White Furniture Company

White Furniture Company
Location E. Center and N. 5th Sts., Mebane, North Carolina
Coordinates 36°5′45″N 79°16′0″W / 36.09583°N 79.26667°W / 36.09583; -79.26667Coordinates: 36°5′45″N 79°16′0″W / 36.09583°N 79.26667°W / 36.09583; -79.26667
Built 1905
NRHP Reference #

82003422

[1]
Added to NRHP July 29, 1982

White Furniture Company, was a major American producer of hand crafted fine furniture for over a century, (1881–1993). Founded by the White Brothers of Mebane, North Carolina, the factory notably produced furnishings for the US Government and The Grove Park Inn.[2]

Origins

In 1881 brothers Dave & Will White founded White Furniture Company.[3] They used a small loan and $275 from working as telegraph operators as capital. The White's Father, Stephen A. White III, had acquired an amount of debt which soiled the family's name. The brothers White pledged to repay their father's creditors and such was the catalyst behind starting the factory.

Will White served as the company President and Dave White as general manager. "The White Brothers were aggressive businessmen who took seriously their place in the town, and who, like many in the New South, equated industrial growth with civic duty and regional pride."

Working with only a plane and a [boiler] the initial manufacturing was limited to only round oak dining tables and wagon wheels. While reaching an early success in 1886 a local businessman invested funds to expand White Furniture and purchase more advanced machinery. Within a brief time span the company employed thirty two people and manufactured tables, chairs, and a bedroom set. The solid oak bedroom set sold for nine dollars and included a bed, dresser, and washstand.

Early history

The Panama Canal contracts

In 1906 under the command of chief engineer John Frank Stevens hundreds of new building were built in Panama. These buildings were created to house Army engineers and canal workers constructing the Panama Canal. The US Government was in need of furniture for both enlisted men and American officers in Panama and the bulk of the contracts were awarded to White's. A local newspaper reported "The first installment of furniture for the Panama Canal, contracted for the government with The White Furniture Company. This train of cars was handsomely placarded, each car bearing a twenty-foot banner worded 'FROM THE WHITE FURNITURE CO., MEBANE, N.C., FOR U.S. GOVERNMENT, PANAMA CANAL,' and then the company trademark, 'The White Line Guarantees Satisfaction.'"

This was the first time a government contract of this type had been awarded to a 'southern factory'. A total of fifty-eight boxcars was shipped from North Carolina to the Panama Canal.

Just one year after being awarded the Panama Contracts, in 1907, White Furniture Company was awarded "Best manufacturer of American furniture" at the Jamestown Exhibition. (A World's Fair celebration during the 300th anniversary of the founding of the Jamestown Settlement.)

References

  1. National Park Service (2009-03-13). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  2. Linda Marquez-Frees and Jim Sumner (March 1982). "White Furniture Company" (pdf). National Register of Historic Places - Nomination and Inventory. North Carolina State Historic Preservation Office. Retrieved 2014-08-01.
  3. Encyclopedia of North Carolina :: UNC Press
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