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August
12, 1958 Charles and Dorothy Chase opened the Folk Music Center
in Claremont, CA on Harvard Ave. in back of Boots Beer's Real
Estate Office. Boots told them they were "welcome to have the
back room because no one will ever come to see you anyway." The
rent was $35 per month. They borrowed $2000 from Dorothy's brother
and bought some records, books, strings and a few instruments
just enough to get started.
Very
soon, Boots was complaining about all the traffic coming through
the office. Two months later, Mike Fay showed up and loaned them
a sitar, a pair of tablas and a tamboura. That was the first international
show. The Claremont Courier took pictures and ran a story that
got the store a lot of publicity.
Shortly
thereafter, the store moved around the corner to a small place
of it's own on 1st Street. Dorothy's father, Albert Udin, known
to the whole town as "Grandpa," ran the store while Dorothy taught
guitar and banjo lessons in the living room of their home and
Charles repaired instruments in the basement. The store was soon
bursting at the seams.
In
1961, Dorothy and Charles opened the Golden Ring, a music cafe,
on Harvard Ave with friends Peggy and Al Hulse and Jean and Will
Marcotte. During it's five year existence, the Golden Ring was
one of the earliest venues for folk music in the Southern California
area, bringing such greats to Claremont as the revered Gary Davis,
Brownie McGhee and Sonny Terry, Doc Watson, Hedy West, John Fahey,
The New Lost City Ramblers, and Guy and Candy Carawan.
On
April 5, 1970, after a short stay at 221 Yale the store moved
to an even bigger location across the street at 220 Yale Ave.
Over the years Dorothy continued to teach guitar, banjo, dulcimer
and autoharp to hundreds of local children and adults. She began
the Claremont Folk Song Society and organized house concerts.
While
Dorothy continued to focus on the instruction and promotion of
music, Charles provided opportunities for local young people to
learn the art of instrument repair. The store's reputation for
skilled repair spread and people came from near and far to have
instruments repaired or to stay and learn the art themselves.
In the summer of 1962, Peter and Polly Gatt pitched a tent in
the Chase's backyard to be able to study with Charles as luthiers
(instrument repair experts).
The
Folk Music Center Museum was opened in 1976 as a non-profit educational,
cultural corporation. The first museum collection was a Stauffer
guitar and a Stauffer Theorbo, both dating back to the 1880's,
that Charles and Dorothy found in a second hand store for five
dollars. The Museum now contains rare and antique musical instruments
and artifacts of culture from around the world.
Recently,
Dorothy and Charles' daughter, Ellen Chase-Verdries began managing
the store. Her son, Ben Harper purchased
the store from his grandparents in order to keep the Folk Music
Center in the family and alive for the generations to come.
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