Banging out a melody on the
ivories doesn’t seem like it has anything to do with winning a war, but
that doesn’t mean that pianos haven’t had a place in the American
military. New York–based Steinway & Sons even had a model of upright
piano—known as Victory Verticals or G.I. Steinways—that were built
specifically for troops in World War II.
During the war, the U.S. government essentially shut down the production
of musical instruments in order to divert vital resources such as iron,
copper, brass, and other materials to the war effort. Yet the
government also determined that the war effort ought to include
entertainment that could lift soldiers’ spirits. But just any old piano
wouldn’t do. They needed ones hardy enough to withstand the trying
conditions out in the field—including being packed into a crate and
dropped out of a plane. “That music was deemed to be such a powerful
morale boost that pianos were actually built to be parachuted around the
world is incredible,” says Jonathan Piper, manager of artifacts and
exhibitions at the Museum of Making Music
in Carlsbad, California, which has a Victory Vertical in its
collection. Steinway & Sons—the president of which had four sons in
the military at the time—had shifted its efforts to constructing tails,
wings, and other parts for troop transport gliders before the commission
for the rough-and-ready pianos came through.
The company was famous for its pianos, but those finely tuned models
weren’t well-suited to where soldiers were stationed, including in the
tropics. “While preserving a high level of craftsmanship, Steinway
designed a piano that was rugged and durable,” says Piper, and they had
to be economical in their use of materials. That started from the ground
up: The Victory Verticals didn’t have legs like most upright pianos,
Piper says, because they wouldn’t have withstood an airdrop. Other
special features included water-resistant glue and anti-insect
treatments, keys covered with celluloid instead of ivory, and bass
strings wound in soft iron instead of the traditional copper. They were
designed to contain only a tenth as much metal as a normal piano. There
were also handles placed under the keybed and the back, so that four
soldiers could carry the 455-pound instruments. “And beyond all that,
the instrument is visually interesting,” Piper says. “Because of its
purpose-built design, the Victory Vertical has an elegant simplicity.
Then there’s the colors: Unlike the vast majority of pianos that come in
a black or dark wood finish, the Victory Vertical was painted in olive
green [like the example at the museum], blue, and gray.”
By the end of the war, Steinway had produced about 5,000 Victory
Verticals, roughly half of which went to military service. (The others
were sold to schools and churches.) Piper notes that the specially
designed instruments were an incredible moment for the makers of musical
instruments, and their resilience through the war years. But more
remarkable were the moments of comfort, joy, and camaraderie those
pianos created in difficult times. The company has a 1943 letter from a
Private Kenneth Kranes, stationed in North Africa, to his mother back in
New York. “We all got a kick out of it and sure had fun after meals
when we gathered around the pianna [sic] to sing,” he wrote, just a week
before he was killed in battle. “I slept smiling and even today am
humming a few of the songs we sang.”
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