Harris Lebus


Harris Lebus was a furniture manufacturer and wholesaler based in the East End of London in Tabernacle Street with a factory in Tottenham. The firm supplied stores such as Maple & Co., mainly producing bedroom and dining furniture.Following the Edwardian period the company became successful in the mass production of furniture affordable to a wider range of customers.

History

During the period of its finest output in the early 1900s, the style of furniture is closely associated with the Arts and Crafts Movement, identified by overhanging cornices, inset door panels and square to turned legs with pad feet in the manner of William Birch of High Wycombe. The off the peg hardware is unfussy and stylistically well designed. These pieces are highly sought after. Also at this time, small numbers of high quality mahogany, satinwood or walnut bedroom suites in the Sheraton style were made
As with many larger firms their designers are kept anonymous. This prolific manufacturer had more to do with bringing the Arts and Crafts style to the masses than any other.
The drawers of Harris Lebus furniture such as chests, wardrobes and roll-top desks made during this period,can be identified by the H.L.L on the face plates of the brass locks. More obviously, some desks had 'The Lebus Desk' stamped on the escutcheon plate of the roll-top lock. In addition, the firm took out a 1904 patent relating to the construction of drawer sides, to reduce warping and subsequent sticking.. This provides a further identification aid for Lebus furniture of the Edwardian period.
During the First World War the company supplied the government with a large volume of war supplies. These ranged from ammunition boxes to aircraft frames..
After the war the firm's manufacturing policy was changed. It was decided to increase mechanisation to enable the production of high volumes of well-constructed furniture affordable to a wider range of people..
This was hugely successful and Harris Lebus became a household name and the largest furniture manufacturer in the world.
During the Second World War the firm produced the Airspeed Horsa glider, the Mosquito multi role aircraft. The firm also undertook Top-secret operations, such as building replica Sherman tanks out of wood.
Following the war the firm became part of the government scheme to produce utility furniture bearing the CC41 mark and were central in providing cheaper manufacturing techniques to provide the country with lower cost furniture with which they could rebuild their homes, and in fact their design team invented and patented the technique of facing man-made boards with other woods.The Company also devised and perfected the means of assembling Furniture from preformed sections and completing the construction by curing resin glue lines, utilising 'Radio Frequency' electricity, or 'R.F.' There was no metal fixing required in the assembly at all. In addition, in the mid 1960s, the company patented an improved veneering procedure.
Harris Lebus ceased being a family partnership in 1947 when it was floated as a public company. Initially family members were on the main board with Sir Herman Lebus becoming Chairman and Managing Director; LS Lebus Assistant Managing Director and Anthony and Oliver Lebus members of the Board. Louis H Lebus and SH Lebus retired.. After financial difficulty, caused by a period of poor management which was not Family, the firm finally closed in 1969.