Woodrow Wilson was the President of the United States. Arizona and New Mexico had just been admitted as the 47th & 48th states. And the ‘unsinkable’ Titanic had just met disaster on its maiden voyage.
Elsewhere, a man named Arthur Jordan had just formed the roots of an organization that would become one of the nation’s oldest and largest and most trusted piano retailer: Jordan Kitt’s Music.
Formerly most famous for being the first man to ship poultry from Indianapolis to New York City by train, Arthur, an industry outsider to say the least, entered his first foray into the music business by opening the Arthur Jordan Piano Company at 13 & G street in the nation’s capital. Before long, he persuaded friend Homer L. Kitt to leave his music business in Chicago and become general manager of his burgeoning piano retailer. By 1922, the two had become partners and decided to purchase a large showroom on G street, as well as another music storefront nearby.
Though it was a joint ownership of a single business and in fact had a single manager for both stores, each operated completely independently in an effort to offer consumers the largest range of brands.