Wisconsin Chair Company
Encyclopedia
The Wisconsin Chair Company was a large factory that for over half a century was the main backbone of Port Washington, Wisconsin
Port Washington, Wisconsin
Port Washington is the county seat of Ozaukee County in the U.S. state of Wisconsin. The city is about 25 miles north of Milwaukee and 110 miles north of Chicago. In the 2000 census Port Washington had a population of 10,467...

. It was destroyed twice: the first time by a huge, devastating fire in 1899 and the second time by demolition in 1959.

Formation

The company was organized in 1889 by John Bostwick, a local jeweler and son-in-law of Barnum Blake. He was one of the largest investors and eventually owned most of the shares and became president of the company. The first plant built by the Wisconsin Chair Co. became the largest employer in the area, providing
work for one-sixth of the Ozaukee County work force. Its presence was most likely the chief reason that the city's Port Washington population increased from 1,659 in 1890 to more than 3,000 by 1900.

1899 fire

Surviving its first financially difficult years, the Chair company suffered its worst blow in 1899 when it was totally leveled by fire. The fire engulfed much of downtown Port Washington and engines from Sheboygan
Sheboygan
- Wisconsin municipalities :* Sheboygan, Wisconsin, city* Sheboygan , Wisconsin, town* Sheboygan County, Wisconsin, county* Sheboygan Falls, Wisconsin, city* Sheboygan Falls , Wisconsin, town- Other Wisconsin locations :...

 and Milwaukee were called in to help contain the blaze. The glow from the fire could be seen as far away as Whitefish Bay
Whitefish Bay
Whitefish Bay is a large bay on the eastern end of the southern shore of Lake Superior between Michigan and Ontario. It begins in the north and west at Whitefish Point in Michigan, about 10 miles north of Paradise, Michigan and ends at the St. Marys River at Sault Ste. Marie on the southeast...

.

The company showed its resiliency by immediately rebuilding, and for many years remained the backbone of Port Washington's economy. The incredible success story eventually ended as sales and profits became smaller and production slowed down.

Closure

By 1959, the company had closed its doors and its sprawling but inefficient 1900 plant, which, like the 1889 plant, was located behind and east of the N. Franklin Street business district, partially encircling the city's inner harbor, has now been completely demolished.

Today there is a historic plaque in the area where the plant once stood detailing the 1899 fire.
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