[Phono-L] First Generation Collectors

Phonophan at aol.com Phonophan at aol.com
Wed Jan 23 19:48:07 PST 2008


I heard about Ira from a collector who had gone to college in OR then moved  
to NY, Mark Kaplan. Some of you remember him I'm sure. He spoke in awe about  
Ira. He also mentioned others in the "old time" set such as Donna Lee (sp?).  
This was back in 1970. I remember Mark was lucky enough to find a Bell-Tainter 
 machine, MISSING ONE OF THE SIDE GEARS on the top works. Incredibly, he 
wrote to  Ira and incredibly Ira had it! Remember his was back in the old "Pony 
Express"  days before the shrinking of the world via the Internet. I mean, I 
wouldn't have  known where to BEGIN to find such an impossible part-- but Ira had 
it!
 
Tim  Fabrizio
phonophan
PO Box 747 
Henrietta, NY 14467

TEL 585 582  1586
FAX 585 582 2624
Web site: www.phonophan.com  

 
In a message dated 1/23/2008 10:21:53 P.M. Eastern Standard Time,  
mfkhanchalian at altrionet.com writes:

Well, as  a Southern California guy, I certainly knew Ira and enjoyed his 
friendship  in the 1980's.  What a wonderful guy! My wife and I enjoyed that  
infamous basement and his wonderful enthusiasm.  I recall a large  number of 
late 2-minute Edison with the original lids that he had  beautifully stored 
behind glass if I remember correctly.  He inspired  my collecting focuses for 
sure.
We had close relatives in Portland so  it was natural for me to meet up with 
Ira and I am so glad I  did.

Michael Khanchalian


----- Original Message -----  
From: "DeeDee Blais" <deedeeblais at yahoo.com>
To:  <phono-l at oldcrank.org>
Sent: Wednesday, January 23, 2008 10:38  AM
Subject: [Phono-L] First Generation Collectors


As I wrote my  little story I thought about first
generation collectors and realized that  early phono
collecting was probably much more regional than it  is
now.  In the Portland, Oregon area there was the
"Edison  Club".  Some of those members were Ira
Dueltgen, Don Fenske, Wayne  Yoder, George Donnough
(sp?), Dona Lee, and Orville White.  Orville  could
make anything and Ira could repair anything.  It was
nearly a  self supporting group.  I know that Ira
corresponded with a few  collectors in California  but
I doubt if he reached out much farther  in the early
years.  I wish everyone could have known Ira.  He  was
a mentor collector for Mike Stitt and myself.  There
was  nothing better than spending a Saturday in Ira's
basement.  You meet  many fine people in your life but
few really rare ones and Dottie and Ira  were a couple
of the rare ones.  They made the world a better  place.
( I am curious... have any other long time collectors
from  outside the Northwest heard of Ira? )  It was the
national clubs like  the Michigan Antique Phonograph
Society and publications such as Alan K's  "Antique
Phonograph Monthly" that helped change collecting from
a  regional to national pastime.  Today, with the
internet, ebay, and  cheap cell phones, it's an
international hobby.  With everything  available and a
little patience, there's no need to make aluminum
corner  columns.  Jerry Blais


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