Walcot and Co

4 x William Birch Dining Chairs

£0.00
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Set of 4 William Birch Dining Chairs, Arts and Crafts
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Set of 4 William Birch Dining Chairs, Arts and Crafts
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Set of 4 William Birch Dining Chairs, Arts and Crafts
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4 x William Birch Dining Chairs

£0.00
sold out

A matching set of four Arts and Crafts dining chairs by William Birch, c 1900s.  Made of stained oak with typical Birch banding to the uprights, legs and stretchers.  In immaculate condition with new rush seats.  

Dimensions: H98cm, H46cm (to seat), W43cm, D40cm

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A matching set of four Arts and Crafts dining chairs by William Birch, c 1900s.  Made of stained oak with typical Birch banding to the uprights, legs and stretchers.  In immaculate condition with new rush seats.  

Dimensions: H98cm, H46cm (to seat), W43cm, D40cm

W. Birch and Co (from Grace's guide to British Industrial History)

William Birch, furniture maker, of High Wycombe

1840s According to family tradition Birch began chair making in the 1840s

1853 First appeared in trade directories. 

1883 William son's Walter started his own chairmaking business in Castle Street, after beginning some years before at the back of The Woolpack pub in Oxford Road. 

By 1888 Another son, Charles, had started a furniture factory in Queen’s Road and carried on in business until World War One. 

1895 Walter took over his father’s firm as Birch and Company with premises in Denmark Street. 

1898 The Denmark Street factory was rebuilt according to the latest modern specifications. The factory burned down very soon after it was built, despite being designed to be fire-proof. 

By the end of the 1890s, Birch's was supplying furniture for Liberty's and other prestigious London stores

Around 1900 the firm seems to have been one of the first to branch out into making general furniture in addition to chairs alone.

Pioneered the development of Arts and Crafts-influenced furniture locally, and employed well-known designers such as EG Punnett, George Walton (who worked with Mackintosh) and Whitehead

Birch’s opened a second site in Wycombe at Leigh Street

1931-5 The whole business concentrated in Leigh St. 

1938 Employed 350. 

1950s Made range called Birchcraft

1954 Acquired by EGomme (makers of the G-Plan range of furniture)