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NASHVILLE, Tenn. — The historic RCA Studio A, saved from redevelopment three years ago, on Saturday completed a restoration to its 1960s heyday with the installment of the building’s iconic signs.
Nipper souvenirs, from miniature dollhouse discs to powder compacts, touted the company’s products from its start until 1929, when RCA bought Victor and kept Nipper as its corporate symbol.
Nipper was a dog in Bristol, England, who lived from 1884 to 1895 and was the model of a famous Francis Barraud painting featuring a phonograph that was picked up by multiple companies, including RCA.
Nipper’s appeal lies in the fact that “he’s a cute dog, with a unique expression on his face, and he became the most recognized symbol of the industry,” said Reindl, who worked for RCA ...
Photo by Hoag LevinsThe RCA Nipper Building has been a major landmark in downtown Camden for 100 years. A Camden County Historical Society event in Victor's Pub in the Nipper Building will ...
Nipper is in the museum section that focuses on Johnson, the Victor Talking Machine Co. and its successor Radio Corporation of America (RCA), which bought the Victor company in 1929. RCA kept the ...
Gain insight into the auction performance of RCA Victor . Track the change in total sales value, performance of lots against estimate and compare the artist's sale price according to the artwork ...
It shows RCA Victor’s dog listening to “his master’s Antiques & Collectibles: Pocket mirror featuring RCA's iconic Nipper the dog could fetch hundreds Skip to main content Skip to main content ...
If that dog is Nipper, who became the poster “child” for the RCA-Victor, then he’s connected to the founder of that company, Eldridge Reeves Johnson, who donated the land in Merion, as well ...
His master’s voice may have changed since Nipper first perched himself on top of the large warehouse Top dog: Region’s affection endures for Nipper | Life & Arts | dailygazette.com Skip to ...
ALBANY, N.Y. (NEWS10)—That large dog sitting on top of 991 Broadway was a real terrier mix, born in Bristol, England, in 1884. His owner Mark Barraud named him Nipper because he would “nip ...