Tag: Starr pianos

  • The Traveling Baby Grand

    Starr Minum Grand, The Indianapolis Star, 16 Dec 1906 p. 52

    I wrote this post for week 34 of the 52 Ancestors in 52 weeks for 2025. The ad at the beginning of this post shows the Minum grand piano built by the Starr Piano Company. I found this ad in the Indianapolis Star, dated December 16, 1906. I saw and heard this piano at my husband’s grandmother’s beach house in 1968. It, along with the human piano player, produced a lovely mellow clear sound as indicated in the ad.

    Lifting the keyboard cover, I found this on the underside of the keyboard cover.

    Raymond’s Early Life

    Raymond Coursen, the first husband of Frances Cabell Coursen Perritt played this model and played it well. The baby grand didn’t come into Raymond’s and Frances’s lives until they had settled on Maui on the Hawaiian Islands.

    Raymond made piano music and sang long before he married Frances. This wasn’t even the first piano in Raymond’s life. A clipping, saved by Frances described Raymond as 7-year-old boy at a big recital with a black eye. He sang in his young soprano voice a solo- “Sleep, Little Tulip”.

    Edgar Coursen, his father, taught him to play the piano while he was a boy. Soon his legs were long enough to reach the petals. So then his father taught him how to play the organ. His mother Annie Griffin Coursen was the singer in the family. She sang opera on stage.

    Off To College

    Raymond entered Oregon Agricultural College (OAC) in 1912. He was a natural choice for a piano accompanist. He joined the Glee and Mandolin club at OAC. He performed piano solos at this club’s concerts as well as being the accompanist for the group.

    A Year in the Hawaiian Islands

    His expressive playing led to a job in his junior year.  In 1914, the Liberty theater of Honolulu hired Raymond to play the organ at their theater in Honolulu, Hawaii. The photo below shows the theater organ at the bottom middle. The films shown during this era were silent, so Raymond supplied sound by playing the organ. The Liberty theater also held live performances on stage. Raymond is playing on a grand piano in the back on the right.

    After playing for 8 months in the theater in Honolulu, he went on tour. He joined the Bervani Grand Opera Company. During the next month he did a tour of the islands. At the end of the tour, he went back to playing at the Liberty Theater.

    Back To Portland, Oregon

    Returning to Oregon but not to OAC, Raymond found a girl. He married Frances Cabell on September 16, 1916. Then he introduced his bribe to the Hawaiian Islands. They moved to Maui where Kula Sanitarium hired him as superintendent of outside work. After three years at the sanitarium, he was hired by the Hilo Sugar Company to work on their Wainaku farm. This farm was also on Maui. Both daughters were born on Maui Island- Rose in May of 1917 and Betty (Elizabeth) in December of 1918.

    The Baby Grand Piano

    The Coursens purchased their baby grand piano from the Starr Piano Company while they were in the islands. Since the Minum grand model was built in Richmond, Indiana, their piano’s first trip involved a long ocean voyage. But the Starr Piano Company shipped their products. From Richmond, Indiana to Maui it is about 4,300 miles. This trip was not the last ocean voyage the Coursen’s baby grand piano made.

    Return to the Mainland

    In the summer of 1923, the Raymond Coursen family returned the mainland of United States. They arrived aboard the SS Enterprise at the port of San Francisco on August 25, 1923. Among the items shipped for Raymond was his baby grand piano. The American and Foreign Marine Insurance Company insured this piano for 700 dollars. The piano was to travel from Hilo to Seattle, Washington, then on to Portland. I assume the insurance was for damage at sea. From there the piano went to 658 Lovejoy St., Portland, Oregon where Raymond’s Mother and father lived. The young Coursen family visited with the elder Coursen family for a while.

    To Bend Oregon

    Four years later, the family moved to a ranch in the Tumalo project, located near Bend, Oregon.

    Edgar Coursen visited them there sometime in 1927 and writes to Frances in September of 1927.

    “There is one thing sure and that the kiddies (Rose and Betty) are getting a good, rugged, healthy start in life that will stay with them for good. And I want to congratulate you Frances on the beautiful way that the children are being brought up.”

    In another letter Grandfather Coursen asks after the horses, cows, dog, cats and chickens at their Tumalo home. Apparently, Edgar Coursen regarded this venture as wilderness farming. But they did have the baby grand piano to play in Tumalo. Raymond taught both girls to play.

    In July, 1928, Raymond started working for the Brooks-Scanlon Lumber Company of Bend. He worked there until his death in 1933. In Bend, the Coursens lived first at 125 Revene Avenue and then at 316 Delaware Street. Raymond studied small engines on the job and by correspondence. On September 14, 1932 he was proclaimed proficient in these topics. He had studied machines, electricity and refrigeration.He was awarded certification stating this from the International Correspondence Schools in Scranton, Pennsylvania. 

    A Sad Event

    About one year later Raymond died in Portland, Oregon after surgery for bladder tumors. He had a severe reaction to the nupercaine spinal anesthesia used during the surgery. Raymond died 22 June 1933. He was sorely missed by his family and Bend friends. Frances and the girls moved to Portland later that summer.

    The baby grand was moved back to Portland. This time Frances and the girls moved in with her mother, Bessie Goughler, and Bessie Husband Mac. Bessie and Mac’s house at 3415 N.E. 47th Ave. was big enough to house them all, even the piano.

    Frances worked and saved until she became a home owner herself. She bought a house at 6305 Brazee Street in Rose City.They moved in on January 18, 1936. Their piano moved with them. But this wasn’t the piano last home.

    The daughters married in 1940. Rose married Howard Foster on June 30 1940. Betty married Bud Robert “Bud” Miller on August 30, 1940.

    Frances Marries Again

    Frances married Hayes Marion Perritt on April 12 1942. They bought property on the Oregon coast near Lincoln City. This place was so remote that electrical and telephone service was not available.

    It must have been a struggle to move the baby grand piano up the steep gravel and grass road. But it happened. Frances played the piano at night by lantern light. The piano sat in the Perritt’s beach house for more than 40 years.

    When this couple separated, Frances moved to a small apartment in Beaverton, Oregon. It filled half the largest room. Visitors squeezed around it. Frances died on May 20, 1994.

    The piano went to a grandson’s home and is still there. It had been new more than 100 years ago.

    Here is a photo.