I recently saw a photo of an acutal CW fiddle owned by a Capt. Cross of a NY regiment. He had carved his name, unit and a heart with his wife's name on it. I was inspired by Capt. Cross's fiddle to carve inscriptions on one of my old fiddles. It is strung with gut strings.
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Reenactment Fiddle
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Re: Reenactment Fiddle
Originally posted by Company Fiddler View PostI was inspired by Capt. Cross's fiddle to carve inscriptions on one of my old fiddles. It is strung with gut strings.Nathan Dodds
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Re: Reenactment Fiddle
Gentlemen,
Thank you for your comments. While I do own two 19th century fiddles, this is not one of them. It has no lable so exact age is uncertain but I'm sure that it's age doesn't match its appearence. It was in very poor condition when I purchased it for the purpose of practicing luthier skills. It was in effect, a throw away instrument. After getting it back into playing condition, I desided to do the carving for use at reenactments. This fiddle has no where near the value or historical importance of my other violins and hence it made a good candidate for this application.Tim Krugman
1st OVC Co. A Musician
"Without music, there could be no army"
Gen. Robert E. Lee
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