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The 2006 Ohio Heritage Fellow
in Material Culture, Bob White is widely recognized
as being one of the finest builders in the U.S of mandolins
and other stringed instruments. Born and raised in southeastern
Ohio, White now lives in Coolville, a Meigs County town
on the road between Athens and Parkersburg, West Virginia.
White is a specialist in building “F-style”
mandolins, the kind played by Bill Monroe and most other
bluegrass mandolinists. He’s also a highly skilled
inlay artist and many of his instruments are beautifully
ornamented with abalone and mother-of-pearl decorations.
He mixes his own finishes and glues, rare for a builder
today.
Bob White is primarily a self-taught luthier who learned
his art in the most traditional of ways—lots of
trial and error. He worked for a few years at Stewart-MacDonald
Banjo Company in Athens, but for the last 30 years,
he has worked on his own, making and selling high-quality
mandolins one at a time. White is also widely known
and admired as a generous mentor who has trained and
freely shared his time and expertise with other builders.
White has long been an enthusiastic participant in the
Ohio Arts Council’s Traditional Arts Apprenticeship
Program.
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