A Simplified History of Strings and Guitars
As far as anyone knows, the first instrument strings were made of catgut, or cattle intestine (cattle: domesticated herd animals such as cows, sheep, goats, etc.). From what we are told, this technology dates back to ancient Egypt.
Catgut (or "gut") strings are known for their warmth and responsiveness to touch. They may be found on most any stringed instrument, from violin to harp to Spanish guitar. However, they are very subject to environmental changes, and must be diligently maintained to prolong costly replacement.
Most plucked gut string instruments having wooden braced soundboards (and the list is vast across time) featured "ladder" bracing patterns. German-born Christian Friedrich Martin, apprentice to Johann Georg Stauffer in Vienna, Austria, emigrated to the United States in 1833. He began his independent lutherie career by building ladder-braced guitars in the Stauffer tradition. In the 1840s Martin, in conjunction with John Coupa, discovered and adopted the move to "fan-braced" patterns, developed by the Spanish builders. By 1847, Martin & Coupa, along with (Louis) Schmidt & (George) Maul, were experimenting with guitars featuring an "X-braced" pattern, though it would be Martin, alone, who would later be credited for popularizing the X-brace.
The drawings, below, are representative of Martin and Coupa's colloaborative bracing experimentations over a 12-year period, from 1833 to 1845.
In the photo, below, we see an early Martin X-braced instrument, the Spanish 1 Model 28. This was a catgut-stringed instrument.
The X-brace was introduced more than a half a century before steel strings existed, at a time when guitars were strung with gut. Though those early X-braced guitars couldn't compete tonally or in loudness with the Spanish fan-braced instruments, the design offered economic benefits. An X-braced soundboard could be completed more quickly using less wood! In spite of its benefits, the X-brace wouldn't catch on for another 75 years, 50 years after C.F. Martin's death. Small-bodied guitars simply sounded better with fan-bracing.
In the early 1900s, the Martin Company's first catalogued steel string guitars were the Koa "Hawaiian" models, private labeled for both the Oliver Ditson Company and the Southern California Music Company. These guitars were being offered in a variety of sizes that ranged from 11-1/8" across the lower bout to 15" (for the 000). In 1916, apparently at the behest of Harry Hunt of the Ditson Company, the Martin Company introduced the 12-fret and 14-fret D model, what we now know as the dreadnought. While it was only 5/8" wider than a 000, the body was longer and deeper, and the waist was a bit wider. Fascinatingly, ALL of these guitar models (including the dreadnoughts) featured fan-bracing, not X-bracing. From what I gather, the X-brace would not begin replacing fan-bracing on steel string guitars until 1924.
Spanish luthier Antonio de Torres Jurado, a gut string builder, is rightly credited with popularizing the shape and sound of what we think of today as the Spanish (or "Classical") guitar. Trained as carpenter, his lutherie career began in the 1850s. Much like C.F. Martin, Torres is responsible, not for inventing, but for cleverly combining improved elements and recent innovations in guitar construction. Torres standardized a refined body shape and depth, a thinner and domed soundboard, and more refined and symmetrical fan bracing. The result was a vastly improved instrument that set the standard for others to follow.
Up to this point, guitar necks had remained largely "un-trussed", relying solely on the inherent stiffness of the wooden neck alone to properly support the pull of the strings, while maintaining a playable action. Action and relief existed as the carefully balanced relationship between the tension of gut strings and the engineered stiffness of the neck. The increasing public demand for steel string instruments pressured builders of the day to address the newfound issue of excessive forward bow in the neck, and they began experimenting with various stiffeners made of wood or metal.
Little more than 20 years after the introduction of steel strings in 1900, an event occurred that marked a significant shift in the way steel string guitar necks would be constructed.
Thaddeus McHugh, assignor to Gibson Mandolin and Guitar Company, filed a patent in 1921 for an improved "Neck for Musical Instruments".
In his application, McHugh explained that the problem he was solving was due to the strings pulling the headstock forward ("The pull of the strings tends to swing the outer end of the neck upward ..."). McHugh's goal, as identified in the patent, was to improve the neck through the use of the truss rod.
His solution involved pressing a rod, threaded on both ends, into a convex channel cut into the neck. The rod was secured on one end through a horizontal hole cut into the headstock, and on the other end through a hole cut into the tenon of the neck. A filler section, cut with a matching concave curve, was added atop the rod to fill the channel.
If anyone ever wondered "why" some early Gibson guitar necks were likened to "baseball bats", have a look at the patent drawing below for insight.
Tightening the rod would "compress" the back of the neck between the headstock and the heel, forcing the already-bowed rod to bow even more, resulting in moving the fretboard closer to the path of the strings ("... the action of the truss is to bow the center of the neck upward"). The neck would effectually "arc" backwards.
According to McHugh, necks utilizing these truss rods would not be prone to "spring or warp", and any neck that did happen to fall prey to the "strains to which it is subjected" could be straightened. He further stated that the rod could be used to "... regulate the distance of the strings from the keyboard."
Keyboard? Yup. That's how the patent referred to the fretboard. But perhaps the claim that would have the greatest impact on guitar construction, going forward, was the following statement and the reason why, today, intrinsic neck stiffness is not a factor in the construction of the acoustic steel string guitar: