We were talking about DeFrehn & Sons over at the Vintage Johnstown Facebook Page - so I wrote up this brief look at the history of the chair factory in Hornerstown - 600 to 700 chairs are made daily at this plant. Frank Medvesek of 547 Russell Avenue finishes sanding a chair before it is sent to the paint-spraying room - seen in the background. The chairs are made on a production line basis and move through the plant on an overhead conveyor. The gentleman on the right is George DeFrehn - superintendent of the factory.
Since their beginnings in 1898 - it is estimated that more than 3 million chairs have been made at their Hornerstown plant.
The chair factory no longer markets its own products directly as it did for many years. In the 1940's it began making chairs exclusively for the National Store Fixture Company out of Baltimore, Maryland which marketed them in all parts of the country.
Actually, the chair-making process at DeFehn's was a three-fold operation. They made the wooden framework, F.T. Shank did the upholstering in his Geistown shop along with a leased space in the chair factory and the finishing work was done by the National Store Fixture Company with its own force of employees at the Johnstown plant.
The chairs made at the factory are of a modern design for kitchen, restaurant, school and other uses. With the exception of certain parts, they are made up of 14-ply laminated wood. Under the process, veneers in large sheets are glued and pressed into forms of the required shape. After the sheets are dried quickly by high frequency electric heat, the laminated wood is ready to be cut just like solid wood.
Chair manufacturing by the DeFehns dates back to 1858, when William DeFrehn opened a shop in Schuylkill County.
William had six sons - Robert, William, Charles,Frank, Augustus and George when he established their Johnstown factory in 1898 at its location at Horner and Poplar Streets.
Thank you for posting this, Lisa. I always wondered about the chair factory. Do you have any pictures of any other chairs they made?
ReplyDeleteI have 2 of the exact chairs pictured here.. How would I find the value of them?
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure about the value but I would be interested in then if they are for sale.
DeleteI have no idea - maybe ask an antique dealer - Lisa
ReplyDeleteLisa, If this factory was at the corner of Poplar and Horner Streets in 1898, when do you think the Poplar Hotel existed?
ReplyDeleteThe mustache comb I bought says it's on the corners of Poplar and Horner Streets and a Swank and Welleky were the proprietors???
Now we have to figure out when the hotel was there. This is just too co-incidental.
Karen L.
Have two antique porch swings they made. One with the original label. Really great pieces.
ReplyDeleteI have a poker table with 4 chairs via national store furniture. Would love an appraisal.
ReplyDeleteFrank Medvesek in the photo was my uncle (mom's brother). Lost track of him back in the late 60s and never knew what happened to him.
ReplyDeleteWas the Medvesek family originally from what today is Eastern Slovakia? My surname is Medvesky also spelled Medvetsky or Medvecky.
DeleteMy mom was Nancy DeFrehn, daughter of Bob ( named after one of his uncles) and Marie Will DeFrehn.
ReplyDeleteIf anyone has chairs or swings I collect them for my children. Please let me know if you are interested in selling them. You can email me at sld@DeFrehnConsulting.com
ReplyDeleteThank you!
What years were the swings made just got one for my son he's 30 years old and thought he could have it for years on his porch.
ReplyDeleteRecently inherited the swing from my grandmothers house. Spent hours and hours in it as a child. I have nowhere to put it and am looking to find info on the value. It was purchased new, been in my family the whole time, had been painted white I believe and then refinished to original wood about 20 years ago. Please email me at velvetseas@gmail.com if you have any resources to share!! Thank you!
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