Philco Radio-Phonograph, Model 42-1012, 1942

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Artifact Overview

By the late 1920s, radio tuners, phonographs, amplifiers, and loudspeakers began to condense into one unit. Manufacturers housed this technology within attractive wooden consoles, accepted as furniture within consumer's living rooms. A growing sophistication in radio programming--and availability of recorded music--anchored radio-phonographs as passive listening and entertainment devices within the home.

Artifact Details

Artifact

Phonograph

Date Made

1942

Location

Not on exhibit to the public.

Object ID

84.24.1

Credit

From the Collections of The Henry Ford. Gift of Therese and Timothy Foley, In Memory of Daniel J. Foley.

Material

Copper (Metal)
Felt (Textile)
Glass (Material)
Plastic
Steel (Alloy)
Textile
Wood (Plant Material)

Dimensions

Height: 37.5 in
Width: 16 in
Length: 32 in

Inscriptions

front: PHILCO receiver, back: Model 42-1012 Code 121 tubes: Sylvania
Philco Radio-Phonograph, Model 42-1012, 1942