Davenport & Treacy

The Davenport & Treacy Company (sometimes rendered as Davenport-Treacy) was a manufacturer of pianos and piano components that was established in 1868 in New York City.[1] It was founded by John Davenport, a graduate of Yale University; and Col. Daniel F. Treacy, an engineer.[2]

By 1889, the company had a 2.5-acre factory complex in Stamford, Connecticut, on the waterfront. Working around the clock except on Sundays, the company cast some 60 piano plates a day, consuming some 60 tons of iron each week, for annual output of more than 15,000 piano plates a year.[3]

Davenport & Treacy pianos sailed aboard the USS McCulloch, a United States Revenue Cutter Service cutter; and the USS Albatross, the first research ship built especially for marine research, racking up more than 20,000 miles at sea aboard the latter.[2]

References

  1. Picturesque Stamford 1892 / The Davenport & Treacy Company The Stamford History Society, Inc., 1892, retrieved 2026-02-21^
  2. Growing Popularity of Davenport & Treacy Pianos The Music Trades Review, 1905^
  3. John C. Freund. The Davenport & Treacy Company Stamford Advocate, 1889-07-12, retrieved 2026-02-21^