Weymann guitars

[1] Weymann's most notable artists include Jerry Garcia[2] of the Grateful Dead & Jimmie Rodgers[3] who is considered the pioneering father of country music.

[1][4] Since its inception, the company has manufactured classical, acoustic and tenor guitars, banjos, the aforementioned mandolute and ukuleles.

According to an article in the Fretboard Journal, there is evidence of Weymann's employing a talented luthier named Carl C. Holzapfel who had arrived from Germany.

Harry Weymann purchased a selection of materials and equipment from the factory and hired ex-Stewart workers to further develop his manufacturing business.

From late 1899 onward, H. A. Weymann began to receive significant media coverage in the Music Trade Review, along with local news press such as the Philadelphia Inquirer.

[11] Jerry Garcia was the guitarist and frontman for the band Grateful Dead who began his career playing a mid-grade Weymann banjo.

Mandolute , patented by Weymann in 1913
This Weymann Orchestra Style 4 banjo (1926), is displayed at the American Banjo Museum as an example of highly decorated Jazz Age banjos.