Parker Knoll
Parker Knoll is a British furniture manufacturing company, formed in 1931 by British furniture manufacturer Frederick Parker and Willi Knoll, a German inventor of a new form of sprung furniture. With roots in the manufacture of high-quality furniture, the brand concentrated on mass-market products from the 1930s to the 1990s. The company was listed on the London Stock Exchange in 1950, but taken private in 2004. After financial problems, it was acquired out of administration by Sofa Brands International. In recent years, the brand has moved back to the higher-quality end of the domestic furniture market.
Frederick Parker
Frederick Parker was born in Shoreditch in 1845. He started in business as a chair maker in 1869, after an apprenticeship at his father's furniture factory. He decided to concentrate on making high quality furniture by hand. After working initially in London, Parker moved to High Wycombe – a historic centre of the furniture trade in England – in 1898. Part of the business was to make furniture for ocean liners, including the Palladian Lounge of Cunard's RMS Aquitania, and for P&O liner SS Ophir, which was commissioned as a Royal Yacht, HMS Ophir, in 1901 to carry the Duke and Duchess of Cornwall and York (the future King George V, and Queen Mary) to Australia. Parker also made furniture for the Viceroy's House in New Delhi, and a carved throne for Emperor of Ethiopia Haile Selassie. The business was incorporated as a limited company, Frederick Parker and Sons Ltd, in 1904. Frederick's son, Tom Parker, later took over the business.
Willi Knoll
Willi Knoll was born in Germany and served as a fighter pilot the First World War. His experience of uncomfortable seating in his fighter plane was the inspiration for his invention of a new form of sprung furniture, with a coiled steel wire string system across the seat and back, which he manufactured in Stuttgart. Knoll came to Britain in 1929 to find a manufacturer for his chairs using his patent.
Formation of Parker Knoll
After Frederick Parker's son, Tom, saw a sample of Knoll's chairs at Heal & Son, the two businesses quickly formed a new company, Parker Knoll, which was launched at the British Industries Fair in February 1931.[1]
The new venture was quickly successful, with advertisements in The Daily Mail and The Daily Telegraph selling low-price tension-sprung furniture in a variety of basic designs. They also provided furniture for the BBC's Broadcasting House in Portland Place, and Cunard's RMS Queen Mary. Increasing demand led to the construction of a new factory in High Wycombe to a design commissioned from Wallis, Gilbert & Partners in 1935; it was destroyed in a fire in 1970.[2]
During the Second World War, the company manufactured A-frames, wooden boxes, and wings for the de Havilland Mosquito, and also repaired gliders, returning to furniture manufacturing after the war. The company was listed on the London Stock Exchange in 1950. The company's reclining chairs became a signature item during the 1960s. The company opened new factory in Chipping Norton in the 1960s, which closed in 2003. Other factories in Andover and Bridgend were also closed in 2003.
Recent years
The parent company became Cornwell Parker plc in 1988, and acquired many other furniture manufacturers. The group was acquired by Silentnight Holdings Plc in 2000,[3] and taken private by a company controlled by the Clarke family (the founders of Silentnight) in 2004. It was bought from Silentnight by Christie-Tyler in March 2005, but Christie-Tyler collapsed into administration within months due to unpaid debts resulting from the financial problems of Courts in November 2004 and Allders in January 2005. It was acquired out of the administration of Christie-Tyler in July 2005 by Sofa Brands International, established by Christie-Tyler's former chief executive Scott Malvenan.[4] Sofa Brands International also acquired other brands, such as G Plan, Derwent Upholstery, Duresta and Leabrooks Upholstery.[5]
The company is now based in Sutton in Ashfield in Nottinghamshire, after moving to a state-of-the-art manufacturing facility in 2016. In recent years, the company has returned to its roots at the high-quality end of the furniture market.
The current collection is made up of the Classic, Lifestyle and Maison sofa ranges. All are designed and manufactured in Nottinghamshire.
Frederick Parker Foundation
When Parker Knoll decided to sell its archive in 1997, a charity – the Frederick Parker Foundation – was established to acquire 170 chairs, 150 carvings and the Frederick Parker Company archive, to maintain as an archive of furniture design and manufacture. The collection is on long term loan to a dedicated gallery at the London Metropolitan University's resource centre, Metropolitan Works.
Notes
- Dictionary of trade name origins; Adrian Room; Routledge, 1983; ISBN 0-7102-0174-5, p.314
- Form and fancy: factories and factory buildings by Wallis, Gilbert & Partners, 1916–1939; Joan Skinner; Liverpool University Press, 1997; ISBN 0-85323-622-4, p.257
- Parker Knoll in bed with Silentnight, BBC News, 13 October 2000
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-09-30. Retrieved 2011-06-17.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- Two more furniture firms sold off, BBC News, 6 July 2005
References
- History, Parker Knoll
- History, Frederick Parker Foundation
- The Frederick Parker Chair Collection, Victoria & Albert Museum
- Sofabrands