This deep dark walnut vintage piano with good looking ivory keys and body, sounds really nice to everyone who plays it. I bet it will for you too.

By the turn-of-the-century Wurlitzer was specializing in some of the first coin-operated player pianos and orchestrions manufactured and sold in the United States.  Rudolph Wurlitzer retired in 1906 and was succeeded by his sons.

By the 1920s, Wurlitzer had an endless array of mechanical musical instruments in addition to their traditional pianos and player pianos. There were several names that were controlled by Wurlitzer by the early 20th Century, including ApolloJulius BauerMelville Clark, De Kalb, Ellwood, Farny, Kingston, Merriam, Strad and Underwood.  After the Great Depression era, Wurlitzer built several lines of spinets, consoles and baby grand pianos well into the 20th Century. The giant Wurlitzer Company continued to build pianos until the 1990s when the Wurlitzer name was sold to the famous Baldwin Piano & Organ Company.

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