Hershey School of Musical Art

Hershey School of Musical Art was an American school located in Chicago, Illinois.

History

It was established within the Hershey Music Hall in 1875 by Sara Hershey and William Smythe Babcock Mathews, attaining special success in its departments of organ, voice, and composition. Clarence Eddy was general director almost from the first, and it was here that in 1877-79 he gave a series of 100 organ recitals without repeating any work. In 1879, Hershey and Eddy married, and in 1885, they discontinued the School.[1]

Hershey Music Hall

Hershey Music Hall was located at 83 & 85 Madison Street.[2] It was built by Sara Hershey's father, Benjamin.[3] Situated opposite McVicker's Theater, it was capable of seating 800 to 1,000 persons. It was furnished with a three manual concert organ built by Johnson & Son, and a Stoneway and Sons' Centennial Grand Piano.[4]

gollark: Although I suppose its puny USB-OTG thing might not be happy with powering up my disk through an adapter.
gollark: In some sort of ridiculous emergency it's technically mountable from my spare phone (unlike NTFS, as the kernel on that is ancient).
gollark: You need special software to read the deduplicated/compressed/encrypted backup repositories off my disk *anyway*, so using a slightly less well supported filesystem is not a concern.
gollark: I automated it ages ago. Repeatedly.
gollark: My backup disk is ext4, due to windows bad and me not using it.

References

This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: G. Grove and J. A. Fuller-Maitland's Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians. Supplement (1922) This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: J. S. Dwight's Dwight's Journal of Music (1878)

Bibliography

  • The Courier (1881). Musical Courier (Public domain ed.). Blumenberg & Floersheim.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Dwight, John S. (1878). Dwight's Journal of Music (Public domain ed.). Boston: Oliver Ditson & Company.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Grove, George; Fuller-Maitland, John Alexander (1922). Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians. Supplement. Presse. p. 239.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Hotchkiss, George Woodward (1898). History of the Lumber and Forest Industry of the Northwest (Public domain ed.). G.W. Hotchkiss & Company.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
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