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Dortch Stove Works

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United States historic place
Dortch Stove Works
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
Invalid designation
Dortch Stove Works, September 2014
Dortch Stove Works is located in TennesseeDortch Stove WorksShow map of TennesseeDortch Stove Works is located in the United StatesDortch Stove WorksShow map of the United States
Location230 N. Franklin Rd.,
Franklin, Tennessee
Coordinates35°55′58″N 86°47′36″W / 35.93278°N 86.79333°W / 35.93278; -86.79333
Area30 acres (12 ha)
Built1929
ArchitectRobert & Company
Architectural styleIndustrial
NRHP reference No.97001438
Added to NRHPNovember 13, 1997
Williamson County Historical Society sign for Allen Manufacturing Company, also known as Dortch Stove Works

Dortch Stove Works is an historic stove manufacturing plant in Franklin, Tennessee. It was built in 1929 by Allen Manufacturing Company, then based in Nashville, Tennessee. During its manufacturing prime, the plant produced stoves and ranges under Allen Manufacturing Company, Dortch Stove Works, and Magic Chef Inc., as well as bedding and furniture under Jamison Bedding Company. Now, the plant is known as The Factory at Franklin, and operates as a mixed dining, retail, and entertainment center.

The property was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1997. When listed the property included five contributing buildings, one contributing structure, two non-contributing buildings, and one non-contributing structure, on 30 acres (12 ha).

Description

The Dortch Stove Works plant is an industrial plant that was designed by Robert & Company of Atlanta in 1929. The main body of the plant consists of the large horseshoe shaped foundry, originally taking up around 245,000 square feet. To accommodate the intensive work involved in manufacturing, the foundry was built with immense stretches of unobstructed floor space, poured concrete floors, high ceilings, and rows of clerestory windows and skylights that were necessary for venting hot air from the building. Several additions were made by Dortch Stove Works between 1935 – 1940, as well as by Jamison Bedding Company in the early 1960s. Now, the open floor plan of the foundry has been converted into a mixed retail and dining center.

The plant also includes the original brick boiler room with a 1960s metal addition made by Jamison Bedding, as well as a spacious assembly room with a wood roof, wood support beams, and poured concrete flooring that was likely built between 1935 and 1940. Two buildings that were probably used for storage sit on the east end of the property and were likely built around the same time as the assembly room. The former front office building, now a restaurant, was built in 1929 with the rest of the foundry and renovated in 1997. Renovations included the addition of outdoor seating areas on the first and second floors.

The most prominent feature of Dortch Stove Works is its water tower. It stands at the front of the plant and has been repainted twice – once to a brick red in 1997, and then to a dark green in 2020.

The plant could be accessed by road, fronting Franklin Road (also known as U.S. Route 31, the Jackson Highway, and the Franklin and Nashville Highway), or by rail, fed by two spur tracks (no longer extant) that serviced the Louisville & Nashville Railroad and the Franklin Interurban Railway.

History

Allen Manufacturing Company

Dortch Stove Works began as a stove manufacturing plant for Allen Manufacturing Company, then helmed by W. F. Allen. In the late 1920s, Nashville-based Allen Manufacturing Company decided to move its production to Franklin, citing a need for upgraded machinery and Franklin's appealing labor market. In 1929, Allen Manufacturing Company hired Robert & Company, an Atlanta architectural firm, to design their new plant. Construction began in October 1929 and finished in the spring of 1930. Limited production started as early as June 1930. The new plant was fully operational by February 12, 1931, and employed 250 people. At the height of production, Allen Manufacturing Company employed 300 people at their Franklin location, at least 75% of whom were locals, and could produce 65 stoves a day. Notable products of Allen Manufacturing Company were the Allen Parlor Furnace and Allen's Princess Range.

However, Allen Manufacturing did not remain in Franklin long. A combination of lawsuits, the high cost of construction, and the looming reality of the Great Depression resulted in Allen Manufacturing Company and the Allen Corporation (formed to sell stocks for the construction of the new plant), declaring bankruptcy in 1932. In late April, Allen Manufacturing Company entered receivership, naming Joe Briggs of the Williamson County Banking and Trust Company and Richard Herbert, the clerk and master of the Franklin chancery court, as the receivers.

Dortch Stove Works

The plant did not remain inactive long. In December 1932, O. L. Dortch, a prominent Tennessee businessman, purchased what was, at the time, one of the most modern stove manufacturing plants in the country. Dortch purchased the plant and most of the new machinery that Allen had installed for $60,000. In March 1933, Dortch Stove Works began operating out of the Franklin plant and quickly became the largest employer in Williamson County. At any given time throughout their 23 years in Franklin, Dortch Stove Works employed between 250-400 workers, reaching a peak of around 450 employees in 1949. O. L. Dortch also announced early in the process that he intended to hire locally as much as possible, encouraging potential employees to move to Franklin and advertising for housing for new employees in the local newspaper.

Dortch Stove Works drove the industrial and economic development of Franklin throughout its tenure. By December 1933, stoves had become the second largest export from Franklin behind flour, which was largely produced by Lillie Mill Flour Company, the county's oldest industry. Popular lines produced under Dortch were the Royal Line, the "Modern as Tomorrow" ranges, and the Pan-American. Throughout the Great Depression, Dortch helped to stabilize the economic landscape of Franklin and the greater Williamson County area by providing steady employment. Dortch was consistently the largest employer in Williamson County: in 1947 it was the only industry in Williamson County to employ 100 or more employees, and in 1949, with a peak of around 450 employees, Dortch was one of the country's largest stove works. The economic impact of Dortch Stove Works and its diversification of Franklin's agrarian economy aligned closely with the development of other towns across the South in the New South era.

Magic Chef Inc.

However, as technology evolved and electricity reached the countryside, the need for wood- and coal- burning stoves dropped. Households moved towards more modern electric appliances, and Dortch lacked diverse enough offerings to weather the drop in demand. In October 1955, it was announced that Dortch Stove Works would merge with Magic Chef Corporation of St. Louis, Missouri. Magic Chef produced a wide range of electric and gas appliances, as well as products like large signs and emblems that were made for Coca-Cola. By 1956, Magic Chef had moved the entirety of its domestic gas range production to Franklin. Ownership of the company changed hands twice during its time in Franklin, once in August 1957 to Food Giant Markets of Los Angeles, and again in October 1958 to Dixie Products Inc., of Cleveland, Tennessee. In 1958, in a bid to keep the industry from moving operations to Cleveland, the city of Franklin purchased the plant and offered to lease the property to Magic Chef at a more affordable rate. Magic Chef continued to operate out of Franklin until January 1961, at which point a recession in market appliances led to the closing of the plant. The city of Franklin was concerned about the loss of the industry and the potential impact it would have on other manufacturing powers in the area.

Jamison Bedding Company

Five months later, Nashville-based Jamison Bedding Company announced plans to expand into Franklin and solved the problem of the city's idle plant. Jamison leased the property from the city and modified the stove manufacturing plant for the production of upholstered furniture. Under Jamison, the plant continued to be a major source of employment in Franklin and the greater Williamson County area. Jamison operated out of the Franklin plant until 1991, and with 30 years of manufacturing was the longest running tenant at the plant. In 1991, Jamison's production moved to Tupelo, Mississippi. While Jamison maintained a few offices on the property until 1995, the rest of the plant sat dormant until 1996.

Adaptive Reuse

In 1995, the city began accepting design ideas for the redevelopment of the site. By the summer of 1996, a plan for the adaptive reuse of the site that had been submitted by local businessman Calvin LeHew was accepted. Local news reported that he intended to rehabilitate the plant and convert it into a retail and entertainment center. Renovations on the property, to be known as The Factory at Franklin, began in 1997, with the first businesses opening in January 1998. Completion of the renovation was officially announced on January 18, 2005. During this time, the Factory was home to over 70 tenants.

In 2012, the plant was sold to billionaire Brad Kelley, who operated the Factory for nine years, until it was sold to Holladay Properties in 2021. Today, the Factory operates as a mixed retail, dining, and entertainment space.

National Register Listing

On November 13, 1997, Dortch Stove Works was entered in the National Register of Historic Places. The listing included nine buildings and structures, six contributing and three non-contributing. The plant was listed under Criteria A for its significance to the commercial and industrial development of Franklin. At the time of its entrance to the National Register, Dortch Stove Works was also entered into the Tennessee Register of Historic Places.

Gallery

  • Williamson County Historical Society sign. Williamson County Historical Society sign.
  • The water tower at Dortch Stove Works, painted green The water tower at Dortch Stove Works, painted green
  • View of the old boiler room, now the Mockingbird Theater View of the old boiler room, now the Mockingbird Theater
  • Rusty, the recycled factory man Rusty, the recycled factory man
  • Plaque for Rusty Plaque for Rusty
  • Second plaque for Rusty Second plaque for Rusty
  • Jamison Bedding Company sign Jamison Bedding Company sign

See also

References

  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  2. "Factory in Franklin- Shopping near Franklin Nashville, Tn". Archived from the original on 2011-05-30. Retrieved 2011-05-31.
  3. ^ "Begin grading on Allen plant first of next week". The Review Appeal. September 26, 1929.
  4. "More about the big new plant". The Review Appeal. October 3, 1929.
  5. ^ Marchese, Amy (January 30, 1998). "1st business in redevelopment of former factory now open". The Tennessean.
  6. Bartlett, Kerri (July 8, 2017). "Previous Factory at Franklin owner says water tower 'is Franklin,' hopes it stays". Williamson Herald. Retrieved April 7, 2022.
  7. Keafer, Tori (October 12, 2021). "New Factory owners plan to 'enhance character,' highlight outdoor spaces over next year". Williamson Herald. Retrieved April 7, 2022.
  8. "Work is actually begun on the Allen plant". The Review Appeal. October 17, 1929.
  9. ^ "Here's the proposition: Below is published the "set-up" on Franklin's opportunity to secure the Allen Manufacturing Company of Nashville". The Review Appeal. September 12, 1929. p. 1.
  10. "To complete first stove here within ten days". The Review Appeal. June 26, 1930. p. 1.
  11. "250 employees on pay roll at Allen MFG. Co. plant". The Review Appeal. February 12, 1931. p. 1.
  12. "Allen MFG. Co. ships ten cars of heaters to the distributor". The Review Appeal. July 2, 1931. p. 1.
  13. "Shipped 1,800 stoves from Franklin during September". The Review Appeal. October 9, 1930. p. 1.
  14. "Town can get enormous manufacturing plant". The Review Appeal. September 12, 1929.
  15. "In receiver's hands Stove company at Franklin will be operated by J. B. Briggs". The Nashville Tennessean. April 30, 1932.
  16. ^ "Sale companies is confirmed". The Review Appeal. December 8, 1932.
  17. ^ "Neighborhood notes". The Nashville Tennessean. January 10, 1949.
  18. "Big stove works here to use 100% local labor". The Review Appeal. March 23, 1933.
  19. "Big plant here seeking homes for employees". The Review Appeal. October 26, 1933.
  20. "More than eight hundred carload shipments here". The Review Appeal. December 28, 1933.
  21. "Franklin stove plant reported in merger". The Nashville Tennessean. October 6, 1955.
  22. "Magic Chef moves division to Franklin". The Nashville Tennessean. May 14, 1957.
  23. "Magic Chef merges with Food Chain". The Nashville Tennessean. August 8, 1957.
  24. "Williamson's stove plant changes hands". The Nashville Tennessean. September 19, 1958.
  25. "Magic Chef plant to stay in Franklin". The Nashville Tennessean. October 24, 1958.
  26. "Franklin stove plant closes". The Nashville Tennessean. January 26, 1961.
  27. "Jamison plant set to expand". The Nashville Tennessean. June 16, 1961.
  28. "Officials to study old bedding plant for stability, safety". The Tennessean. September 30, 1992.
  29. "Franklin seeking ideas to transform old factory". The Tennessean. September 17, 1995.
  30. "Jamison sale OK'd". The Tennessean. April 18, 1996.
  31. Easy, Jim (May 9, 1997). "Census to bring Franklin #3.4 million in revenue". The Tennessean.
  32. Marchese, Amy (June 30, 1997). "Old factory ready to smoke". The Tennessean.
  33. Watson, Courtney (February 3, 2005). "new & used". The Tennessean.
  34. "The Factory at Franklin". The Factory at Franklin. Retrieved April 22, 2022.
  35. Walters, Kevin (October 26, 2014). "The Factory at Franklin freshens up with new tenants". The Tennessean. Retrieved May 11, 2022.
  36. "Nashville's Holladay Properties purchased Factory at Franklin for $56M". Williamson Herald. October 6, 2021. Retrieved May 11, 2022.
  37. Marchese, Amy (January 6, 1998). "Factory gets on historic register". The Tennessean.

External links

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