Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

Registered UK Charity (No. 115342)

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 162,258 pages of information and 244,500 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 147,919 pages of information and 233,587 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Dancer and Hearne

From Graces Guide

Dancer and Hearne Brothers, furniture makers, of High Wycombe

1860s William Hearne, a labourer, and his wife Eliza, a lacemaker, established the Hit and Miss pub, amalgamating a series of cottages. Legend has it that there was a one-man workshop shed behind the pub where chairs or parts of chairs were made.

By 1881 William had died and Eliza had married Samuel Dancer, a labourer from Beaconsfield. Samuel took over the Hit and Miss pub. He was recorded as "publican and chair factor". Also living at the Hit and Miss were William Hearne’s son Alfred, age 20, a chairmaker. So it appears that Alfred was making chairs while Samuel sold them.

1895 The firm is first recorded in the 1895 trade directory. A photograph of that date shows 31 employees. The listing gives the firm’s location as ‘Penn Street and Holmer Green’. The Holmer Green factory, supposedly based in Factory Street (now Orchard Way), was used by the company until some time after 1939 but nothing more is known about it.

Dancer & Hearne grew steadily to become one of the biggest furniture factories area

1934 A series of famous photographs shows the Big Chair, a 6½-foot high Windsor wheelback chair made for the British Industries Fair.

1935 the firm took over a factory on Lindsay Avenue, High Wycombe, which it maintained until 1967. There were also premises at Fairmeadow Works, West Wycombe Road, High Wycombe, which were taken over by Chippy Heath in 1968.

By 1938 it had around 500 employees and was producing 450,000 chairs a year.

Late 1930s: orders were slow, Cecil Hearne played upon a connection with Geoffrey de Havilland the aircraft manufacturer (who had been born in Terriers on the north side of High Wycombe) and began making Tiger Moth aeroplane parts for the de Havilland firm.

WWII the Penn Street factory was given over completely to making parts for the De Havilland Mosquito [1] The Lindsay Avenue site also made plane parts.

1949 Established the Ammanford factory in South Wales.

1952 Aircraft parts were made again when orders for chairs declined

1957 Ammanford factory closed

By the 1960s Dancer & Hearne was mainly producing wooden chairs for Government contracts and schools, and dining chairs for other furniture firms

1962-3 the company made losses; only small profits in later years.

1967 bought by Parker-Knoll. The new Production Manager at Penn Street found what he called "industrial anarchy" with out-of-date equipment and a "chaotic situation".

1970 The Ministry of Education decided to abandon wooden chairs in favour of plastic and metal, depriving Dancer & Hearne of the core of its business. The company closed in 1970.


See Also

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Sources of Information

  1. Mosquito by C. Martin Sharp and Michael J. F. Bowyer. Published by Crecy Books in 1995. ISBN 0-947554-41-6
  • Furniture Makers of High Wycombe [1]