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Ernest Erastus Forbes Sr.

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Ernest Erastus Forbes Sr.

Birth
Oxford, Calhoun County, Alabama, USA
Death
25 Oct 1958 (aged 91)
Birmingham, Jefferson County, Alabama, USA
Burial
Birmingham, Jefferson County, Alabama, USA GPS-Latitude: 33.4919158, Longitude: -86.841353
Plot
Block 12
Memorial ID
View Source
Ernest Erastus Forbes, Sr. was the founder of the Forbes Piano Company.
He was oldest of six children born to William Patrick and Sarah Elizabeth McCully Forbes. He attended Oxford College in Calhoun County, Alabama, then returned to the family farm. He left to take a job as a salesman for a music company in 1887. Two years later, he founded his own music company in Oxford. He opened a second store in Birmingham in 1892, but closed by the 1893 financial panic.

Forbes found work cutting ice for the Caldwell Ice & Coal Co.. After a few weeks, Gilbert Carter hired him to sell pianos and organs. He made $15 a month at first, but was promised double if he could sell an organ each month. He sold five in his first month and was earning $100 a month by the end of his first year. Carter made him a junior partner in 1896, but the partnership dissolved after two years, with Forbes giving up his shares in exchange for $2,000 worth of Chicago Cottage Organ merchandise.

Forbes opened his own store in Anniston and married Mary V. Mallory. He expanded the operation to other cities, with a flagship showroom on 20th Street North in Birmingham. He moved to a larger space on 4th Avenue North in 1912.

Forbes treated the business as a calling, often sacrificing profits to get more instruments in the hands of young musicians. His newspaper advertisements repeated his belief that cultivating an interest in music would reduce crime. Forbes became a favored dealer for many area churches and offered space in his downtown showroom where local piano instructors could stage recitals.

After the death of his first wife and during the Great Depression, Forbes consolidated to his main stores in Birmingham and Montgomery. He began dealing in textbooks, white goods, appliances and other products to stay in business. The store survived and grew again. He married widow Annie Forbes in 1933. In 1943, they purchased a home in Montevallo, which he donated to the Presbyterian Home for Children in Talladega as a place where older girls could live while attending the Alabama State College for Women. The gift was made in memory of his first wife.

When Forbes died, he divided the business between his sons: Ernest, Jr., James, William Kenneth, Herman French, and Nelson.
Ernest Erastus Forbes, Sr. was the founder of the Forbes Piano Company.
He was oldest of six children born to William Patrick and Sarah Elizabeth McCully Forbes. He attended Oxford College in Calhoun County, Alabama, then returned to the family farm. He left to take a job as a salesman for a music company in 1887. Two years later, he founded his own music company in Oxford. He opened a second store in Birmingham in 1892, but closed by the 1893 financial panic.

Forbes found work cutting ice for the Caldwell Ice & Coal Co.. After a few weeks, Gilbert Carter hired him to sell pianos and organs. He made $15 a month at first, but was promised double if he could sell an organ each month. He sold five in his first month and was earning $100 a month by the end of his first year. Carter made him a junior partner in 1896, but the partnership dissolved after two years, with Forbes giving up his shares in exchange for $2,000 worth of Chicago Cottage Organ merchandise.

Forbes opened his own store in Anniston and married Mary V. Mallory. He expanded the operation to other cities, with a flagship showroom on 20th Street North in Birmingham. He moved to a larger space on 4th Avenue North in 1912.

Forbes treated the business as a calling, often sacrificing profits to get more instruments in the hands of young musicians. His newspaper advertisements repeated his belief that cultivating an interest in music would reduce crime. Forbes became a favored dealer for many area churches and offered space in his downtown showroom where local piano instructors could stage recitals.

After the death of his first wife and during the Great Depression, Forbes consolidated to his main stores in Birmingham and Montgomery. He began dealing in textbooks, white goods, appliances and other products to stay in business. The store survived and grew again. He married widow Annie Forbes in 1933. In 1943, they purchased a home in Montevallo, which he donated to the Presbyterian Home for Children in Talladega as a place where older girls could live while attending the Alabama State College for Women. The gift was made in memory of his first wife.

When Forbes died, he divided the business between his sons: Ernest, Jr., James, William Kenneth, Herman French, and Nelson.

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