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Mando-cello

Alternate name:Mandolin
Alternate name:Mandocello
Maker: Gibson
Date: 1914
Place Made:Kalamazoo, Michigan, United States, North America
Model: K-2
Serial No: 17984; 2037 (factory order number)
SignedMother-of-pearl inlay on peghead face, in cursive text: The / Gibson
Engraved into tailpiece, in cursive text: The / Gibson

Label inside instrument, in black text with underlined text handwritten in black ink:
Patented Feb. 1, ’98 / “ March 30, ’06 / Other Patents Pending / GibsonMando-Cello StyleK-2- / Number17984 is hereby / GUARANTEED / against faulty workmanship or material. Should / this instrument, with proper care and usage, go wrong, / we agree to repair it free of charge at our factory, or / to replace it with another of the same style or value. / GIBSON MANDOLIN-GUITAR CO. / (Manufacturers) / Kalamazoo, Mich., U. S. A.
MarkingsStamped onto neck block: 2037
Stamped into pickguard: PAT. MAR .30 .09
DescriptionThe mando-cello is a baritone mandolin with the same tuning as a violoncello and was created to fill out the range of the mandolin orchestras that were popular early in the twentieth century. The Style K-2 was one of the initial models offered by the Gibson Mandolin-Guitar Manufacturing Company, when it was formed in 1902. The Style K-2 had the same design and features as the top-of-the-line, pear-shaped Style A-4 mandolin and Style H-2 mandola. It was discontinued in 1922, as the popularity of mandolin orchestras began to fade and players switched to banjos and guitars.
DimensionsTotal mando-cello length: 960 mm (37-13/16”)
Back length: 473 mm (18-5/8”)
Width at heel: 86 mm (3-3/8”)
Width at widest point: 363 mm (14-9/32”)
Rib height (including edging) at heel: 87 mm (3-7/16”)
Rib height, at waist: 85 mm (3-11/32”)
Rib height, at endpin: 85 mm (3-11/32”)
Head length: 172 mm (6-25/32”)
Head width, top: 72 mm (2-27/32”)
Head width, bottom: 61 mm (2-13/32”)
Neck length (nut to ribs): 331 mm (13-1/32”)
Neck width, nut: 41 mm (1-5/8”)
Neck width, heel: 52 mm (2-1/16”)
Soundhole height: 62 mm (2-7/16”)
Soundhole width: 90 mm (3-17/32”)

Vibrating string length (nut to bridge edge): A course – 628 mm (24-23/32”); D course – 629 mm (24-3/4”); G course – 631 mm (24-27/32”); C course – 632 mm (24-7/8”)
ProvenancePreviously owned by Neal Penner, a former Gibson representative, Enid, Oklahoma. In 1980, Denner sold this instrument, along with 32 others, to Pete Wagener, Savage, Minnesota. By 1997, owned by Curtis Teague and Lorette Simone, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Purchased from Teague and Simone, 1997.
Credit Line: Board of Trustees, 1997
Not on view
Object number: 06085