As a early Berliner record collector, It was exciting to read the APS article about the newly found 1891 American Berliner record. One of the writers mentioned he saw an American 10-inch Berliner record of the same time-period. This would be the first 10-inch record known. The related (and to me of more historical interest) question would be: what was the first 10-inch record made for sale? That is unlikely to be an early 1890’s Berliner. All the commercial machines of this period were hand-winds with a flywheel so close to the small turntable that no record much bigger than the 6-inch would fit. The Berliner hand-wind phonograph a few years later could accommodate up to a 7-inch record. Perhaps Berliner was distributing these 10-inch records to encourage manufacturers to start making 10-inch record capable machines?MrRom92 wrote: Thu Feb 27, 2025 9:41 amIs it bad if I ask, what is the worlds first 10” record?Starkton wrote: Mon Feb 24, 2025 8:51 am In the current Nauck auction I have just been reading at number 152 (ViLMJ 3001 S.H. Dudley: When Reuben Comes To Town): "The world's 1st 10" record!"
This can no longer be upheld! Read the article “Delight in the Find” in the March issue of “The Antique Phonograph.”
I vote for the Eldridge Johnson TEN INCH records as the first commercially available 10-inch record. Dudley/ When Reuben Comes to Town (#3001) was recorded on the first day, January 3, 1901. The initial week’s records carried the rare TEN INCH label. The specific record in Nauck’s catalog does not have a TEN INCH label and likely was recorded later.