Otto Schlicht
Otto Schlicht was a German-American manufacturer of concertinas in Chicago.
Biography
Schlicht arrived in the United States from Germany around 1900, having worked on German-type concertinas there. He applied his knowledge to the production of concertinas, and began producing models under the brand-names Patek, Pearl Queen, and Peerless for music shop in Illinois.[1][2]
He transitioned to owning his own concertina workshop, where he produced his brands until 1950. Shortly after he ceased working, in 1952 concertina maker Christy Hengel purchased Schilicht's concertina-making equipment, which had been stored in a basement since the workshop closed, for $1500, moving it to his own shop in Minnesota.[3]
gollark: Who's this "Winter"?
gollark: ||It seemed like they were just remotely viewing and interacting with each other, magically mapped onto the environments on each end, but could sort of move items around by accident sometimes.||
gollark: You should do `free -m` for megabytes.
gollark: There's the OC wiki, but it seems outdated and incomplete.
gollark: I am somewhat busy right now but can totally* maybe** play next week.
References
- Litwin, Steve; Kohan, Mark (2004). "The Chemnitzer Concertina: Polka Music's Workhorse". Polish American Journal. Retrieved 30 January 2015.
- Philip Vilas Bohlman(Philip Bohlman); Otto Holzapfel (2002). Land Without Nightingales: Music in the Making of German-America. University of Wisconsin-Madison. p. 206. ISBN 978-0-924119-04-0.
- American Folk Art. ABC-CLIO. pp. 408–. ISBN 978-0-313-34936-2.
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