Detroit Conservatory of Music was a music school in Detroit, Michigan. It was considered one of the leading institutions of music in the United States. It was founded in 1874 by J. H. Hahn and opened a normal school training department in 1889.
It was located at 5035 Woodward Avenue. In 1909 the Detroit Conservatory Orchestra was organized at the school.
Chapters of Mu Phi Epsilon, Sigma Alpha Iota, and Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia existed at the school.
The school featured on postcards. The Detroit Historical Society has a collection of documents from the school. The Detroit Public Library has a photograph of a woman playing violin at the school.
Alumni
Notable alumni include:
- Rachel Andresen
- Les Baxter
- Betty Carter
- Kenneth Louis Cox II
- Johnny Desmond
- Lucia Dlugoszewski
- Jean DuShon
- Dennis Edwards
- T. J. Fowler
- James Frazier (1940–1984)
- Antoinette Garnes
- Lou Hooper
- Boyd Marshall
- Sharon Elery Rogers
- Patricia Terry-Ross
- Elizebeth Thomas Werlein
- Thomas Whitfield (singer)
- Agnes Woodward
- Gaylord Yost (1904–1905)
References
- ^ Burton, Clarence Monroe; Stocking, William; Miller, Gordon K. (April 14, 1922). "The City of Detroit, Michigan, 1701-1922". S. J. Clarke publishing Company – via pages 343, 504, 506, 588, 724, 1005, and 1117.
- Conway, Colleen; Pellegrino, Kristen; Stanley, Ann Marie; West, Chad (October 15, 2019). The Oxford Handbook of Preservice Music Teacher Education in the United States. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780190671426 – via page 52.
- https://michmemories.org/exhibits/default/catalog/4387b7d5e056c1b6abd293e5acafe5c5
- "Detroit Conservatory of Music".
- "Woman playing violin, Detroit Conservatory of Music | DPL DAMS". digitalcollections.detroitpubliclibrary.org.
- "Kenn Cox and Donald Walden: "Free Jazz Radicals" | Solidarity". www.marxists.org.
- "The Half Century Magazine". Half-century magazine. April 14, 1919 – via Google Books.
42°21′26″N 83°3′54″W / 42.35722°N 83.06500°W / 42.35722; -83.06500
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