Anne Romagnoli (nee Piatanesi), a former Gage Park resident, music teacher, businesswoman and nationally acclaimed authority on accordion manufacture and repair, died Friday, Jan. 6 at age 90.
Mrs. Romagnoli was the longtime owner of the Italo- American Accordion Manufacturing Company, widely known as the Midwest’s premier new and used accordion company. Many considered her to be the Chicago area’s First Lady of Accordions.
The company has been located in Oak Lawn at 5510 W. 95th St. since 1996, when it moved from its longtime home in Gage Park, at 3137 W. 51st St. It was founded in the early 1900s in the city’s Little Italy neighborhood and purchased by Mrs. Romagnoli’s father and uncles in 1915.
Mrs. Romagnoli and her husband, Giuseppe “Joe” Romagnoli--known as the last man in America who could build an accordion from scratch—owned the business from the early 1950s until his death in 1994.
She also was owner of the Republic Music School of Chicago, which for years was headquarters at 59th and Kedzie in Chicago, across the street from the Colony Theatre. At the school, Mrs. Romagnoli taught accordion to hundreds of students, young and old.
In the 1950s, before guitar bands like the Beatles would later cause accordion music to plummet in popularity among the young, Italo-American employed as many as 100 people. Today, it has a few staffers.
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