Skip to main content
Glass armonica
Glass armonica
Glass armonica

Glass armonica

ALTERNATE NAME(S)
  • Glasharmonika
  • Harmonica de verre
Date1785 ca.
Place MadeFrance, Europe
Serial No.none
Signednone
DescriptionAs the popularity of playing musical glasses increased during the mid-18th century, Benjamin Franklin, American statesman and inventor, designed a more utilitarian version of the fashionable instrument--the armonica. He had a glassblower make him a set of 36 hemispherical bowls, graduated in size, with a hole in the middle so that they could be placed in a row on a horizontal iron spindle and rotated by a treadle mechanism like that of old-fashioned sewing machines. The Museum's example is equipped with a crank rather than a treadle to rotate the spindle.
Dimensions910 x 1080 x 445 mm (excluding candle holders and crank)
ProvenancePurchased in 1999 from Wolfgang Ruf, Emmetten, Switzerland.
Published ReferencesKoster, John "A Benjamin Franklin Invention . . . Museum Acquires Rare Glass Armonica Built in 18th-Century France." _America's Shrine to Music Museum Newsletter _27, No. 3 (August 2000): 4-5.

Koster, John. "A Benjamin Franklin Invention . . . Museum Acquires Rare Glass Armonica Built in 18th-Century France." _Glass Music World_ (Spring 2001): 5 and 7.

Koster, John; Margaret Downie Banks; Ana Silva. "Ethereal music making: champagne toasting flutes or tuned musical glasses?" _National Music Museum Newsletter_ 45, no. 1 (Winter 2021): 7,

Larson, André P. _Beethoven & Berlioz, Paris & Vienna: Musical Treasures from the Age of Revolution & Romance 1789-1848_. With essay by John Koster. Exhibition catalog, Washington Pavilion, Sioux Falls, South Dakota, September 12-November 2, 2003. Vermillion: National Music Museum 2003. Pages 22 and 81.

Larson, André P. "Glass Armonica." _South Dakota Musician_ 35, No. 1 (Fall 2000: cover, 22.




Credit LineRawlins Fund, 1999
Object number06208
On View
Not on view
Musical glasses
1915-1945 ca.
Lap organ
Daniel B. Bartlett
1847 ca.
Single horn, F
Frank Holton & Company
1930 ca.
Single horn, F
Frank Holton & Company
1929-1930 ca.
Harmonium
Alexandre & Fils
1843-1850 ca.
Violin
C. Barton Rice
1951
We use cookies to ensure we give you the best experience on our website. By continuing to use this site or by closing or clicking "I agree", you agree to the use of cookies. I agree