
I am a rank amateur when it comes to brass, but I like to restore vintage instruments with a history. I currently have a 1962 EK Blessing trumpet, and a rare German Einheits bandoneon with three sets of reeds instead of two.
I recently picked up a Conn trombone at a flea market in restorable condition with a very interesting background. It says it is a Carl Fischer's American Model, New York, has a serial number under the model info. on the bell it says that it was given to the USS Leviathan's Engineering Department by the Consolidated Iron Works. This is the Hoboken company owned by Andrew Fletcher that worked on the huge vessel's boilers after it was confiscated from the Germans in 1917 (they called it the SS Vaterland) by the US government when war was declared at the beginning of WW1. The vessel then became the USS Leviathan troop carrier and ferried some 100k doughboys to and from Europe. It had a band that was pretty good and recorded music for Victor Records, mostly fox trot tunes. Later on United States Lines bought it and turned it back into a luxurious transatlantic ship.
This instrument has a serial number, 27197, just below the engraved model info, where the bell joins the pipe. I thought the instrument was contemporary to the date the ship made its first voyage after being refurbished into a troop carrier, but that serial number puts it around 1893 (!!). Is this accurate?
I have a picture of the trombone player with the band from an old sheet music for a song they played, but I would love to have a name if anyone knows where to find it.