To attempt to determine what Glen’s first guitar was, one has to look at historical testimony and media content. Luckily there are several references to this guitar that are available.
In the 1969 edition of
TV Radio Mirror Magazine, in a story called
“Glen Campbell, His Live Story!”, Glen’s dad recalls:
“Glen got his first guitar when he was about 4. I ordered it from Sears and Roebuck. Glen was so little, his fingers wouldn’t go around the neck and reach the middle strings, so I bought him a three quarter size (guitar), that he could reach around.”
In the unauthorized biography
“The Glen Campbell Story” Freda Kramer writes:
“When he was four, his dad sent off to Sears, Roebuck for a three-quarter size guitar”
Andrew Dansby, Entertainment writer with the
Houston Chronicle, wrote from a 2008 interview, in an article dated 9/18/11:
“Campbell distinguished himself by embodying the restless push and pull between city and country. Raised in a small Arkansas town, he learned on a $7 Sears and Roebuck guitar with a corncob capo fashioned by his father."
Biography produced a video documentary on Glen, in which they presented:
This information about Glens first guitar
In the
BBC documentary “
Glen Campbell: The Rhinestone Cowboy”, Glen shares with the viewers:
This story about his first guitar
Finally, in an interview with Gerald Campbell, Glen’s brother, relates:
This story about Glen's first guitar
As early as 1905,
Sears, Roebuck & Company was selling musical instruments and the
Harmony Company was Sears main supplier. In 1916, Harmony was bought by Sears, continuing to make instruments for Sears and other customers. In 1940, Sears sold the Harmony brand to an investment group and adopted the Silvertone brand name for all musical instruments. After 1940, Sears continued to buy guitars Harmony and sell them in their catalog.
"Cowboy Guitars” were very popular in the U.S. in the 30’s and 40’s with the advent of Roy Rogers and Gene Autry. These were the times when kids dreamed of being a cowboy. Sears & Roebuck, as well as many other mail order outlets, offered several “Cowboy Guitars”. These guitars were smaller and inexpensive, making them a perfect beginner’s guitar. The majority of these guitars were made by the Harmony Company, coming with cowboy themed stencil painted art on the soundboard. There were probably 20-30 popular Cowboy guitar stencils that were put on the guitars, being produced by Harmony, and sold by the different mail order outlets.
By all accounts, Glen got his first guitar around 1941, when he was around four to five years old. By most accounts, this guitar came from Sears. Luckily there are references from the Sears and Robuck catalog from those years, on the Cowboy guitar’s they sold.
- Cowboy Guitars in the Sears and Roebuck Catalog
- searscat1a.jpg (297.56 KiB) Viewed 18432 times
- Cowboy Guitars in the Sears and Roebuck Catalog
- searscat2aa.jpg (373.79 KiB) Viewed 18432 times
- Cowboy Guitars in the Sears and Roebuck Catalog
- searscat2a.jpg (490.44 KiB) Viewed 18432 times
- Cowboy Guitars in the Sears and Roebuck Catalog
- searscat3.jpg (461.96 KiB) Viewed 18432 times
There are pictures of Glen and (what I feel is) his first guitar. It appears that in some of the pictures, the decal has worn off…but the tail piece seems to be the same in all the pictures.
- Glens First guitar4.jpg (250.16 KiB) Viewed 18432 times
- glentruck2.jpg (161.42 KiB) Viewed 18432 times
- glentruck1.jpg (111.65 KiB) Viewed 18432 times
- glensfirstguitar2.jpg (332.26 KiB) Viewed 18432 times
- Glen early guitar2a.jpg (178.75 KiB) Viewed 18432 times
- glensfirst.jpg (232.36 KiB) Viewed 18432 times
Can I definitely say that Glen’s guitar is a certain “Cowboy Guitar” from the Sears Catalog from that period? No. The lack of a clear picture and various incongruent descriptions make it difficult.
But, it certainly seems that Glen's first guitar was a Cowboy Guitar and that his dad bought it for him around 1941. It certainly would have been through a mail order company and no other company is recalled, other than Sears and Roebuck. But, it appears that if you tell a story long enough, it becomes historical...but not factual.