1920s George Houghton & Sons "Pageant" Resonator Banjo Ukulele




She's a looker, huh? This GH&S, UK-made banjo uke certainly looks like it could fit right in with some Formby numbers. It's got an archtop-style tonering design, is lightweight, extra-loud, and punchy for its size. As British jo-ukes are wont to be, the neck profile is a little chunky, but it plays great after work.

A customer owns this and she wanted it setup properly, some dot-inlay replaced, and a set of Gotoh UPTs thrown-on. This was done and the end-result is a banjo-uke that sports a 5/8" bridge, spot-on 1/16" action at the 12th fret, and a lot of chop. It's also strung-up low G so that it can be used for more-engaging lead work. Work included what was mentioned above as well as a fret level/dress job, too.

Specs are: 13" scale, 1 3/16" nut width, 15/16" string spacing at the nut, 1 3/8" spacing at the bridge, 7 7/8" rim diameter, 9 1/2" resonator diameter, and 2 1/2" depth. The neck has a flat-profile board and medium, C-shaped rear profile.

Materials are: maple neck, maple rim, ebonized-maple fretboard, aluminum hoop tonering suspended on brackets, nickel-plated steel flange and hardware, and all-original hardware (save tuners and bridge) throughout. The head is skin.




I added side dots and replaced all the face dots with 1/4" pearl because someone had put weird, rhinestone-like plastic markers in at some point in the past.






The owner wanted black, keystone/tulip-style buttons for the Gotoh UPT pegs.



Comments

Nick R said…
I think George Houghton adopted the "lion couchant" as he is called in heraldic terms in the mid-30s when there was a big government drive to encourage folk to buy home produced merchandise. George Houghton & Sons also branded its instruments Reliance as well as G H & S, and also the cases the firm made by the zillion as they were all produced at the Reliance Works. You see this lion on the labels stuck into the cases which is very rare as they fell out over time and sometimes if a chipboard case is embossed, you can see this lion somewhere in the design! Not the world's most useful information I know- but the company was big for quite a while and was also very long established. Of course, it is four lions couchant that guard Trafalgar Square in London! They may be the inspiration but when that monument to Admiral Nelson was opened there were no lions as they were added nearly 30 years later and Edwin Landseer the artist who created them was criticised as they looked so docile!
Jake Wildwood said…
Dang, Nick, I think YOU'RE the inspiration here. Thank you for that!
Nick R said…
Thank you Jake, I am pleased it is not totally useless information! I went and bought an early 1930s Reliance guitar- one that pre-dates the lion and it has a Reliance case- not embossed- no lion. I took it to my guitar expert maker/repair man who confirmed it was all solid wood and concluded with: "I still don't like it." Never mind! I have a date stamped 1934 Harmony round hole archtop- the Valencia- like that tenor you once had- and sold branded as The Michigan in the UK by Beare & Son of London. That has an embossed Reliance case- complete with the lion that suggests he debuted about 1934/35! More useless info!