Banjo Created For Charles P. Stinson

Charles P. Stinson’s minstrel credits include working with Callinder's Georgia Minstrels, the World's Minstrels, and Harvey and Frohman's Minstrel Companies as a banjo player, actor, and drum major. He made his name through banjo competitions though, notably in an 1888 competition in Kansas City when he beat eleven white competitors to become the first known African American to win such a competition in a southern state.;After touring through the 1880s, Stinson returned to Pittsburgh and set up a studio teaching amateur musicians. He taught parlor music to his middle-class students eager to join banjo, mandolin, and guitar orchestras playing arrangements of popular songs. Through his role as a teacher, Stinson also sold student-level banjos to his students. This banjo likely made by J.H. Buckbee in New York was the result of a collaboration between Stinson and Buckbee to create banjos for Stinson to assemble and distribute to his students; a common arrangement in the late nineteenth century as the instrument became popular. Artist John H. Buckbee. (Photo by Heritage Art/Heritage Images via Getty Images)
Charles P. Stinson’s minstrel credits include working with Callinder's Georgia Minstrels, the World's Minstrels, and Harvey and Frohman's Minstrel Companies as a banjo player, actor, and drum major. He made his name through banjo competitions though, notably in an 1888 competition in Kansas City when he beat eleven white competitors to become the first known African American to win such a competition in a southern state.;After touring through the 1880s, Stinson returned to Pittsburgh and set up a studio teaching amateur musicians. He taught parlor music to his middle-class students eager to join banjo, mandolin, and guitar orchestras playing arrangements of popular songs. Through his role as a teacher, Stinson also sold student-level banjos to his students. This banjo likely made by J.H. Buckbee in New York was the result of a collaboration between Stinson and Buckbee to create banjos for Stinson to assemble and distribute to his students; a common arrangement in the late nineteenth century as the instrument became popular. Artist John H. Buckbee. (Photo by Heritage Art/Heritage Images via Getty Images)
Banjo Created For Charles P. Stinson
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制限:
商業目的またはプロモーション目的で使用する場合は、ゲッティ イメージズのオフィスへお問い合わせください。
クレジット:
Heritage Images / 寄稿者
報道写真番号:
1326286508
コレクション:
Hulton Archive
作成日:
1888年01月01日(日)
アップロード日:
ライセンスタイプ:
リリース情報:
リリースされていません。 詳細情報
ソース:
Hulton Archive
オブジェクト名:
2833307
最大ファイルサイズ:
5728 x 8019 px (48.50 x 67.89 cm) - 300 dpi - 3 MB