“The King” by H.N. White
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“The King” by H.N. White
Hi all! I’ve had this trombone for a few years and know a little bit about it (made by the H.N. White company sometime between 1893 and 1899), but was wondering if anyone knew more about it!
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Bach 42B w/Olsen Rotary Valve - AR Resonance MS72/GR0
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Re: “The King” by H.N. White
I have one of these, too (actually 2: one High Pitch and one Low Pitch). Mine has a higher serial number -- in the 7,000s.
Is the brace under the cork barrel doubled (a straight part and a curved part)? If so, it's not as old as you think. The doubled brace was intended to strengthen the inner slide against misalignment. It was invented around 1907 and patented in 1913. I just find the doubled brace hard to hold.
Thomas King was a trombone soloist around the turn of the 20th Century and Henderson White was the technician who made the instrument (and founded the company).
You can find a lot of history about the HN White company on the hnwhote.com Web site.
Is the brace under the cork barrel doubled (a straight part and a curved part)? If so, it's not as old as you think. The doubled brace was intended to strengthen the inner slide against misalignment. It was invented around 1907 and patented in 1913. I just find the doubled brace hard to hold.
Thomas King was a trombone soloist around the turn of the 20th Century and Henderson White was the technician who made the instrument (and founded the company).
You can find a lot of history about the HN White company on the hnwhote.com Web site.
Bruce Guttman
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Re: “The King” by H.N. White
Do you know what model it is? This is what the slide looks like
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Bach 42B w/Olsen Rotary Valve - AR Resonance MS72/GR0
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Re: “The King” by H.N. White
Without the patent on the cork barrel but with the double brace, I'd put it between 1907 and 1913. Depending on bore, it's the #1 Solo, #2 Solo, or #3 Solo (smallest bore #1). Most likely #2 as this appears to be the most popular model.
Bruce Guttman
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Re: “The King” by H.N. White
The patent says “May 17-1910”
Bach 42B w/Olsen Rotary Valve - AR Resonance MS72/GR0
Olds Recording R-15 - Warburton 11D/T3★
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Re: “The King” by H.N. White
You have a patent statement? If that's the case the horn is 1910 or newer. Somehow I missed that on your pictures. Is there also a lion head on the cork barrel?
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Re: “The King” by H.N. White
The patent is on the curved brace. There is a lion head on the barrel, the slide, and on the bell section where it receives the slide. Also, the inner slide diameter appears (tape measure and eye judgment haha) to be 15/32 of an inch.
Bach 42B w/Olsen Rotary Valve - AR Resonance MS72/GR0
Olds Recording R-15 - Warburton 11D/T3★
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Re: “The King” by H.N. White
Also, the inside width of the hand slide is just under 2.75 inches, and the bell is 6 5/8 inches in diameter
Bach 42B w/Olsen Rotary Valve - AR Resonance MS72/GR0
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Re: “The King” by H.N. White
You may have the #1 solo based on the measurements you provided. Note that your slide is 0.468", about the same bore as a Bach #37 trumpet!
Bruce Guttman
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Re: “The King” by H.N. White
Very cool! Any guesses of when it’s from? I’m thinking early 1910s. Also, do you mean the number 1 from the picture below?
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Re: “The King” by H.N. White
Yup. No. 1.
Now the question is whether it's High Pitch or Low Pitch. If you are having real problems tuning to other instruments, it's probably High Pitch (almost a half step sharp). Low Pitch is a little flat.
Also, even though a modern small shank mouthpiece "sorta" fits, you really need a shorter mouthpiece with a smaller shank.
Now the question is whether it's High Pitch or Low Pitch. If you are having real problems tuning to other instruments, it's probably High Pitch (almost a half step sharp). Low Pitch is a little flat.
Also, even though a modern small shank mouthpiece "sorta" fits, you really need a shorter mouthpiece with a smaller shank.
Bruce Guttman
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Re: “The King” by H.N. White
Yup, definitely flat! And I do use a modern small shank, but it actually seems a little too small/goes further into the horn than it should. Maybe the bore got widened somehow. What gives it away as a No. 1 vs a No. 2 or 3?
Last edited by Arendsdale on Sun Oct 17, 2021 7:35 pm, edited 3 times in total.
Bach 42B w/Olsen Rotary Valve - AR Resonance MS72/GR0
Olds Recording R-15 - Warburton 11D/T3★
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Re: “The King” by H.N. White
Bell diameter rules out #3. Your measurement of bore indicated 0.468", which is about the same size as a Conn 2H and smaller than anything we use today. That would indicate more likely a #1 than a #2.
Bruce Guttman
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Re: “The King” by H.N. White
Ah ok. I was thinking it might be a No. 2 because on the 1911 version on the website, the image actually has the patent as May 16-1910 and my horn says the 17th. And the No. 1 doesn’t mention the patent date.
Bach 42B w/Olsen Rotary Valve - AR Resonance MS72/GR0
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Re: “The King” by H.N. White
I may have found one of the pre-1930’s models in silver. I’m not sure yet which model it is. What are they generally worth? Are they more or less valuable than the later years?
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Re: “The King” by H.N. White
Sorry to burst your bubble, but these very old Kings are not terribly valuable nor are they very desirable. They are generally way too small for today's requirements. The friction fit between slide and bell is not desirable (and tends to come apart at the worst times). The double brace for the inner slide is uncomfortable to hold. If it's High Pitch, it's absolutely unusable.
They do have nice engraving, and if the silver plate is not too tarnished it can be polished up to look great.
If you have a period instrument group for its period, it may have a use. Otherwise, no.
They do have nice engraving, and if the silver plate is not too tarnished it can be polished up to look great.
If you have a period instrument group for its period, it may have a use. Otherwise, no.
Bruce Guttman
Merrimack Valley Philharmonic Orchestra
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Re: “The King” by H.N. White
Thanks for the honest assessment. The asking price on this one is $280 but it’s definitely a friction fit and if I can’t play it regularly I don’t have much use for it.
Jupiter 636
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Re: “The King” by H.N. White
Note: I have two of them; one each High Pitch and Low Pitch. The Low Pitch is below A-440 even with the tuning slide all the way in. I can make the High Pitch bell + Low Pitch slide sorta work. I also had to do a lot of work on the slide to get it almost passable. I paid about $100 each.
Bruce Guttman
Merrimack Valley Philharmonic Orchestra
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