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Christian G. Carron, with contributions by Kenneth L. Ames, Jeffrey D.
Kleiman, and Joel Lefever. Grand Rapids Furniture: The Story of Americas
Furniture City. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Public Museum of Grand Rapids,
1998. v + 244 pp.; numerous color and bw illus., directory of furniture
makers and their marks, bibliography, index. $35.00.
As scholarly investigation of nineteenth-century American furniture has
matured in the last few decades, we have moved from broad surveys of the
material to more specialized studies. At the Metropolitan Museum of Art,
for example, the up-scale panoply of objects in the 1970 exhibition and
catalogue, Nineteenth Century America, was followed in 1986 by
the more temporally focused exhibition and publication, In Pursuit
of Beauty, and finally by the monographic treatment in 1995 of
Herter Brothers: Furniture and Interiors for a Gilded Age. Across
the river, at the Brooklyn Museum of Art, nineteenth-century studies have
followed a similar path but have often focused on a somewhat broader economic
range. The 1960 ground-breaking exhibition and abbreviated catalogue,
Victoriana: An Exhibition of the Arts of the Victorian Era in America,
included 260 objects that ranged from small, pressed glass cup plates
to parlor cabinets. In 1979, Brooklyn examined the gilded age of the American
Renaissance and in 1997 presented a monographic exhibition on the progressive,
machine-made furniture made for the upper-middle market by New York designer
and manufacturer George Hunzinger.
It is not surprising, then, as the millennium draws to a close and nineteenth-century
revivalism is regarded with historical objectivity, that scholarly focus
should be directed toward the regional accomplishments and history of
machine-made, middle-market furniture in the United States. After all,
it is this latter aspect of the furniture trade that most characterizes
the American contribution to the history of Western furniture rather than
the superb handcraftsmanship of Herter Brothers. Although acknowledgment
of this aspect of the furniture industry seems slow to have manifested
itself here, it has evidently long shaped the view of American furniture
abroad. For instance, although the examples of American furniture chosen
by the Keepers at the Victoria & Albert Museum, London, are characterized
by progressive designside chairs by Samuel Gragg and George Hunzinger
and a sofa by John Henry Belterthey also espouse a ready acceptance
and ingenious use of the machine. In fact, one of the few pieces of American
furniture selected to bring back to England by the British delegates to
the 1853 Crystal Palace Exhibition in New York was a small, Elizabethan
revival occasional table whose main virtue was that it was made largely
by machine.1
The book under discussion here examines in unprecedented historical detail
the development of the machine-made furniture business in Grand Rapids,
Michigan, the self-proclaimed Furniture City. One uses the
term business with intent; this study is more a socioeconomic
history of the furniture trade in this city rather than an object-oriented
study replete with stylistic analyses. Although this volume makes considerable
contributions to the history of the furniture trade that will be useful
to curators, collectors, and antiques dealers, one can only lament this
current trend in the discipline that diminishes the object. By not focusing
on the furniture as art objects, the author precludes a discussion of
the stylistic characteristics of Grand Rapids furniture that might distinguish
it from machine-made furniture from other centers.2
Another aspect of this book is endemic to current publication practices.
The book was published in conjunction with an exhibition held in 1994
that was drawn from the collection of twenty-six hundred examples of indigenous
furniture in the Grand Rapids Museum to mark the 140th anniversary of
the institution; the exhibition is now a permanent installation. Museums
and publishers seem apprehensive about the appeal of exhibition catalogues
that they fear will have a shorter shelf life than more independently
conceived books. Since the potential market for specialized art history
books is so small, it is difficult to understand this anxiety. As a result,
the nature of the exhibitions that inspired these publications is not
recorded and is lost unless, presumably, one travels to the host institution
and inspects the exhibition files. Clearly one way around this issue would
be to include an abbreviated exhibition checklist in the more generalized
publication to document those objects that were displayed. This information
might be important in helping future historians evaluate possible influences
that the exhibited objects had on taste and scholarly interests. In addition,
the present book suffers from a lack of rigorous editing. Not only are
some foreign names misspelled (Pierre de La Mésengère, not
Pierre de la Mésengère), but accent marks are also omitted
(möbel, not mobel). Also, some basic information is repeated by the
multiple authors (the prizes awarded at the Centennial Exhibition for
bedroom suites and the ethnicity of the work force, for example). These
reservations aside, this book is full of new information and of revealing,
often amusing or sad, anecdotes.
The book is divided into nine chapters that trace the history of the furniture
industry in Grand Rapids from the 1830s to the present. There are more
than two hundred photographs that include color images of furniture in
the collection of the Public Museum of Grand Rapids as well as historical
black-and-white images. Although the photographs are coordinated chronologically
with the text, they are not numbered and constitute virtually an addendum.
This lack of coordination between pictures and text also results in an
omission of illustrations necessary to elucidate important points. The
captions, often quite long, are printed as sidebars in sepia as opposed
to the black of the text. There are, regrettably, no footnotes, although
some sources are cited in the text. The lack of footnotes severely diminishes
the scholarly value of the text and raises numerous questions about various
conclusions drawn. Six of the chapters were written by Christian G. Carron,
who also curated the exhibition that inspired the book, and three others
are by scholars who collaborated on the project. There are general background
chapters that set the cultural stage for the furniture history, describe
the increased reliance on machinery, and relate the rise of labor unions.
The historical sections trace the humble beginnings of the industry and
conclude with a fascinating description of the adaptation of the furniture
industry to new materials and markets in the late twentieth century.
In chapter one, Good Timing and a Flair for Leadership, Kenneth
L. Ames, a champion of material culture studies, provides a good introduction
to the importance accorded furniture in American Victorian culture. He
suggests four main reasons for the rise of the furniture industry in Grand
Rapids. First, by the time the city began to prosper in the 1870s, manufacturers
had built new factories from scratch with the latest machinery and did
not have to endure the costly and time-consuming conversions that plagued
manufacturers in established eastern centers such as New York and Boston.
The establishment of the Grand Rapids Furniture Market, a semi-annual
trade show, brought buyers and sellers together in an organized and efficient
manner, and the publication of the Grand Rapids Furniture Record,
a well-designed and well-written trade journal, also appealed to consumers
and helped educate them about new trends and products. The fourth crucial
development was the establishment in 1903 in the Grand Rapids Public Library
of a reference section dedicated to publications on the history of furniture
and the trade for the instruction of local designers and manufacturers.
Chapter two, Arrivals and Beginnings, by Carron, traces the
early history of the furniture industry in the city. Traditionally, William
Deacon Haldane, from upstate New York, was the first furniture
maker in Grand Rapids in the mid-1830s. The first manufacturer to employ
power machinery, however, was Ebenezer Ball beginning about 1849; he perhaps
is the true father of the machine-made furniture industry in Grand Rapids.
Other early settlers included the Widdicomb family, from Devonshire, England,
by way of New Hampshire, who arrived about 1857. The text is rife with
familiar names of American manufacturers, and it is a revelation to learn
about their origins and that their factories were located in Grand Rapids.
Carron outlines the fortuitous combination of conditions that encouraged
the furniture industry: rich natural resources of both hard- and softwood
forests and of natural waterways that included the Grand River and access
to the Great Lakes; the newest technology; capital investors who were
not adverse to high risk; and a large work force composed of skilled woodworkers
from Germany, England, Scotland, and Canada, as well as unskilled newer
immigrants mostly from the Netherlands and Poland and native-born African
Americans who arrived from the South during Reconstruction. The arrival
of the railroad in 1857 was the final ingredient for success; it reduced
the travel time to New York and the large eastern markets from two or
three weeks to two or three days.
Joel Lefever gives three case studies of the most influential manufacturers
in the nineteenth century: Berkey & Gay Furniture Company; Nelson,
Matter & Company; and Phoenix Furniture Company. These firms established
vertical monopolies and owned tracts of forests, lumber mills, and means
of transportation in addition to large factories with the latest machinery.
These factories eventually also had photography studios to produce promotional
material and mail-order catalogues. Grand Rapids firms early on referred
to themselves as furniture makers rather than cabinetmakers, which alluded
to handwork, to emphasize the low cost and high quality that machine-made
furniture could attain. As time progressed, Grand Rapids manufacturers
tended to abandon low-end production in favor of middle and upper-middle
market goods. This strategy often entailed the addition of carved decoration
to the machine-made furniture, and by the early 1880s the Grand Rapids
Furniture Carvers Guild was established. Although these companies
had independent sales forces, they soon realized the benefits of cooperation
and held joint trade shows and established manufacturers associations.
The attribution of furniture is often difficult due to the scarcity of
labeled pieces and the conscious community of style established to create
an identity for Grand Rapids furniture. Brief hints on preferred drawer
construction methods and use of chalk marks during assembly are offered
to differentiate the production of one company from another, but these
are ultimately somewhat vague and not conclusive.
Making Connections, written by Jeffrey D. Kleiman, offers
a fascinating account of the Byzantine interconnections of the banking
and furniture business in this one-industry town. Nineteen furniture manufacturers
eventually controlled the industry. Berkey & Gay, Grand Rapids Chair
Company, and Phoenix Furniture Company were at the center of these interlocking
business interests, and their shared executives also controlled the four
major banks. The fate of the furniture worker was entirely at the mercy
of the entrepreneurial class. Beginning in 1910 the workers attempted
to begin collective bargaining but met with no cooperation from the factory
owners. In 1911 the first great strike occurred but led to few gains for
the workers. Although the Clayton Anti-Trust Act of 1914 helped break
up the overlap of business influences, the lot of the workers was not
dramatically improved. This brief history of the labor movement in Grand
Rapids is clearly and poignantly told, although it lacks historical context.
The furniture labor movement had begun in New York by the mid-1880s. There
is no explanation why the movement took so long to arrive in Grand Rapids.3
The remaining five chapters relate the history of the Grand Rapids furniture
trade in the twentieth century. Grand Rapids responded to the stylistic
trend, if not the full spirit, of the arts and crafts movement in the
first decade of the century. Curiously, although one of the main tenets
of the movementhandcraftsmanshipwas ignored, another goal
of the movementto provide simple, well-designed furniture to a large
audiencewas ironically accomplished by the large-scale production
of machine-made furniture in the arts and crafts style. During the 1910s
and 1920s, the Grand Rapids factories specialized in good-quality historical
reproductions. Foreign designers had been lured to Grand Rapids to help
establish the arts and crafts market, and this trend continued in the
succeeding decades. In 1917 the importance of the designer was acknowledged,
and the Grand Rapids Furniture Designers Association was founded. In 1931
the association hosted the first meeting of the American Institute of
Decorators. To ensure the historical accuracy of their reproductions,
some manufacturers purchased antiques. Hollis M. Baker, the owner of Baker
Furniture Company, owned more than four thousand pieces of antique furniture.
He opened the Baker Museum for Furniture Research in 1941; eventually
a portion of this collection was transferred to the Public Museum of Grand
Rapids.
The success of Grand Rapids manufacturers owed a great deal to their willingness
to subsume personal identity in favor of collective marketing. Between
1899 and 1913 most city-made furniture was labeled not with the manufacturers
name but rather with the communal Grand Rapids Made logo.
The extent of this cooperative solidarity was unusual but served the city
well. Rather than trying to establish name recognition for dozens of small
firms, the city-wide logo benefited them all. More important than the
city logo was The Market, the semi-annual trade show that
brought wholesale buyers directly to the city. Both local and out-of-town
manufacturers set up displays. Although the Market had its beginnings
in the late 1870s, the 1910s and 1920s witnessed its greatest success.
In 1925, Grand Rapids had ten exhibition halls, and about 560 dealers
participated. An entire entertainment industry grew up to support the
Market, and hotels, restaurants, and theaters flourished. Other cities,
of course, had similar markets, and eventually the larger and more accessible
American Furniture Mart in Chicago superceded the one in Grand Rapids,
which ceased in 1965.
The great prosperity in the United States in the 1920s curiously did not
include the furniture industry in Grand Rapids. Victorian cultural ideals
about the importance of the home declined, and Americans were more inclined
to spend money on a new car than on new furniture. Increased production
capabilities in those years also saturated the furniture market, and prices
fell. There was an attempt to stimulate the industry through the introduction
of the art moderne style in the mid-1920s. Josef Urban, Donald Deskey,
and Kem Weber, among others, were lured to Grand Rapids. The Herman Miller
Furniture Company, which hired Gilbert Rohde in the early 1930s and later
George Nelson, was the most successful company to bring modernism to a
large market.
The Great Depression sounded the final death knoll for the traditional
furniture industry in the city. By 1940, 30 percent of the furniture companies
had closed. The number of workers declined from twelve thousand in 1929
to fewer than three thousand in 1940, and wages dropped 50 percent between
1929 and 1933. Traditional manufacturers largely retreated to the smaller,
high-end market of reproduction colonial furniture, inspired by the new
museums devoted to our colonial past such as Colonial Williamsburg and
the Henry Ford Museum. During World War II, the furniture factories were
successfully refitted for war production. After the war, the experience
of the efficiency of large government contract orders and the need to
furnish new houses, schools, and offices to accommodate the demobilized
armed forces refocused the furniture trade in Grand Rapids to the contract
furniture business. School furniture, which had been a staple of the economy
since the late nineteenth century, store and restaurant fittings, theater
and stadium seating, and especially flexible office cubicles became the
new specialties of the local industry. Office environments have become
the mainstay of the industry and the hope of the future as well.
The last section of the book is a Directory of Grand Rapids Area
Furniture Makers and Marks. This section is perhaps the most useful
aspect of the publication and reason enough for all furniture historians
to have this book on the shelf. About eight hundred individual makers
and companies from western Michigan, established from the 1830s to the
present, are listed, in addition to some retailers and purveyors of supplies
vital to the industry. Although some entries are short, those for more
important firms include company history, personnel,
marks and labels, and other sources. This last
category suggests sources for more information, such as the location of
company catalogues and where to find examples of furniture in public collections.
The inclusion of reproductions of numerous company logos, however, may
be somewhat misleading for the average collector; these marks seldom appear
on furniture but rather were culled from company catalogues and advertisements.
The cross-referencing in this section has not, unfortunately, always been
well edited. For example, the innovative plywood chairs designed by Frank
Gehry for Knoll, Inc., that are touted in the text are mentioned only
under the actual manufacturer, Davidson Plyforms, Inc. The short bibliography
and index also suffer from a lack of editorial acumen. For example, Leslie
Green is listed as a separate author from Leslie Green Bowman, and similar
publications from the Metropolitan Museum of Art are listed in one case
under the title of the exhibition (In Pursuit of Beauty) and in
another under the author (Herter Brothers). In addition, the date of publication
given for each title is incorrect. Finally, in the too brief index our
colleague and Metropolitan Museum curator Catherine Hoover Voorsanger
is the only historian included among the furniture firms and designers
of Grand Rapids.
Pointing out flaws is only one task of the reviewer, and I would be remiss
to end on a negative note. This publication should be applauded for its
seriousness of purpose and its major contribution as the first scholarly
step at documenting the ongoing history of Grand Rapids as a vital center
of the furniture industry in the United States.
Barry R. Harwood
Brooklyn Museum of Art
1. Clive D. Edwards, Victorian Furniture: Technology and Design
(Manchester, England, and New York: Manchester University Press, 1993),
pp. 16465.
2. For an interesting discussion of this issue, see John Walsh, Eight
Theses for Art Historians and Museums, College Art Association
News 24 , no. 2 (March 1999): 1012.
3. Labor unrest and strikes were reported in national furniture trade
papers such as the American Cabinet Maker and Upholsterer; for
example, see Barry Harwood, The Furniture of George Hunzinger: Invention
and Innovation in Nineteenth-Century America (Brooklyn, N.Y.: Brooklyn
Museum of Art, 1997), p. 135 and notes 202 and 203.
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