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Bio of Murtogh D. Guinness: The Man Behind the Music
Murtogh D. Guinness
Born in London in 1913 into a prominent Anglo-Irish brewing family, Murtogh D. Guinness became interested in mechanical musical instruments and automata when he was only six years old. On a visit to Paris, his mother took him to Breguet, a shop that sold clocks, watches, and related items. She bought him a pop-up mechanical singing bird that he picked out himself—an event that marked the start of a lifelong passion.

It was not until some 20 years later, though, that Guinness began collecting mechanical musical instruments and automata in earnest. By the time he settled in New York City—where he bought twin townhouses to accommodate his collections—he had gathered together music boxes, fairground organs, orchestrions featuring pianos, cymbals and bells, and more from all over the world. Visitors to his home recall a virtual wonderland of what one guest described as “conjurors, illusionists, acrobats... a fantastic collection of mechanical pieces.”

Those who remember Murtogh D. Guinness, however, recall not just his collections but his great hospitality. Over the years he had amassed not just a stellar group of objects, but an enthusiastic circle of friends who shared his passion for mechanical musical instruments and automata. As the Morris Museum displays and interprets his collection, it will not only fulfill its mission as a “teaching museum,” but will satisfy Guinness’s wish of having the public enjoy the collection in its entirety just as much as he did.

The Murtogh D. Guinness Collection

Bio of Murtogh D. Guinness: The Man Behind the Music

Importance of the Collection

Entertainment on Demand

Long-Term Plans for the Collection

Musical Machines and Living Dolls: Mechanical Musical Instruments and Automata from The Murtogh D. Guinness Collection

Collection-Related Programs

Collection Highlights

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