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Dobson Five-String Banjo

Object Details

Description

This banjo was made by Henry C. Dobson of New York, New York around 1877. It is a Five-String Banjo, with 19 frets, 22 brackets, walnut neck, rosewood veneer hoop and resonator. The banjo is stamped on the bottom of the neck:

HENRY C. DOBSON'S PATENT JULY 13, 1867

This instrument features U.S. Patent #66810 dated July 13, 1867, by Henry C. Dobson, for an improvement in securing the banjo head to the rim. This method of tightening the head with vertical screws from above is similar to that seen in a banjo by George Teed, and later, in some “Top Tensioning” banjos made by The Gibson Company.

Attached to the inside of the resonator is a printed label and instruction sheet signed: “#1424 Henry C. Dobson…1877.”

Henry C. Dobson and his family were among the most active players and popularizers of the banjo in the early stages of its commercialization. They were influential in the transition from fretless to fretted fingerboards and the use of resonators and more complicated “tone ring” supports for the head. Some of Dobson’s instruments were actually made by the Buckbee Company in New York City.

Location
Currently not on view
Data Source
National Museum of American History
maker
Dobson, Henry C.
date made
ca 1877
Credit Line
Gift of Hermann W. Williams, Jr.
Physical Description
rosewood (overall material)
metal (overall material)
animal skin (overall material)
walnut (overall material)
Measurements
overall: 37 1/2 in x 13 in x 3 1/4 in; 95.25 cm x 33.02 cm x 8.255 cm
overall: 37 in x 13 in x 4 in; 93.98 cm x 33.02 cm x 10.16 cm
Object Name
banjo

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