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Examples

  • Steinway's diary can be viewed online, and in the supplementary exhibit, 'A Gateway to the 19th Century,' at the National Museum of American History through April 8.

    Steinway on the Superhighway Stuart Isacoff 2011

  • But much of the story involves Steinway's efforts to advance his dream of developing Queens into a Utopian home for his workers.

    Steinway on the Superhighway Stuart Isacoff 2011

  • "I will take care of that B flat, sir," replied Bill Hupfer, Steinway's expert technician.

    When Two Makes Perfect Byron Janis 2011

  • The result was Steinway's crowning achievement, the 1876 Centennial, which became the prototype for all future Steinway concert grands.

    When Two Makes Perfect Byron Janis 2011

  • (And given some of Steinway's recent forays into more elaborate cases, basic black certainly starts to look better in comparison.)

    Archive 2009-06-01 Matthew Guerrieri 2009

  • On his instructions, Steinway's chief technician shaved the piano's hammers so they would be even lighter, and rearranged some parts so that a single note could be repeated in an almost machine-gun-like fashion.

    When Two Makes Perfect Byron Janis 2011

  • (And given some of Steinway's recent forays into more elaborate cases, basic black certainly starts to look better in comparison.)

    Amadeus Beaux-Arts Matthew Guerrieri 2009

  • Entries include the 1863 draft riots and the building of the New York City subway, Steinway's friendship with Grover Cleveland, financial panics of the time, labor issues and the piano wars of the 1870s.

    Steinway's finely tuned sense of 19th-century America Jacqueline Trescott 2010

  • Steinway's inventories were up 9% on Dec. 31 from a year earlier.

    Signs of Stability Drive Up Stocks 2009

  • In the rear of the Messrs. Steinway's factory there is a yard for seasoning timber, which usually contains an amount of material equal to two hundred and fifty thousand ordinary boards, an inch thick and twelve feet long; and there it remains from four months to five years, according to its nature and magnitude.

    The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 20, No. 117, July, 1867. Various

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