Brantlley and Friends,

 

The sad discussion about Mr. Peterson raised the question concerning the 
whereabouts of Eldridge Reeves Johnson's Papers.  Of course nobody kept records 
like Thomas Edison, but I believe many of ER Johnson  papers are in good hands. 
 As I'm a bit of a fan of Mr. Johnson, I put up a little information on my web 
site about him and where other phono-enthuisiasts can research him.  Check out 
http://www.phonojack.com/Johnson.   

 

Researching ERJ 
The repository for ER Johnson?s Papers, for the period of 1885-1976 is located 
at the University of Wyoming, American Heritage Center in Laramie, WY.  These 
valuable papers are not yet available on-line but perhaps you can accelerate 
the university's Digital Initiative Program by making an on-line donation to 
the University?s American Heritage Center, just click here to learn more. 

 

The Lemelson Center for Study of Invention and Innovation says:  "Johnson?s 
papers contain correspondence, diaries, biographical material, financial 
reports, clippings, booklets, ledgers, and photos, relating to the Victor 
Talking Machine Company and the machine itself".

 

Also check out the Johnson Victrola Museum in Dover Delaware   
http://history.delaware.gov/museums/jvm/jvm_main.shtml Johnson'd desk, a 
variety of reports and documents and great stash of papers are kept there.  

 

Our friends at the EMI Archives (originally British Gramophone Company, later 
G&T) have original documents, letters, wires including correspondence with 
Emiler Berliner and ER Johnson.

I have also seen some rarely seen letters from ER Johnson to William Barry Owen 
that demonstrate an incredibly compassionate side of ER Johnson.

There are several other locations where researchers can get access to ER 
Johnson papers.

 

Because of the incredible interest in Thomas Edison and his meticulous note 
keeping and the many good stewarts that have cared for preserved Edison's 
personal and company records, we're luck to have a treasure trove of Edison 
Papers on line at Rutgers University.  The Thomas Edison papers project scanned 
documents stored at the Edison National Historic Site as well as documents from 
private collections.  If you are one of the fortunate few to have "an authentic 
Edison paper", you should register your item(s) with The Thomas Edison Papers 
project at Rutgers.  Check out:  http://edison.rutgers.edu/  If you want an 
unlimited supply of good Edison reading, start buying the fabulous six volumes 
printed Books Edition.

 

Have fun,

 

Jack Whelan

 

 

 

 

 

 

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From [email protected]  Fri Apr 17 19:02:40 2009
From: [email protected] (Hummel Family)
Date: Fri Apr 17 19:11:03 2009
Subject: [Phono-L] Ultra rare Model H Recorder
In-Reply-To: <[email protected]>
References: <[email protected]>
Message-ID: <ce787ab2e7e94365bdc2a52e25c33...@familyleft>

I assume that this was joke, since it has a recorder top on it?

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Steven Medved
Sent: Friday, April 17, 2009 5:47 PM
To: phonolist; Phono-l
Subject: [Phono-L] Ultra rare Model H Recorder


http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=200330413754

For the Edison collector who has everything.
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