1910s H. Williams Quart-Sized Harp Guitar




So adorable... and so odd! I have no information on the maker ("H. Williams, Buffalo NY"), but he definitely had a good hand. This creature is both pretty and elegant in its cut and folksy-as-heck at the same time. I really love the rope binding around the edges, Portuguese-ish soundhole rosette, and "American cabinetry" headstock details. It's simply a treat.

The backstory to this instrument is that a consignor of mine actually left this at the dump sometime last year. A local acquaintance picked it up and brought it here for evaluation. She eventually left it here over winter and, like all my backed-up workload, it's finally done.

The builder of this instrument certainly hadn't thought-out the nature of tension and time, so when this came in it had a twice-poorly-reglued bridge, a huge oversized extra bridgeplate installed, and a line of bridgepin-holes on the top that'd formed something that looked like a shattered fault-line under the falling-off bridge. There were also several back seams and cracks needing to be addressed and a new bridge was needed desperately.

Part of the trouble was that it was probably built for gut (these days: nylon) strings, but it'd been abused with some pretty brutal steel over its life. After dealing with all of the usual repair issues (cracks, new bridge, seams, fret work, etc.), I removed the extraneous jumbo bridge plate that'd been installed and added bracing where it was needed -- two lengthwise braces to either side of the soundhole and one ladder-brace to the south of it. Aside from those and one ladder brace right at the top of the soundhole, the only other bracing is an odd, large, bridge-plate/brace that sits under the saddles that the builder installed originally.

My new bridge is setup for string-through mounting of the nylon/classical strings and it has two drop-in saddles for easy action adjustment up/down via shims or shaves. I also cut the harp neck's saddle at a steep angle to get as much extra vibrating length for the lowest notes as I could.

Work included: a new rosewood bridge, new saddles, fret level/dress, seam and crack repair (and re-repair) to the back and sides, additional bracing changes to the top, cleaning, replacement tuner parts from my bins, and a good setup. Action is hair-under 3/32" (bang-on) at the 12th fret, the neck is straight, and there's adjustment room at the saddles to set it up to taste.

A note on strings: I used a standard "LaBella 900 Gold Nylon" set for the fretted neck, but tuned it up from E-to-E to A-to-A (ADGCEA low to high), as the scale length suits this "quart" tuning. I used a custom set of sub-bass strings for the harp neck that I bought from JustStrings.com's D'Addario individual classical strings selection. They're gauged 60w, 58w, 56w, 54w, 52w, 46w. I originally had a 50w for the highest of these, but the tension was too high so I subbed-in a standard classical guitar low E for that note. I tuned the sub-bass strings DEFGAC low to high and that suits the range of keys friendly to the fretted neck -- D, G, C, A, and E if you retune the C to B for E tunes. The D note is one step below normal guitar's low E.

Scale length: 18 1/4"
Nut width: 1 9/16"
String spacing at nut: 1 3/8"
String spacing at bridge: 2"
Body length: 14 3/4"
Lower bout width: 12"
Waist width: 8 1/8"
Upper bout width: 9 1/2"
Side depth at endpin: 3"
Top wood: solid spruce
Back/sides wood: solid mahogany w/some curly figure
Neck wood: oak or?
Bracing type: ladder/tic-tac-toe shape
Fretboard: ebony, ebony nut(s)
Bridge: rosewood, bone saddles
Neck feel: medium C-shape, flat board

Condition notes: extra bracing added, replacement bridge and saddles, and general wear and tear throughout with some old (not-so-pretty) hairline crack repairs on the back, sides -- one on the top.





Because the underside of the top looked like a fault zone along the original bridge pin holes, when I made the new bridge I used "string-through" string holes rather than full-size pinholes for string mounting. This means the bridge is far-less likely to crack-up and split (like the original) if it dries out and whatnot. It also means less of my repaired top surface is torn-up and weakened through drilling-out 12 pinholes. 









The back and sides look like they're made from pretty, slightly-flamed, Cuban mahogany.





Comments

Ivan said…
Really sweet. I'm interested in it if the person who brought it in no longer wants it.
Bill Arnold said…
Gorgeous! Beautiful work, Jake!
Oscar Stern said…
Oh & for a Steel String sound on the Fretted Strings you might get away w/ using Thomastik KR116 Rope Core Classical Guitar strings.
Oscar Stern said…
Very cute little Harp Guitar.
Oscar Stern said…
Thomastik KR116 Rope Core steel strings would sound great on this, the only thing is that they would have to make a Special version of that set designed for the shorter scale so the silk winding wouldn't extend past the tuner posts. I believe it was either Hank Williams or Henry Williams who made this cute little Guitar.