American record label from Chicago in the early 1900s
Vim Records was a short-lived American record label that was active during the early 1900s. Vim discs include issues of ragtime banjo music recorded by Vess L. Ossman.
History
The Vim Company was founded in 1896 in Chicago, Illinois, and it was active in labeling records in the first decade of the 20th century.[1] Vim was primarily a sporting goods store but also sold bicycles and electrical goods. Record Research newsletter categorizes the firm as a "Department Store Label", meaning the owners entered an agreement with an already established record company, and "... they proceeded to have their own records pressed with the name of the department store prominently printed on the label."[2]
Vim Records were single-sided lateral cut disc records. Vim was recorded and manufactured by the International Talking Machine Company and Leeds & Catlin.
The company offices were moved between 1901 and 1903. Known address are:[3]
56-60 Fifth Avenue, Chicago, Illinois
68 E. Lake Street, Chicago, Illinois (1903); after street renumbering this was 10 Lake Street
39 S. Clark Street, Chicago, Illinois; Company Headquarters
A branch office was opened in late 1903 at 704 West Walnut Street, Des Moines, Iowa.[4] In 1906 the branch was moved to 808 West Walnut Street,[5] and in 1907 it was moved to 204 7th Street.[6] This location remained open until late 1908 when the firm of Harger & Blish, an established firm from Dubuque, Iowa, were appointed the jobbers in Des Moines.[7]
The last listing for the firm producing records in Chicago was in the Edison Phonograph Monthly January 1910 issue.[8]
The owner and president of the company was Leon Atwell Olmsted, a native of New York who moved to Chicago in the 1890s. After opening his first store in 1896, he eventually expanded to seven stores in Chicago and another seventeen throughout the nation.[9] It was reported that he died in a fire at his home in Minocqua, Wisconsin, at the age of 63, but it was soon learned that he died of exhaustion after fighting the blaze.[10][11] At the time of his death in 1936 the stores were being managed by his son Leslie B. Olmsted.
Record numbers
The record numbers on Vim labels can be broken down into multiple series. The following companies are known to have produced records for Vim.
Leeds & Catlin: V-prefixed records are from Sun and associated labels
International Record Company (IRC): X-prefixed records are from Excelsior and associated labels
All unprefixed record numbers in the chart below appear to have been produced by IRC. Every artist and recording name matches up with the IRC catalog numbers.
Record labels
The word "Vim" in stylized cursive text appears on all of the record labels along with a double lined border, the company name, "Chicago, Ill.", and the words, "For Any Disc Talking Machine". The background color for all labels is beige, but in some photos the coloring appears to be white, light yellow, or mint green. Aging and years of handling have caused some labels to become dark beige in appearance.
Some labels have the recording details (record number, artist, etc.) printed in black ink while others are in red ink. It is unknown if there is any significance to the printing color of the recording details.
Recordings
All recordings in this chart must be verified by seeing the information on a Vim Record label or in a Vim Company catalog. A Leeds & Catlin or International Record Company catalog that do not specifically state "Vim Record" are not sources for adding new records to this chart.
Unconfirmed information in any row must have an asterisk symbol (*) placed beside the information. This may happen because the label is not readable or the information was not printed on the label. The International Record Company[12] recording catalog is useful for obtaining Vim Records information, but unless actually seen on a Vim label, all such information should be marked with an asterisk symbol.
All information in the chart must be placed in order by the "Record Number."
Record Number
Artist(s)
Recording Name
Type
Year Recorded & Notes
Frederichs and Strange
Jesus Lover of My Soul
Duet
This is likely baritone William Frederichs and soprano Ellen Strang, but the title is not in the IRC catalog. Spellings of their names differ.
^"Jobbers of Edison Phonographs and Records". Edison Phonograph Monthly. 1 (2). Orange, New Jersey: The National Phonograph Company: 11. April 1903. Retrieved December 3, 2016.
^"Among the Jobbers". Edison Phonograph Monthly. 1 (9). Orange, New Jersey: The National Phonograph Company: 9. November 1903. Retrieved December 3, 2016.
^"Among the Jobbers". Edison Phonograph Monthly. 4 (5). Orange, New Jersey: The National Phonograph Company: 5. July 1906. Retrieved December 3, 2016.
^"Among Jobbers". Edison Phonograph Monthly. 5 (2). Orange, New Jersey: The National Phonograph Company: 8. April 1907. Retrieved December 3, 2016.
^"Among Jobbers". Edison Phonograph Monthly. 6 (11). Orange, New Jersey: The National Phonograph Company: 13. November 1908. Retrieved December 3, 2016.
^"Jobbers of Edison Phonographs and Records". Edison Phonograph Monthly. 8 (1). Orange, New Jersey: The National Phonograph Company: 32. January 1910. Retrieved December 3, 2016.
^"Fire Injuries Are Fatal To L. A. Olmsted". Chicago Tribune. Chicago, Illinois. April 25, 1936. p. 14.
^"Will of L. Atwill Olmsted Gives Wife $175,000 Estate". Chicago Tribune. Chicago, Illinois. May 3, 1936. p. 30.
^"Beg Your Pardon". Chicago Tribune. Chicago, Illinois. May 11, 1936. p. 7.