidence
of keyed-bugle making in the United States is a 7-keyed instru-
ment in B(j (Figure 4) made by Nathan Adams in Lowell, Massa-
chusetts, about 1825.12 From published accounts of Adams, he
Keyed Bugles Made
in the United States
15
seems to have been a competent mechanic and a somewhat eccen-
tric old bachelor. He was born in 1783, served as bandmaster on
the U.S.S. Constitution, worked on musical instruments along
with other mechanical repair work from about 1824 to 1835, and
spent the remainder of his life until 1864 as a mechanic and a
repairer of ships' chronometers.13
At least five other bugles of similar construction marked by
other firms in the United States have survived. Although these
can be dated only approximately, all seem to have been made or
imported in the 1830s or early 1840s. Two of these, one with six
keys (Figure 5) and another with eight keys, are marked Klemm
& Brother, Philadelphia. The other three, a six-key and two
eight-key bugles, are marked by Firth, Hall, and Pond, New
York.14 Both of these firms were primarily music publishers and
dealers and may well have imported the instruments. In any
case, no lasting progress toward a brass-instrument industry in the
United States was made as a result of either Adams' work or that
of the two music stores. It took a transplanted London instru-
ment maker to show the Yankees how to build the Royal Kent
Bugle.
Probably in the mid-1830s, James Keat, one of the four sons of
of Samuel Keat, a well-known London instrument maker emi-
grated to the United States and settled in Winchester, New
Hampshire. James Keat worked for Graves & Co., an established
musical-instrument firm, and evidently passed on to the Amer-
icans the latest in keyed-bugle design. In the museum at Deer-
field, Massachusetts, is a seven-keyed bugle in B[^ marked "J. Keat
for Graves & Co., Winchester, N.H." There is also a seven-keyed
instrument with similar markings in the collection of William
Gribbon, Greenfield, Massachusetts (Figures 6 and 7), and one
with nine keys belonging to Fred Benkovic of Milwaukee,
Wisconsin.
In 1837, Keat purchased one-half of the second story, including
waterpower privileges, of a four-story building, the upper two
16 floors of which were occupied by Graves & Co.15 He evidently
Figure 4. The earliest known American-made keyed bugle by Nathan Adams, Lowell, Massachusetts, 1825. It is in
Bi> with seven keys in box mounts. Displayed on board the U.S.S. Constitution, Boston Naval Shipyard, Boston, Mas-
sachusetts.
Figure 5. Keyed bugle marked "Klemm & Bro., Philadelphia," circa 1835. In Bb with six keys in box mounts; prob-
ably imported. Mouthpiece not original. From the collection of Professor Martin Lessen, Rochester, New York.
Figures 6 andy. Keyed bugle marked "J. Keat for Graves & Co., Winchester, N.H.," circa 1837. In Bb with seven
keys in box mounts, crook and tuning bits. From the collection of William Gribbon, Greenfield, Massachusetts.
intended to start his own business and may actually have pro-
duced instruments for a time. His health failed, however, and in
1842 he sold the shop.16 Keat died in 1845. If his tombstone
markings in the Winchester Cemetery are correct, he was born in
London on May 7, 1813, making him the third of the four sons
of Samuel Keat.
Graves & Co. began making keyed bugles of their own, and
many examples of their copper bugles with brass trim are found
in collections in the United States. The earliest Graves & Co.
models were probably made in the late 1830s and early 1840s and
were almost exactly like Keat's examples. One of these early
Graves & Co. bugles (Figure 8) is in the collections of the Smith-
sonian Institution (USNM 237,754) ; and another in the Pills-
bury Collection (number 517), at the Henry Ford Museum,
Dearborn, Michigan.
The next step in the development of the keyed bugle in this
country was the turn to the smaller bugle in e|j. Such instru-
ments were known in Europe earlier, for keyed bugles in e\) and
f were included in the 1821 patents of the Parisian maker Jean
Hilaire Aste, better known as Halary.17 Following is an excerpt
from a magazine article by Allen Dodworth, soloist, conductor,
and arranger for the Dodworth Band of New York, one of the
outstanding bands of the 1840s.
Many are under the impression that a brass instrument that is
not imported cannot be good; this is very erroneous, as it is a
question whether as good instruments are made in the world, as
can be, and are made in this country. The best e-flat bugles I
have ever seen, were first made in Boston, by a person who was
not a musical instrument maker, but a machinist, Mr. Sibley,
who mathematically reduced the proportions of a B bugle to the
size necessary for an e flat, and was so successful, that his pattern
has been used ever since, by nearly all the bugle makers18
Development of the
Smaller e\) Bugle
19
One surviving bugle made by Henry Sibley is a nine-keyed instru-
ment in e\> in the collections of the Smithsonian Institution
(USNM 237,755) • It 1S shown in Figure 8 with a Graves & Co. B\)
bugle. At a time when mechanical ability was usually applied in
several different fields, it is not surprising that Sibley did not
always work as a musical-instrument maker. He appeared first in
Boston directories as "musician" in 1832, and contemporary con-
cert programs included him among the trombone players. In
1834, his listing changed to "wooden leg maker," and then, a year
later, to "musical instruments." In 1846, he was listed as a ma-
chinist and instrument maker, and from 1848 until 1859, a
machinist. Sibley entered a "silver bugle with keys" in the Massa-
chusetts Charitable Mechanic Association fair in 1841. In award-
ing a silver medal, the committee remarked:
This instrument, made by Henry Sibley of Boston, the committee
pronounces to be a first rate piece of workmanship. Of the
quality of its tone, and the correctness of its intonation they have
not had a very favorable opportunity to judge for themselves; but
they understand, from persons on whose opinions they can rely,
that it is equal in these respects to the best imported instru-
ments.19
About this time another important maker of keyed bugles, E.
(Elbridge) G. Wright, started business in Boston. Wright is
listed in the Boston directories as "musical instrument maker" in
1841. It is possible, however, that he worked earlier in a nearby
town, for there is an ophicleide in the Essig collection in War-
rensburg, Missouri, marked "E. G. Wright, Roxbury." Wright
eventually became even more famous for his keyed bugles than
Graves & Co.
An interesting experiment in materials for keyed bugles was
tried by George W. Shaw of Thompson, Connecticut, and pro-
tected by United States patent 4,132 of August 4, 1845.
A patent has been granted for a mode of making keyed bugles of
20 tortoise shell. In this ingenious and beautiful device the brilliant
Figure 8. Top, keyed bugle marked "Graves & Co., Winchester, N.H.," circa
1840. In Bb with nine keys in box mounts. Mouthpiece and crook not original.
USNM 237,7C4. Bottom, keyed bugle marked "H. Sibley, Boston," circa 1840. In eb
with nine keys in post-on-footplate mounts. Mouthpiece and shank not original.
USNM 237,755.
tone of the bugle is preserved, while the instrument is made ex-
tremely light; and from the elasticity of the material, it is not
subject to deterioration of tone from indentations. The instru-
ment is made in 5 parts, which are welded together in an in-
genious and perfect manner.20
21
At least two of these instruments survive, one efo or f with nine
keys (Figure 9), in the collections of the Smithsonian Institution
(USNM 251,395) , and another small model in high b\j with nine
keys belonging to the collection of Fred Benkovic in Milwaukee,
Wisconsin.
Samuel W. Richardson, a partner in Graves & Co. from 1832
until about 1845, evidently established his own shop in Rochester,
New York. A nine-keyed bugle in et-j marked "Richardson & Co.,
Rochester, N.Y." is found in the collection of instruments at the
University of Illinois at Urbana. Directories show Richardson as
an instrument maker in Rochester beginning in 1847. Demand
for the small e|-> bugle could not have been too great in Rochester,
for by 1851 Richardson had become an upholsterer. His subse-
quent listings are also interesting: "foreman Burrs Perfumery
Factory" beginning in 1859 and "Patent Leg Maker" in 1866.21
Figure 9. Tortoise-shell bugle marked "George Shaw, Thompson Ct.," patented
1845. In eb or f, nine keys with channel-shaped shanks over block mounts. Hole
covers are cupped for stuffed pads. Mouthpiece and shank not original, USNM
251,395-
The small ef> keyed bugle became increasingly popular with Ned Kendall
bandleaders and soloists in the United States, and it was on this
instrument that this country's most famous keyed-bugle player,
Edward (Ned) Kendall (Figure 10) amazed his listeners. Ken-
dall was born March 1, 1808, in Newport Harbor, Rhode Island.
His father was in the military and previously had been stationed
at Savannah, Georgia, where an older son James had been born.
Ned and his brother James are said to have been playing for
military musters in Newport by 1823. Both became famous play-
ers in later years, Ned on the bugle and James on the clarinet and
trombone.22
A concert at Boylston Hall in Boston on May 27, 1825 featured
James Kendall on the clarinet and also included the following:
"Finale to 1st Part—Military Symphony, Haydn, with the intro-
duction of the Kent Bugle." 23 Although the performer is not
named, it seems likely that it was Ned Kendall playing the trum-
pet part with the orchestra on his Kent Bugle.
What may have been Ned's first solo performance on the
instrument appeared on a program of 1830 which has been
preserved in the Boston Public Library. One item on the pro-
gram is a "Solo, Kent Bugle (first time) Mr. E. Kendall."24
Ned took up where Richard Willis left off, perfecting even
greater skill in playing and spreading the popularity of the
instrument.
In 1835 after plavmg with the Boston Brigade Band directed
by his brother and leading other small bands for several years,
Ned formed the Boston Brass Band which was one of the first
such organizations in the country (Figure 11). With the repu-
tation established as leader and soloist with this band, he was
soon in demand as a soloist by bands and concert groups through-
out the country. Many stories exist about his excellence on the
keyed bugle, and there is no doubt that he traveled widely. The
Kendalls and a celebrated Boston vocalist, Miss Anna Stone,
formed a concert company in the 1840s and appeared as concert
soloists in many eastern cities. Ned and James are also known
to have visited Europe. 23
The famous contest between Ned Kendall on the keyed bugle
and Patrick Gilmore playing the valve cornet was held in Salem,
Massachusetts, in December 1856. Although it was more of a
crowd-pleasing publicity stunt by the showman Gilmore than a
contest, it was an exciting affair and is entertainingly described
by Harry A. Schwartz in his Bands of America.2* Neither con-
testant could be said to have won the contest, and it is probably
only in retrospect that some significance is attached to the
outcome. The fact that a young band director could play as
well on the cornet as this country's finest player of the bugle
seemed to spell out the beginning of the end for the keyed
bugle. Even before this, the cornet, easier to play and more
consistent in tone quality had begun to replace the older
instrument.
For a few of his declining years, Ned "traveled with Spaulding
and Rodgers' Circus, leading the band; and was a great card
as a bugle soloist."20 Upon his death on October 26, 1861, the
following obituary appeared:
Death of Ned Kendall. Edward Kendall, the celebrated bugle
player, died at his residence, No. 9 Piedmont street, Saturday
morning of consumption. He has been quite ill for the last two
years. His age was 54 years.
For many years Mr. Kendall was connected with the military
bands of this city, and he has been the leader of several of them.
He also travelled abroad, and wherever he went his bugle playing
excited the greatest wonder. He was doubtless the best performer
on that instrument in the world. Those who have heard him
play the "Wood Up Quickstep," or the "Wi72slow Blues Quick-
step," can never forget him. He leaves several sons and daughters.
The Funeral will take place tomorrow at 1 p.m. from Hollis
Street Church.2"
The brass band Kendall was leader of for so many years was
present at his funeral and played three pieces.
While the band was playing the first piece E. H. Weston (a
24 former pupil of the deceased) walked up and took from its case
Figure 10. Edward (Ned) Kendall (1808-1861) in 1841. Draw-
ing from The Globe, Boston, January 26, 1890, page 19.
Figure 11. Program of the first performance of the Boston
Brass Band from the Boston Daily Advertiser and Patriot, March
28, 1835, page 3.
CT GRAND CONCERT. J%
M
R. J. KENDALL respectfully announces 10 tliepuhfic
of Boston audit. vicinily.ihal his FAREWELL CON-
CERT will he given at the Masonic Temple, (D* THIS
EVENING, .O March 28, previous to his departure for
London, on which occasion he solicits the attention of thai
kind public, under whose patfenage lie lias been so long fos-
tered. He is happy to say thai all the principal talenl of the
profession have generously volunteered their aid. By the
generosity oflhe Manager of the Tremom Theatre.the entire
strength of the Musical Department ol thai establishment
will assist.
Frincipal Vocal Performers—Mrs. Andrews, Mist A.
Woodward, Mrs. Kellogg, Mr. Comer, and Mr. Andrews.
Principal Instrumental Solo Performers—Messrs. Hill,
Downes, E. Kendall and J. Kendall.
Director— Mr. T. Comer. Leader— Mr. 0>linelli.
Mr. Jones will preside at the Piano Forte.
The Orchestra will be the largest and most complete ever
offered to a Boston public.
In addition to which he has the pleasure of introducing flfir
the first lime in America, a Military Bandof brass instru-
ments only, consisting of twenty performers. Leader—Mr.
E.Kendall. _ v
PART I.
1. Grand Overture, composed for and dedicated to the
Aiuuicur Society of Uostou, and played now in public for the
first lime. Isenbec.
2. Glee—Red Cross Knight. CaWSolt.
3. Solo—Clarionet. Mr. J. Kendall. Nel cor piu, with
variations, composed by himself, arranged with orchestral
accompaniments, by U. C. Hill. Mozart.
4. Trio—Mrs. Andrews, Miss A. Woodward, and Mrs.
Kellogg—"Spirits of Bliss." Burglmesl.
5. Solo—Kent Bugle, Mr. E. Kendall. Air and Varia-
tions—"Sul Margine." Kendall.
6. Song—Mrs. Andrews—"Should he upbraid." Bishop.
7. Solo—Violin. Mr. U. C. Hill. Souvenir de Fologne—
Variations and Rondo. Hill.
8. Comic Song—Mr. G. Andrews—"Professional Dinner
Parties,"—in which will be included Hair Dressers, Tailors,
Shoemakers, Tallow Chandlers, Dancing Masters, Music
Masters, Lawyers, Painters, Actors, &c. &c.
9. March—Brass Band and pas redouble. Walsh.
PART II.
1 Grand Overture—"The Bride ol llie Brigand," 1st lime
iu America. F. Ries.
2. Song—Miss A. Woodward—"Come, come." Maeder.
3. Duett—"Ebben per mai Memoi ia"—Mrs. Andrews Bnd
Miss A. Woodward—from LaGazza Lndra. Rossini.
4. Song—Mr.Comei—"King Deaths," 1st time. Neukom.
5. Solo—Flute—Mr. Downe—Tema and Grand Varia-
tions. Drouet.
6. Recitative and Song—Mrs. Kellogg—"I'll lollow tby
fairy footsteps." Lee.
7. Waltz and Quick Step—Brass Band. Mazzinghi.
8. Glee—"Foresters sound the cheerful Hum"—Bugle
Obligalo. Mr. E. Kendall, arranged wilh accompaniments,
by T. Comer. Bishop.
9. Solo—Trombone—Mr. J. Kendall—Introduction and
Aria—"Oh no we never mention her," and Rondo from Der
Freischutz, "Hunting Chorus,"—accompanied by tho Brass
Baud, and Orchestra entire. Webor.
ICpTickets CO cents each, to be had at the principal Book
and Music Stores, and at the daor of the Temple on the
evening of porlormauce. Concert to commence at 7 o'clock
precisely. WSis mh 28
the silver bugle, whose strains had entranced millions, and laid
it on the coffin, where it remained through the deeply impressive
services.2*
The Brass Band Era The instrumentation of bands in the United States varied a great
deal, but up until about 1835 had consisted generally of four or
five clarinets and perhaps a flute; a trumpet or bugle, and a pair
of French horns; and some combination of bassoons, serpents, or
trombones. The Salem band of 1805 or 1806 is reported to have
consisted of five clarinets, two flutes, bugle, trumpet, two French
horns, bassoon, trombone, and drum.29
About 1835, probably as a result of similar changes made in
European bands, most bands in the United States became all
brass by discarding their clarinets and flutes in favor of keyed
bugles, and their bassoons and serpents for the advantages of
ophicleides or valved basses. A writer in the October 1835 issue
of New York's American Music Journal™ did not find this
change to be much of an improvement. Among several causes
for the "not very flattering" state of military bands in New York,
he reports the following:
Another cause has been in operation lately, viz: the revolution
or rather the transmigration which these bodies have been under-
going to the state of brass bands, which seem at present to be
all the rage. Brass bands when they play in tune are good things
to march after; but it is not in the nature of things that they can
produce the beautiful effects of the old bands. A full band ought
to consist of:31
8 clarinets 2 bassoons 1 bass drum
1 E flat clarinet 2 trombones 1 pair cymbals
1 piccolo flute 1 serpent 1 [set] Chinese bells
2 horns 1 bass horn 1 muffled drum
2 trumpets
By this time the Dodworth Band of New York had become all
26 brass, and the Boston Brass Band had been organized under Ned
Kendall. Very soon, virtually all bands followed their example.
The first concert of the Dodworth Band after the change has
eluded this author's search, but the first appearance of the Boston
Brass Band took place on March 28, 1835, m conjunction with a
vocal and orchestral concert. The newspaper program stated:
"Introducing for the first time in America, a military band of
brass instruments only, consisting of 20 performers, leader Mr.
E. Kendall." 32
The instrumentation of these first brass bands is not known
exactly, but was probably similar to that of the Salem Brass
Band of 1837: e[? bugle, B^ bugle, trumpet, Efj alto, post horn,
three tenor trombones, bass trombone, baritone, two basses, snare
and bass drums; :{:! or the American Brass Band of Providence in
1838: one e\) and three Bf> keyed bugles, E^ trumpet, B^ post
horn, two French horns, tenor trombone, bass trombone, bass
horn, bass drum, small drum, cymbals, and fife.34 Additional
examples of instrumentation are suggested by band arrangements
found in the American Journal of Music and Musical Visitor of
1844. In the May 4 issue, the "Lucy Long Quickstep" was
arranged by B. A. Burditt for Bfo bugle 1, B(j bugle 2, or post
horn, fife, tenor trombone, bass or ophicleide.35 In the July 16,
issue, "Hewitt's Quickstep'' by Burditt is arranged with a larger
instrumentation of ef? bugle, two B[> bugles, E\) trumpet, two
B\) post horns, two tenor trombones, bass trombone, two ophi-
cleides, bass drum, cymbals, and side drum.36
Bands became a very popular form of entertainment during
the 1840s. Almost every town had its military band loosely at-
tached to the town militia, and some towns had independent
bands as well. They played for militia musters and drills,
marched in parades, and put on concerts with other town
musicians. They were often engaged for political events, picnics,
and dances. Occasionally, they played in places of general enter-
tainment such as Niblo's and Castle Garden in New York. On
occasion, they could also be heard at the theaters before the first
curtain and between acts. 27
The change to brass bands with the keyed bugle as the leading
solo voice encouraged a number of soloists on the instrument.
Inscriptions on gift instruments and newspaper accounts of other
gift bugles tell of G. R. Choate, leader of the 35th N.Y.V. Regi-
mental Band; Rufus Pond, leader or ihe Milford Brass Band;
S. Wells Phillips, leader of the Greenport Brass Band; D. Chase
of the Clinton Brass Band; Francis W. Morse and Jerome H.
Smith, leaders of the Salem Brass Band; J. C. Greene, leader of
the American Brass Band of Providence; A. R. Fitch of the
Fitchburg Cornet Band; Captain Ed Pier of Corning; D. C. Hall,
leader of the Lowell Brass Band; and A. W. Fisher of Bangor,
Maine.
Some measure of the honor given these men is found in the
cost of gift bugles presented to them. An E. G. Wright silver e\j
bugle with 12 keys for A. W. Fisher cost the citizens of Bangor
$350 in 1851. Another similar instrument presented to J. H.
Smith in Salem in the same year cost $480, more than half a
year's salary for a skilled tradesman.37
The excitement over the new brass bands also led several
American composers to write marches, quicksteps, and other
pieces for brass bands. Names most often appearing on programs
of the period were Allen Dodworth, B. A. Burditt, S. Knaebel,
Charles Zeuner, Oliver Shaw, and J. Holloway whose "Winslow
Blues" and "Wood Up Quickstep" were outstanding favorites.
Mechanical
Improvements
A number of mechanical improvements were made in the bugle
from 1840 to i860. The number of keys increased from nine to
ten, eleven, and finally twelve; the key mounts which earlier had
been of the box type were replaced by posts on footplates; and
tuning bits and crooks were discarded in favor of the telescopic
tuning shank. On some very late bugles, cupped hole covers and
stuffed pads replaced the flat covers and leather pads of earlier
models (Figures 6, 8, 14, 15). Materials used included brass,
silver, gold, German silver, and even tortoise shell as well as the
traditional copper.
Figure 12. Table of written and sounding pitches for eb and Bb bugles. Fingering
charts from Dodworth's Brass Band School for eb and Bb bugles with eleven keys.
34 indicates that either key 3 or keys 3 and 4 may be used. The same applies to
other similar groupings.
SERIES OF NOTES
PRODUCED BY A BUGLE
WITH ALL KEYS AT REST
AS WRITTEN
\UL -*:
m
AS SOUNDED
#
Bfc, BUGLE
E|, BUGLE
.. bd ° " b* —
fa*. ^ "»
i
V?
s
feg, kg.
i
FINGERING CHARTS E^ BUGLE (SOUNDS THREE SEMI-TONES HIGHER)
M°"ft" 1 1 '1 =
-v*-**-^* s^2 6 1 0 2 3 31 O 2 3 31 0 2 10 Z7 17 9* 19 2 10
l0*H%7* $ H ^ f 9 10 2 11
BUGLE (SOUNDS TWO SEMI-TONES LOWER)
tut, fag, ^r fe g
zr-^f^-^ J^t^i*0 2 3 * * C 29 91 0 2 10 27 17 9* 19 2W 2 I
, 0 2 33 5 6 7 ^ ^ 5 $ 4* 10 3 il
The function and fingering of at least the first seven keys
remained unchanged. Key 1, which stood open, gave written
b when pressed and c' when at rest; key 2, c#'; key 3, d'; key 4,
an alternate fingering for d' and vent for dfl', b[/ and e|j"; key 5,
df; key 6, e'; and key 7, f (Figure 12). The notes f#' and g' were
then produced by starting the series again with key 1. This time
the sequence needed only to be followed to key 5 for written b|/
before beginning another sequence on b' and c" with the first
key. Since the open or natural tones were closer together in the 2g
Key Bb efc
1
13.6
9-7
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
2
21.3
16.7
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
3
27.2
20.9
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
4
$l-9
24.4
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
5
40.0
30.0
X
X
X
X
X
X
6
46.6
35-4
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
7
5°-9
38.8
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
8
42.6
X
9
62.3
46.9
X
X
X
X
X
10
70.1
49-9
X
X
X
I I
74.8
53-°
X
X
X
X
12
56.6
X
X
Nu
mber of
keys:
12
11
10
9
8
7
6Figure 13. Key placement on Bb and eb bugles. Col-
umns two and three of the chart give the distance of
each tone hole from the bell on representative Bb and
eb bugles. Checks in columns four through ten show
which keys are included on bugles with less than twelve.
higher range of the bugle, only the first few fingerings were theo-
retically necessary after the first octave. The fingers used for the
first seven keys were invariably 5, 4, 2, 1, and 3 of the right hand,
followed by 1 and then 2 of the left (thumb being 1).
Additional keys were added m an Trregular, but consistent
way. Of the twelve keys with which the later bugles were
equipped, an eleven-keyed instrument has all except key 8; a
ten-keyed instrument has all except 8 and 12. In addition to the
basic seven keys, a nine-keyed bugle has keys 9 and 11; and an
eight-keyed instrument, key 9. Six-keyed bugles lack the fifth
key of the first seven. Figure 13 includes a photograph of a bugle
showing the placement of the tone holes, and a table giving the
distance of each hole from the bell on representative B(^ and e\>
bugles. Checks in columns to the right indicate the keys normally
found on bugles with less than the full compliment. Although
the e\) bugles often have twelve keys, no American B[? bugles
have been found, so far, with more than ten keys.
The exact function of the additional keys beyond the standard
seven remains an area of inexact knowledge. Three additional
keys added in 1822 by Halary of Paris were clearly intended to
extend the downward compass of the instrument. The fingering
chart given in the patent for a ten-keyed bugle is different from
that for the seven-keyed instrument only in that it includes a
lower octave fingered with combinations of keys including the
added three.38 Adam Carse describes additional keys on some
bugles as trill or shake keys. "Some eight-keyed bugles are
provided with two shake keys for the left little finger, one of
which was to be used when the instrument was in c, and the
other when it was crooked in B flat." 39
This author has been able to locate only three keyed-bugle
instruction books published in the United States: The Complete
Preceptor for the Bugle by B. A. Burditt; Dodworth's Brass Band
School by Allen Dodworth; and The Instrumental Director by
Ezekial Goodale. The following statement concerning extra keys
is quoted from Burditt. 31
The compass of the bugle is about the same as that of the post
horn, with this exception—the notes are not good below B (some
bugles having extra keys for producing high and low notes
with.) 4°
Fingering charts given in Dodworth's Brass Band School for both
e\) and B|j keyed bugles with eleven keys indicate the use of keys
8, 9, 10, and 11 (9, 10, 11, 12 on a twelve-keyed bugle) only on
the highest four tones of the two-octave chromatic compass:
a", b\)", b", and c'" (Figure 12).
No doubt the added keys on American bugles provided some
or all of the functions described above, but the possibility of
ornamental or prestige value should not be overlooked. Most of
the twelve-keyed bugles were gift instruments presented to
famous bandleaders and soloists.
Three Outstanding
Examples of Workmanship
in the United States
32
The summit in keyed-bugle design in the United States was
reached by E. G. Wright and Graves & Co. of Boston in their
exquisitely made and highly decorated presentation bugles.
These instruments are alike in function and mechanical detail,
but each is unique in its decorative design. So far eight of them
have been examined by the writer, seven having twelve keys and
one having eleven keys, all dating from 1850 to 1862. Three of
these are illustrated and described here in some detail. They
are a silver Graves & Co. model presented to Captain Ed Pier in
i860 (USNM 63.610); a silver, E. G. Wright instrument with gold
keys and trim given to J. C. Greene in 1850 and preserved in the
Rhode Island Historical Society Museum; and a gold, E. G.
Wright bugle presented to D. C. Hall, also in 1850, and now in
the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan (cover illustra-
tion and Figures 15 through 24).
Functionally and mechanically, the instruments are nearly
identical, and can be described together. They are in e\) and have
Figure 14. Left, mouthpieces from Hall
and Greene bugles by E. G. Wright.
Right, tuning shank from the Hall bugle.
twelve keys or tone holes. The keys are mounted on axles
between short posts as can be seen in several of the photographs.
The footplate on which these posts are attached is shaped in
the form of a heart. A flat spring is attached beneath the key,
its free end sliding in a small, iron-reinforced channel on the
footplate. The key nearest the bell stands open, the rest are
closed keys. The Pier instrument by Graves & Co. has cupped
hole covers for stuffed pads; the others, flat covers for leather
pads. The Hall bugle's keys have tiny sleeves of harder metal
protecting the axle holes on which they pivot.
All three instruments were equipped with a telescopic tuning
shank adjustable from seven to about thirteen centimeters by
means of a screw mechanism. The Hall instrument, however, is
the only one of the three which still has the original shank.
Mouthpieces survive for both the Hall and Greene bugles. They
are alike in general outline, but not identical. These are shown
in Figure 14 with the tuning shank from the Hall instrument.
The Pier bugle is made of silver, as is the body of the Greene
instrument. The Hall bugle and the keys, trim, and mouthpiece
of the Greene bugle are of a gold and silver alloy.
The bell of the Pier bugle is engraved with an eagle above
swirls of plumage and the inscription "Presented to Capt. Ed
33
Pier by his Corning Friends, i860." On a banner below is the
maker's mark: "Made by Graves & Co. Boston" (Figure 15).
The Greene bugle by E. G. Wright is the most striking in
appearance with its silver body set off by gold keys and fittings.
The bell-garland in gold is intricately engraved with plumes,
nude cherubs, musical instruments, and other figures. On top of
the bell, the maker's trademark is engraved in the silver of the
main body of the instrument: "E. G. Wright, Maker, Boston"
with a small flourish of decoration. Below this, there is an
elaborate gold medallion with banners, plumes, an anchor, and
an eagle engraved: "J. C. Greene Providence Nov. 5, 1850."
The Hall bugle is the most elaborately decorated of the three.
The top of the bell is engraved with a handclasp, armor and a
Figure 15, the Pier bugle, side view. Figure 16, the bell of the Pier bugle photo-
graphed from the top. Figure 17, a detail of the Pier bugle showing the saddle-
rest, lead-pipe, tone-hole-border, and end-plate engravings.
0$-i]L - ^^^¥^
i6
l7
Figure 18, the Greene bugle, side view. Figure 19, the bell-garland of the Greene bugle.
Figure 20, the bell of the Greene bugle photographed from the top. Figure 21, a detail of
the Greene bugle showing the saddle-rest, lead-pipe, tone-hole-border, and end-plate
engravings.
*9
20
21
22
23
<"2#i^ Mt& by
^E.G .WRJGH'J
'Me.}!en
Figure 22, the Hall bugle, side view. Figure 23, a detail of the Hall bugle showing the saddle-rest, lead-pipe, tone-
hold-border, and end-plate engravings. Figure 24, the bell of the Hall bugle photographed from the top.
shield, spears, a bayonet, horns, a banner, and the following
inscription: "Presented to D. C. Hall Esq by the members of the
Lowell Brass Band April 15, 1850." Below this elaborate design
is the maker's trademark, "E. G. Wright, Boston" (Figure 22).
Mr. Hall evidently valued this instrument too highly to use it
as his regular playing instrument for he made a duplicate of
brass, plated with gold, which is preserved in the Henry Ford
Museum.41
Decline Neither the workmanship of Graves and Wright nor the virtuoso
playing of soloists like Ned Kendall could forestall for long the
advance of the valved cornet. As early as 1831 valved instruments
began to appear on concert programs. The following was heard
on a program of February 12, 1831, at Boylston Hall, Boston:
"Solo—Tyrolese Air, with variations by Kendall, (James) on a
newly invented instrument called the VALVE TENOR TROMBONE,
made by Mr. Whitney of this city." 42 In 1845 at Providence,
Rhode Island, an attempt was made to form an entire band of
valved instruments. An advertisement in the March 12, 1845,
issue of the Providence Gazette stated that the new Providence
Brigade Band would be ready for engagements on the first of
May. "The wind instruments, 12 in number, are to be upon
the improved plan, operating with valves." By 1850 almost all
advertising of band instruments in newspapers and magazines
featured saxhorns and other valved brasses. The contest, already
mentioned, between Ned Kendall on the bugle and Patrick
Gilmore with his valved cornet took place in 1856 and helped
enhance the image of the valved instrument. Ned Kendall died
in 1861, and the Civil War bands forming at that time outfitted
themselves largely with valved instruments. In 1871, E. G.
Wright passed away after helping to form the Boston Musical
Instrument Manufactory, a company that produced only valved
brasses. In 1877, Henry Distin emigrated to this country and
40 brought with him the latest knowledge of the P£rinet piston
valve. In that year, Graves & Co. ceased business in Boston. The
field was then left entirely to the valved-instrument makers.
The heritage of this era when the Royal Kent Bugle was the
most popular band instrument in the United States is preserved
in the history of many fine bands and bugle soloists, in music
written for these bands, and in the many beautifully made
instruments of Graves, Wright, and other early craftsmen. The
American band tradition of air and variation solos, so popular
with the Sousa band, began with the keyed-bugle playing of
Willis, Johnson, and Kendall.
i. R. Morley Pegge, "Key Bugle," Grove's Dictionary of Music and NOTES
Musicians, vol. 4, p. 733.
2. Phillip Bate, The Trumpet and Trombone, pp. 118, 119,
3. "The Famed Distin Family," The New York Times, August 7, 1881.
4. Contributions of the Old Residents Historical Association, vol. 5,
pp. 179-181.
5. Sidney Forman, The i8o2d Special Regiment, p. 11.
6. Major Sylvanus Thayer to the Adjutant General, Records of the
Office of the Adjutant General, United States Military Academy, Na-
tional Archives, item 321.
7. Sylvanus Thayer, "The West Point Papers, 1808-1872," Index.
8. The Aurora, Philadelphia, November 20, 1820.
9. Thomas S. Lanard, 700 Years with the State Fencibles, pp. 16-18.
10. Louis Cephas Madeira, Annals of Music in Philadelphia, pp. 44, 45.
11. Francis Johnson, "The Death of Willis" (Philadelphia: Fiot,
Meignen 8c Co., 1830).
12. On board the TJ.S.S. Constitution, U.S. Naval Shipyard, Boston,
Massachusetts.
13. Contributions of the Old Residents Historical Association, vol. 5,
pp. 179-181.
14. The Klemm & Bro. instruments are found in the collections of
Clifford Allanson of Delmar, New York, and Martin Lessen of Roches-
ter, New York. The Firth, Hall, and Pond instruments are in the
collection of the University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois; the Henry
Ford Museum (no. 29.2951), Dearborn, Michigan; and in the collec-
tion of Fred Benkovic, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. 41
10.
15. Cheshire County Registry of Deeds, vol. 145, p. 119.
16. Ibid., vol. 147, p. 122.
17. French patent 1,849 °f 1821.
18. Allen Dodworth, "Brass Bands," The Message Bird, New York,
June 15, 1850, p. 361.
19. Third Exhibition of the Massachusetts Charitable Mechanic
Association at Quincy Hall in the City of Boston, September 20, 1841
(Boston: T. R. Marvin, 1841), p. 84.
20. Annual Report of the Commissioner of Patents (Washington:
Government Printing Office, 1845), p. 38.
21. Rochester, New York, city directories for 1851, 1859, and 1866,
respectively.
22. "Kendall's Silver Bugle," The Globe, Boston, January 26, 1890.
23. Program reproduced in James W. Thompson, "Music and Musical
Activities in New England, 1800-38," p. 650.
24. Ibid., p. 655.
25. P. 31-36.
26. Op. cit. (note 22).
27. Boston Evening Transcript, Monday, October 28, 1861.
28. Op. cit. (note 22).
29. Thomas Carroll, "Bands and Band Music in Salem," a paper read
before the Essex Institute, April 16, 1900, p. 3.
30. P. 251.
31. "The State of Military Bands in New York," The American
Music Journal, New York, October 1835, p. 251.
32. Boston Daily Advertiser & Patriot, Boston, March 28, 1835.
33. Op. cit. (note 29).
34. James W. Thompson, "Music and Musical Activities in New
England, 1800-38," pp. 417, 419.
35. P. 304.
36. P. 348.
37. The American Musical Review, New York, January 1, 1851, and
March 1, 1851.
38. Op. cit. (note 17).
39. Adam Carse, Musical Wind Instruments, p. 284.
40. The Complete Preceptor for the Bugle, p. 2.
41. Pillsbury Collection, Henry Ford Museum, Dearborn, Michigan,
no. 667.
.„ 42. Op. cit. (note 23), p. 411.
Bate, Phillip. The Trumpet and Trombone. New York: W. W.
Norton & Co., Inc., 1966.
Burditt, B. A. The Complete Preceptor for the Bugle. Boston:
Elias Howe, circa 1850.
Camus, Raoul Francis. "The Military Band in the United States
Army Prior to 1834." Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, New
York University, 1969.
Carroll, Thomas. "Bands and Band Music in Salem." A paper
read before the Essex Institute on April 16, 1900.
Carse, Adam. Musical Wind Instruments. London: MacMillan &
Co., Ltd., 1939.
Contributions of the Old Residents Historical Association. Vol. 5.
Lowell, Massachusetts: The Association, 1894.
Dodworth, Allen. Dodworth's Brass Band School. New York:
H. B. Dodworth, 1853.
Forman, Sidney. The i8o2d Special Regiment. West Point:
United States Military Academy Printing Office, 1948.
Goldman, Richard Franko. The Wind Band. Boston: Allyn &
Bacon, 1961.
Goodale, Ezekial. The Instrumental Director, 2d ed. Hallowell:
Glazier, Masters & Co., 1829.
"Kendall's Silver Bugle." The Globe. Boston, Massachusetts,
January 26, 1890.
Lanard, Thomas S. 100 Years with the State Fencibles. Phila-
delphia: Nields Co., 1913.
Madeira, Louis Cephas. Annals of Music in Philadelphia. Edited
by Phillip H. Goepp. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott, Co., 1896.
Morley-Pegge, R. "Key Bugle." Grove's Dictionary of Music and
Musicians, 5th ed. New York: St. Martin's Press, Inc., 1959.
Schwartz, Harry W. Bands of America. New York: Doubleday &
Co., Inc., 1957.
"The State of Military Bands in New York." The American
Music Journal. New York, October 1835.
Thayer, Sylvanus. "The West Point Papers, 1808-1872." Unpub-
lished manuscript in the United States Military Academy
library, West Point, New York. Copy in Library of Congress.
SELECTED
BIBLIOGRAPHY
43
Cindy Adams, editor; J. Thomas Russell [and others] associate
editors. 1965.
Thompson, James W. "Music and Musical Activities in New
England 1800-1838." Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, George
Peabody College for Teachers, Nashville, Tennessee, 1963.
White, William Carter. A History of Military Music in America.
New York: The Exposition Press, 1945.
44 -&U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: 1971 O 445—335