• Source: Sherman Clay
    • Sherman, Clay & Co. was an American musical instruments retailer—mainly pianos—and a publisher and seller of sheet music, founded in San Francisco. Founded in 1853 as A. A. Rosenberg, it was sold to Leander Sherman and Clement Clay in 1870 and was incorporated as Sherman, Clay & Company in 1892. During the 20th century, it gradually expanded its retail operation into a nationwide chain of stores, and by the 1980s it had around 60 stores. It was based in San Francisco until at least the 1970s. In 2013, the company closed or sold its last retail stores.


      History



      What would become Sherman, Clay was founded in 1853 as the A. A. Rosenberg music store and was located in San Francisco at the corner of Kearny and Sutter Streets. Leander Schutzenbach Sherman (1847–1926), who had been working as a clerk for Rosenberg, bought out his employer in 1870 and took on Major Clement C. Clay (1836–1905) as a partner in 1879. In 1892, Sherman, Clay & Co. was incorporated with Sherman as president. During the 1890s, the firm imported music, pianos, and musical instruments; and it manufactured pianos and church organs from its factory. At that time, the two principals were Leonard Georges (born 1850), who served as treasurer, and Louis F. Geissler (born 1861).
      By 1894, the company had grown to four stores, with the opening of a store in Portland, Oregon, joining existing ones in San Francisco, Oakland, and Seattle. The Portland store changed locations a few times but, notably, remained in the Woodlark Building from 1930 to 1974, and the company continued to operate a Portland store until 2013. Clay Sherman, grandson of co-founder Leander Sherman, became president of the company in 1949. The company was sold to Bernard Schwartz, of San Francisco, in 1957.
      The company had 21 stores in the 1950s, and was continuing to expand. It had 28 stores in spring of 1965, all located in the three states of California, Oregon and Washington. Its headquarters was still in San Francisco at that time. The company soon began to expand beyond the West Coast, and by the mid-1970s it had "become a national chain, with stores from Manhattan to Kansas City and Seattle to Los Angeles." In the 1980s, it had around 60 stores.


      = 21st century

      =
      By the 2010s, Sherman, Clay claimed to have sold over two million instruments. The company also sold new and used pianos manufactured by companies such as Steinway & Sons (which included subcontracted pianos from suppliers sold under the secondary names Boston and Essex), the Yamaha Corporation, and the Henry F. Miller Piano Company.
      In 2013, Sherman Clay announced it was exiting the retail business in California, its longtime home base, on May 31, 2013, after 142 years. Of the four remaining California locations at that time, the stores in San Francisco and Walnut Creek were sold to Steinway and Sons, to remain in operation as piano dealerships, while those in Roseville and San Bruno were to be closed. The company had only two stores elsewhere at the time, in Seattle and Houston, but they closed later the same year, the Houston store around June and the Seattle store in September 2013. The Seattle location was the company's last store. Since the 1970s, the company had been owned by Sherman Clay Group, a diverse company involved in real estate management and consumer finance.
      May 7, 2013, was proclaimed by San Francisco chief of Protocol Charlotte Mailliard Shultz as Sherman Clay Day in San Francisco to honor the retailer.


      Selected personnel


      General manager
      Al Jacobs (1903–1985), songwriter
      C.M. "Sandy" Balcom, and Leroy "Pop" Vaughan, who both once worked for the Sherman, Clay & Co., in Seattle, went on to found Balcom and Vaughan, a pipe organ manufacturing company in Seattle
      Richard Powers, Sherman, Clay's general manager for the New York office, until 1925, when he went into radio
      Bernie Pollack replaced Richard Powers in 1925 as general manager of the New York office
      Sheet music
      Elizabeth Octavia Garrett (née Stone), mother of actress Betty Garrett (1919–2011) managed the sheet music department in Sherman Clay, Seattle
      Professional staff
      Rose Fischer (born around 1878), in 1922, left a position in the New York office of Broadway Music to work with the professional department in the New York office of Sherman, Clay & Co. She was hired by Richard Powers, Sherman, Clay's general manager for the New York office; She married William C. Spiegel (born around 1875) in 1998 in San Francisco


      Selected published music, composers, and lyricists


      Works
      "Li'l Liza Jane" (1916)
      "Rose Room" (1917)
      "Whispering" (1920)
      "My Little Grass Shack in Kealakekua, Hawaii" (1933)
      "Close Your Eyes" (1933)
      Composers and lyricists
      Wallie Herzer (1885–1961), composer, lyricist
      Harry D. Kerr (1880–1957), composer, lyricist
      Vincent Rose (1880–1944), composer
      Nacio Herb Brown (1896–1964), composer
      Johnny Noble (1892–1944), composer
      Bernice Petkere (1901–2000), composer, lyricist


      Selected sheet music artists and engravers


      Leland Stanford Morgan (1886–1981)


      Images



      Selected sheet music cover artists


























      References


      Archival resources

      University of Washington Libraries, Digital Collections
      Image: "Hinkley Block, Seattle", (circa 1911), Museum of History and Industry, Seattle
      Image: "Installing totem pole at Westlake Mall, Seattle, 1960," Museum of History and Industry, Seattle
      Image: Company salesman with TV, phonograph, radio, ca. 1947," Museum of History and Industry, Seattle
      San Francisco Public Library, San Francisco Historical Photograph Collection

      Image: "Sherman, Clay & Co., in San Francisco,"
      Inline citations


      External links


      Interview with Past President, Don Ravitch NAMM Oral History Library, April 7, 2005
      Interview with Chairman, Eric Schwartz NAMM Oral History Library, May 14, 2008

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