Born in
Markneukirchen in the
Electorate of Saxony to a family of cabinet makers, Martin became an apprentice of the guitar maker
Johann Georg Stauffer of
Vienna,
Austria. Martin also became a foreman at Stauffer's workshop. Martin was the second of five children and was more commonly known as Friedrich, given the German custom of using the second given name. In Martin's case, four of the children's first given names are a derivation of Christian (Christiane, Christian, Christian and Christiana). As a result of a dispute between the Cabinet Makers Guild, of which Martin was a member, and the Violin Makers Guild, Martin moved to the
United States in 1833. The move occurred less than a year after his father Johann Georg Martin died, and, being the last alive of Johann Georg Martin's progeny, he would have been free of familial obligations to emigrate. On arriving in
New York City, he set up shop at 196 Hudson Street on the
Lower West Side. Martin's first workshop housed a small production setup in the back room, and a retail music store up front. This shop was the forerunner of
C. F. Martin & Company, which is still family-owned and operated, whose CEO, , is C.F. Martin's great-great-great-grandson, C.F. Martin IV. At the insistence of his wife, Ottilia Kühle (daughter of the
Maschinentischler [machine carpenter] and maker of pedal harps Karl Kühle in Vienna), Martin moved the guitar shop in 1838 to
Nazareth, Pennsylvania where it is still located. Martin's guitar construction and design innovations produced a model of flattop guitar that is still in use today. ==See also==