![]() It was non-working when removed from storage and sold as is. In 1990 he moved back to Durham, North Carolina and in the summer 2007 brought it back from the shop. He and the theremin moved back to Philadelphia, then to North Carolina in 1978, then to Connecticut/Cleveland in 1984 where he moved the theremin into his shop (and was in working condition). Peter received the theremin in 1966 when he was 7 years old as a birthday present from his uncle George. Originally purchased by a musician in Philadelphia in the 1930s and then purchased by Peter’s mother’s great uncle (mother’s father’s brother). George Cadwallader Corson, of Plymouth Meeting, PA (1889–1970).Identifying traits, modifications, condition, etc., are used to track unregistered RCA Theremins. Care has been taken to avoid duplicates, but duplicates are entirely possible. These instruments may have appeared in media and correspondence, or are documented as part of a museum collection. These are theremins that have not had their serial number documented, or have incomplete serial number information. These are theremins that have a verified, unique serial number that distinguishes them from any other in the registry. To locate serial numbers, check the identification section. To submit your RCA Theremin to the registry, check the submission guidelines. There are currently 138 RCA Theremins in the registry: 112 registered, 26 unregistered.
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