American Made Pianos

An Outstanding Manufacturing Tradition

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French, Jesse & Sons

Factory Location: Rochester, New York
Serial Number Dates: 1896 - ?

History:

Jesse French & Sons Piano Company was established in 1875 in Rochester, NY. The company was once a division of the P.A. Starck Piano Company, and also shared the name, Dorman French & Smith Pianos. It was also affiliated with Krell French and H. A. Selmer. Piano names that are associated with Jesse French & Sons include Ackerman & Lowe, Continental, Frenchetts, Jefferson, Krell-French, Lagonda, and Browning.

 

Information source: Pierce Piano Atlas

The Resonance of a Continent: The American Piano Tradition

The American piano manufacturing tradition is a story of unparalleled craftsmanship meeting the boundless natural resources of a new world. At its heart lies the selection of materials—most notably the vast, old-growth spruce forests of the Pacific Northwest and the Northeast. These superior stands of Sitka and Adirondack spruce provided the tight-grained, resonant timber essential for crafting the world’s finest soundboards, offering a tonal depth and "singing" quality that European makers envied. Combined with a relentless spirit of industrial innovation, American makers refined the overstrung scale and the heavy cast-iron plate, creating instruments of such structural integrity and powerful projection that they redefined the modern piano.