- Lambert Hitchcock
Lambert Hitchcock (born
May 28 ,1795 ,Cheshire, Connecticut ; died 1852) was an Americanfurniture manufacturer, famous for designing and mass-producing the HitchcockChair .Hitchcock was the son of John Lee Hitchcock, an
American Revolutionary War veteran who was lost at sea in 1811. He attended the Episcopal Academy of Cheshire, now known asCheshire Academy , and was anapprentice to woodworker Silas Cheney. In 1818, he opened a furniture factory inRiverton, Connecticut , then called Hitchcocksville. The factory at first made chair parts. Soon, however, Hitchcock, influenced by Connecticut clockmakerEli Terry , began mass-producing simple, affordable chairs and selling them throughout the United States. Instead of painting designs on the backs, he used the relatively new and easier technique ofstenciling . By the late 1820s, the Hitchcock Chair Company was producing over 15,000 chairs a year.Although an innovative manufacturer, Hitchcock was an unsuccessful businessman. His company went through receivership in 1832, with his brothers-in-law joining the business under the name Hitchcock, Alford & Co. In 1843, he sold his interest in the company and started a new company in
Unionville, Connecticut , which also failed. He died in 1852 with little money to his name.In 1946, John Tarrant Kenney came upon the abandoned Hitchcock Chair factory while fishing on the
Farmington River . He wrote a biography, "The Hitchcock Chair", and started a new Hitchcock Chair Company in the same location. That business lasted until 2006, when it was forced to close due to competition from low-cost overseas furniture manufacturers.References
*John Tarrant Kenney, "The Hitchcock Chair" (1971).
External links
* [http://www.bartleby.com/65/hi/HitchcocL.html Columbia Encyclopedia entry]
* [http://www.boston.com/news/local/connecticut/articles/2006/04/06/furniture_maker_closes_its_doors_after_more_than_a_century/ Steven Scarpa, "Furniture maker closes its doors after more than a century"] , The Record-Journal (Meriden, Connecticut ), Apr. 6, 2006
* [http://www.americanheritage.com/articles/magazine/ah/2006/5/2006_5_9.shtml "Last Seating"] , American Heritage, Oct. 2006
* [http://www.barkhamstedhistory.org/Short%20tour.html Barkhamsted Historical Society page -- includes photo of Hitchcock Chair factory]
* [http://history.rays-place.com//ct/riverton.htm#IV Edmund L. Smiley, "A Short History of Riverton, Conn." (1934)]
* [http://www.hitchcockchair.com/history.html History of Hitchcock Chair Co.]
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