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Heritage
Heritage Guitar
Inc. of 225 Parsons Street in Kalamazoo, Michigan was incorporated on
April 1, 1985. The company is going on 25 years old, it has achieved the
status of one of the premier guitar companies in the world today. It
is, in many instances, the new guitar line handled by countless vintage
shops throughout the world. This indicates it is thought of as the
collectible guitar of tomorrow.
The idea to start Heritage Guitar began when the Gibson Guitar
Corporation closed its Kalamazoo, Michigan factory in September of 1984
and moved all production to its other plant in Nashville, Tennessee (in
operation since 1975). When this took place, some of the employees were
asked to move to Nashville. However, since their families had spent many
years in Kalamazoo, it made it difficult to uproot and move. Therefore 3
men, Jim Deurloo, Marvin Lamb, and JP Moats, decided to start a guitar
manufacturing business. In 1985 when the company was incorporated, 2
other former Gibson Guitar Corporation employees, Bill Paige and Mike
Korpak, joined as owners. Mike left the company in 1985.
The founders biggest resource is and was the group of craftsmen
they could draw from to begin operations. The owners themselves each had
in excess of 25 years of hands on experience in making guitars. To this
day each of the owners is directly involved in the manufacturing of
each instrument.
Heritage started operations in the oldest of five buildings
formerly owned and operated by Gibson Guitar Corporation. That building
was completed in 1917 and has been a center for guitar manufacturing
ever since. Much of the machinery that Heritage uses today, was
purchased from Gibson Guitar Corporation.
The first guitar Heritage introduced was the H-140 solid body
single cutaway electric guitar. This model was shown at the NAMM show in
June of 1985.
Since that time Heritage has added many instruments. Currently
Heritage manufacturers Custom Carved Hollow Body Guitars, Semi Hollow
Body Guitars, and Solid Body Guitars. This is to say nothing of the
countless number of custom instruments made in each of the groups
previously mentioned. Banjos, Mandolins, Flat Tops, and Basses, are no
longer being produced because of the demand for the guitars mentioned in
the above 3 categories.
Heritage is proud of its older employees’ with 25 years of average
experience and what it has accomplished in 24 years. Heritage is also
training younger luthiers to learn this fine art of craftsmanship.
Semihollow Bodies
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