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Thomasville's History
Thomasville Furniture Industries entered the first decade of the 20th century as
the fledgling Thomasville Chair Company in a bustling railroad-side community in
the triad area of North Carolina, near High Point, the furniture capital. Founded
in 1904, it was just one of many chair manufacturers scattered throughout North
Carolina. It turned out 180 chairs a day and owed two local timber farmers, T.J.
Finch and his brother C.F. Finch, $2,000 for lumber.
When the company couldn't pay its debt in cash, the Finch brothers reluctantly accepted
stock instead and decided to buy out the other stockholders. Business improved immediately
under the astute guidance of the Finch family with sales topping $1 million by 1917
and the company becoming recognized for innovations in design as well as manufacturing
quality. The Thomasville Chair Company achieved many "firsts" for the
furniture industry. These included the first national sales force in the furniture
industry and the first American furniture company to produce and sell an entire
suite of furniture: Thomasville dining tables, buffets and chairs.
To survive the Great Depression, the company stopped paying dividends to stockholders
and management took a cut in salary. Then, in 1933 the company began a series of
trade classes which enabled hundreds of their employees to learn new and better
manufacturing techniques.
In 1941, Thomasville Chair Co. went to war with the rest of the country, making
items requested by the federal government, including: double decker bunk beds for
the Army, wooden plugs for bombs, tent stakes, wooden spatulas and rolling pins.
And with 597 company men serving in the war, the first group of women reported for
work in March of 1942.
During the 1950's, sales reached $17 million, many innovations in machinery were
made and the company's reputation for crafting quality furniture grew. In the '60s,
the company (under the direction of Tom A. Finch) received a new name, Thomasville
Furniture Industries, Inc. In 1968, it was acquired by Armstrong World Industries.
In the 70's, Thomasville entered the contract market, providing furnishings for
hotels and inns, primarily in the United States. In 1984, they expanded into Government
sales, and their products can be found in military facilities worldwide. In December
1995, Thomasville was purchased by Furniture Brands International, Inc., a major
residential furniture company located in St. Louis, MO.
Today, Thomasville Furniture Industries is a full-line furniture manufacturer with
dedicated galleries in more than 400 leading independent retail furniture stores.
Additionally, there are over 160 Thomasville Home Furnishing stores which carry
only Thomasville products.
Guiding the continuing growth of Thomasville is Nancy Webster, president and CEO
since 2005.
The corporate offices and showrooms are still located along the railroad tracks
in Thomasville, NC. Today, employees number over 3,300 in manufacturing facilities
in North Carolina and Virginia.
The famous Big Chair, an 18-foot reproduction of a Duncan Phyfe design (first erected
in 1922 and rebuilt in 1951) still stands in the town square as a symbol of the
mutual success of a now famous chair company - and the town that cherishes its nickname,
"Chair City".
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