6/6/11

American Co.

1950's Peripole Child's Trap Snare Drum Stand @ 14.00 for now Peripole-Bergerault Inc. The year was 1945. World War II was near its end, but still raging in Europe and in the Pacific. A couple of young music educators and parents, upon the urging of their famous mentor, Peter Dykema, Professor and Chair of Music at Columbia University Teachers College, decided to turn their talents toward making instruments for music education in elementary schools. Sylvia and Mack Perry named their fledgling business "Peripole." Their first product was their signature "Tymptone" drum which was made in the living room of their apartment in Brooklyn, NY, from recycled and salvaged materials. No new materials were available because of the war effort, to which the entire country and its resources were marshaled. Each drum was hand-painted by Sylvia with small figurines. The Perrys were soon delighted to receive an order from the famous Macy's department store in New York City, and being the "cottage" industry that they were, they had no choice but to deliver the order in the only freight carrier available to them a baby carriage. The years that followed saw Sylvia and Mack take Peripole out of their living room and into a storefront building. There was no one else making musical instruments for general music education at the time, and the Perrys saw rapid growth in Peripole. They took over the store next door, then the one next to that, and finally moved into a commercial factory building. In the early 1960s, established leaders in their field, the Perry's forged an alliance with the Orff-Schulwerk movement in Europe and made history by becoming the first company to import Orff instruments into the United States for sale to schools. The Perrys were also charter members of AOSA. In 1974, after launching two famous b rands of Orff instruments in the United States, the Perrys made a new partnership with the Bergerault company in France, having finally found a company whose Orff instrument quality matched their own high standards of manufacture. and...