Flickr Widget

Showing posts with label Perspecta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Perspecta. Show all posts

Monday, August 15, 2011

Kent-Coffey Manufacturing Company

The Kent-Coffey Manufacturing Company was started in 1907 by Harold Coffey in Lenoir, North Carolina. Along with his friends, neighbors and competitors James Broyhill and John Bernhardt, he was one of the early leaders in establishing the North Carolina furniture industry in the early 1900s.

The Kent-Coffey collections of the 1950s and 1960s were solidly built and priced so the average consumer could afford them, resulting in their being very popular. The brand is experiencing a new surge of interest, as young MCM afficionados are beginning to become familiar with the name and add Kent-Coffey pieces to their growing collections.

Court records indicate that the Singer Company furniture division acquired the company in 1983. However, Singer's aggressive attempt to diversify broadly proved financially unsound, and the furniture division fairly soon went bankrupt.

From furnituremagazine.com and lexisone.com


Perspecta highboy
hotcoffeemodern.com

Nightstands from The Sequence collection
1stdibs.com

Dresser from The Tableau collection
ebay.com

Nightstands from The Continental collection
paperstreetantiques.com

The Wharton gentleman's chest
furnishmevintage.com

Town House triple dresser
midcenturymobler.com


Kent-Coffey furniture was always well marked, so it is easy to identify. Here are drawer markings from two of the collections.


The Wharton marking with Kent-Coffey logo
theculturalpsychologist.blogspot.com

Perspecta marking with Kent-Coffey logo
furnishmevintage.com


1957 print ads for the Goldenaire collection, celebrating the company's 100th anniversary, depict typical room settings of the era.


Master bedroom
ebay.com (Seller: whitemtnhowdy)

Father's room (not just twin beds...a whole room!)
ebay.com (Seller: whitemtnhowdy)

Teen room
ebay.com (Seller: whitemtnhowdy)

Guest room
ebay.com (Seller: whitemtnhowdy)


The Harold Coffey home in Lenoir, North Carolina, has been preserved as a bed and breakfast, which is called Sharon Elizabeth's.


The former Harold Coffey home in Lenoir, NC
pillowsandpancakes.com