W. E. Hill & Sons

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W.E. Hill & Sons
Industrymanufacturing
FounderWilliam Ebsworth Hill
HeadquartersLondon
Productsmusical instruments
Websitewww.wehillandsons.com

W. E. Hill & Sons (1880) is a London-based firm that specialises in violins and other string instruments,[1] and bows. It was also known as William Ebsworth Hill & Sons or William E. Hill & Sons.

Overview[]

Founded by William Ebsworth Hill at Wardour Street in 1880 and moved to 38 New Bond Street in 1887, ten years later relocated to 140 New Bond Street. In 1887 built workshops in Hanwell and extended them in 1904. The name W. E. Hill & Sons is built on a long family history of violin making, going back to William Ebsworth's great-grandfather, Joseph Hill. The firm soon gained a widespread reputation for expertise and dealing in fine instruments. They were also established as makers of instruments, bows, cases and fittings. A Hill's Certificate of Authenticity is considered definitive worldwide throughout the firm's history and their publications on Stradivari and Guarneri are still industry standards.[2]

Many fine craftsmen worked for the firm. For much of the 20th century, the Hill workshop employed England's best bow makers, who created bows renowned for character and consistency. Hill violins, cellos and cases are also highly regarded. Their other products included varnish cleaner, violin e-strings, rosin, peg paste, music stands, chinrests, and specialist tools.

Over the years many of the most celebrated instruments by Stradivari, Amati, and Guarneri passed through Hill & Sons. They built up one of the most notable collections of stringed instruments which can be seen at the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford, including the "Messiah" Stradivari from 1716.

In the mid-1970s Hills bought 'Havenfields' in Great Missenden, Buckinghamshire and moved to the workshop there.

W. E. Hill and Sons closed the workshop at Havenfields in 1992.

The owners and directors of W. E. Hill & Sons: Stefan-Peter Greiner, renowned violin maker, Simon Morris and Steven Smith, managing directors of J&A Beare, Derek Wilson, Hill bowmaker, and Robert Brewer Young, distinguished luthier, have broad experience in expertise, appraisal, violin and bow making, restoration, and conservation.

Their acquisition of the company marked its return to London. The W. E. Hill & Sons workshop is located in the historic coach house and stables of Burgh House from 1704 in London Hampstead.

Under the direction of Robert Brewer Young and Stefan-Peter Greiner, violins modelled after Stradivari - including the Messiah of 1716 - notable Bergonzis, and the work of Guarneri del Gesu are being made as part of the Hill heritage.

Derek Wilson, who joined Hill in 1978, oversees the making of bows that offer the excellence of an enduring English tradition.[promotion?][citation needed]

Using the resources provided by the Hill archive, access to rare instruments and centuries of experience allows W. E. Hill & Sons to provide the music world with the finest tools for performance.[promotion?][citation needed]

Auction record prices[]

  • New York, October 16, 2013 – Tarisio Auctions, (New York) Violin Bow CHARLES LEGGATT FOR W.E. HILL & SONS, c. 1905 ex-Aaron Rosand mounted in Gold/Tortoise-Shell with fleur-de-lys motif US$15,600
  • London, Oct 7, 2010 – Sotheby's of London Lot 35 Violin Bow, World Record for a Hill violin bow $15,899 £10,000 €11,538
  • New York, Oct 18, 2009 – Tarisio Auctions Lot 414 Cello, 1893, World Record for a Hill Cello $54,000 £33,366 €36,311
  • London Mar 11, 2008 – Sotheby's of London Lot 129 Cello Bow, World Record for a Hill cello bow $18,788 £9,375 €12,257 Filimonov Fine Violins

W. E. Hill & Sons Bow Makers[]

  • (b. 1838 - d. 1914) (Hills 1880–1891) - no marking
  • (b. 1876 - d. 1948) (Hills 1890–1945) - marked with a single nick in the lower mortise
  • (b. 1848 - d. 1932) (Hills 1891–1930) - no marking
  • (b. 1875 - d. 1970) (Hills 1892–1956) - marked with a single dot
  • (b. 1860 - d. 1944) (Hills 1894–1940) - before 1904 marked with downward nicks in the head mortise, after 1904 the nicks became horizontal
  • (b. 1880 - d. 1917) (Hills 1895–1916) - marked with two nicks in the centre of the mortise
  • (b. 1886 - d. 1969) (Hills 1900–1930) - marked with a pattern of three leaves
  • (b. 1903 - d. 1976) (Hills 1917–1976) - marked 1
  • (b. 1904 - d. 1943) (Hills 1918–1943) - marked 2
  • William Richard Retford (b. 1899 - d. 1960) (Hills 1919–1960) - marked with two dots
  • (b. 1900 - d. 1953) (Hills 1919–1930) - marked 0
  • (b. 1905 - d. 1984) (Hills 1919–1939) - marked 4
  • Albert Leeson (b. 1903 - d. 1946) (Hills 1920–1946) - marked 3
  • (b. 1888 - d. 1945) (Hills 1920–1939) - marked 5
  • Arthur Bultitude (b. 1908 - d. 1990) (Hills 1922–1961) - marked 6
  • William Watson (b. 1930 - d. 2018) (Hills 1945–1962) - marked 7
  • (b. 1932 - d. 2014) (Hills 1946–1956) - marked 9
  • (b. 1903 - d.?) (Hills 1946–1968) - marked 10 or X
  • (b. 1933 - d. 2012) (Hills 1949–1973) - marked 8
  • David Taylor (b. 1940) (Hills 1956–1966) - marked 13
  • Alan Willis (b. 1942) (Hills 1957–1962) - marked 11
  • Garner Wilson (b. 1944 - d. 2013) (Hills 1960–1966) - marked 12
  • John Clutterbuck (b. 1949) (Hills 1964–1971) - marked 14
  • (b. 1949) (Hills 1966–1978) - marked 15
  • Stephen Bristow (b. 1952) (Hills 1967–1972) - marked 16
  • David Earl (b. 1953 - d. 1982) (Hills 1969–1978) - marked 18
  • Ian Shepherd (b. 1955) (Hills 1971–1975) - marked 17
  • Matthew Coltman (b. 1955) (Hills 1977–1981) - marked 19
  • John Stagg (b. 1954) (Hills 1977–1983) - marked 20
  • Derek Wilson (b. 1962) (Hills 1978–1985) - no marking
  • Tim Baker (b. 1962) (Hills 1981–1984) - no marking

W. E. Hill and Sons Violin Makers[]

Bibliography[]

  • Hill, W. H.; Hill, A. F.; Hill, A. E. (1909). Antonio Stradivari: His Life and Work, 1644–1737. London: W. E. Hill & Sons. OCLC 47174898.
  • Hill, William Henry (1932). The Violin Makers of the Guarneri Family: Their Life and Work. London: W. E. Hill & Sons. OCLC 23741230.
  • W.E. Hill & Sons (1976). The Tuscan and the Messie. London: W. E. Hill & Sons. OCLC 3225254.

References[]

  1. ^ The Guitar (From The Renaissance To The Present Day) by Harvey Turnbull (Third Impression 1978) - Publisher: Batsford. Images from the W. E. Hill & Sons Collection: plate 22c (Guitar by Alexandre Voboam dated 1652) and plate 23a/b/c (Chitarra Battente by Jacobus Stadler)
  2. ^ Henley, William (1973). The Universal Dictionary of Violin and Bow Makers (2nd ed.). Brighton: Amati Pub. Ltd.
  • W.E. Hill & Sons (A Tribute), Richard Sadler 1996 ISBN 0-9504357-2-4
  • Giovanni Paolo Maggini: His Life and Work (1892) Henry, Arthur & Alfred Hill
  • https://archive.org/details/giopaolomagginih00hugg
  • The Hill Bow Makers 1880-1962, John Milnes and Derek Wilson 2016, ISBN 978-0-9549702-9-1

External links[]

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