Welcome, Davezzr.
Windsors was a musical instrument company in Birmingham, England active during the early 20th century, who made string instruments in many different ranges of quality. I remember hearing the factory was destroyed in an air raid in WWII. They had a really massive output of instruments, and many of their 'lower line' instruments aren't that difficult to come by. In order to get instruments into the hands of more players and prospective players, many instrument companies produced inexpensive student-line instruments that were cheap to purchase, and a way for folks to get their feet wet, and glom on to the craze. Remember, the banjo and mandolin were the real in vogue instruments in the early 20th century, and it wasn't until the guitar was further developed that they began to fall out of favor. It's like how you can find a cheap 'guitar' at Sprawl-Mart or on the internet quite readily; people are curious to try them, and pop culture and music has deemed it a 'cool' thing to play, so there's a market for accessible and inexpensive instruments.
If you could provide some pictures of your instrument, I could likely give you a better idea of it's quality, condition, etc.; it's just hard to say definitive things about an instrument sight unseen. I've seen a Windsor "Eclipse No. 10" and a "De Luxe" banjo from Windsor, but not an "Emperor". I've also seen adverts where it looked like the lower number instruments (1, 2, etc) were described as the high-end instruments produced, but I can't say with divinity that that is the case. Again, if you can furnish some pictures, even email them to me and I can put them up here if you're not sure how, I'll probably be able to give you some more details.
_________________ - - - Spence - - - A little autobiography, including pictures, HereActually, I hate music. I'm only doing this for the money.
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