We acquired this Seeburg jukebox in Atherton, Calif., in 1964. It plays vertically, alternating record sizes, and can play one or both sides of a record. We’d love to know more about it. — Peggy ...
BACK STORY: Gloria Delaney has traveled the globe looking for unique items for her wholesale business, Dwelling. But she found one of her most unusual items on a short Sunday morning ride between her ...
A 1948 Seeburg jukebox that can hold up to 50 records and play both sides. A mid-century overhead hospital radio that operates on coins. One of the first all-electric phonographs dating back to the ...
Coin-operated machines such as the jukebox make up one of the fastest-growing interests in today’s collector market. They are being bought, restored and used for home entertainment. Collector Steve ...
Here at Hackaday, we love to see old hardware treated with respect. A lovingly restored radio or TV that’s part of our electronic heritage is a joy to behold, and while we understand the desire to ...
At the peak of the jukebox collecting craze in the late 1980s and '90s, John Bennett operated a 15,000-square-foot showroom on First Avenue South called Jukebox City. Bennett, who owns the Luna Park ...
Dan Coulter will never live in the era of Elvis, Marilyn Monroe and Cadillacs with big fins. So Coulter does the next best thing. He runs a jukebox repair shop, surrounded by the same music — played ...
We often associate jukeboxes with 1950s teenagers and rock and roll and such. At least I do. But the rise of the jukebox actually occurred long before Elvis was ever cued up at any Milwaukee soda shop ...
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