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  • Michael Thonet (1796 - 1871)
    Reference: Geneanet Genealogy - SmartCopy : Feb 13 2022, 14:17:16 UTC
  • John B. Waldron (1856 - 1886)
    Obituary From: Semi-Weekly Telephone Bloomington, Monroe County, Indiana Tuesday, 11 May 1886Death of John B. WaldronJohn B. Waldron died Monday morning at two o'clock, after a most painful sickness of...
  • William Mckee (aft.1740 - 1813)
    William McKee, who was descended from Scotch-Irish parents, and served both in the War of the Revolution and in that of 1812. He emigrated from Cumberland County, PA, to Nittany Valley, Centre County, ...
  • Seth Kinman (1815 - 1888)
    Born September 29, 1815, Union County, Pennsylvania* Died February 24, 1888 (aged 72) Table Bluff, California* Resting place Table Bluff Cemetery, Loleta, California 40.6495°N 124.2093°W* Occupation hu...
  • Pvt. Nathan Wood, (USA) (1822 - 1889)
    Nathan served in Company A 211th Pennsylvania Infantry during the Civil WarJune 16th, 1889, Mr. Nathan Wood, of this city, in his sixty-seventh year, of quick consumption. Mr. Wood was born in Winchend...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chair-maker

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Since the mid-17th century a chair-maker, or chairbler, is a craftsman in the furniture trades specializing in chairs. Before that time seats were made by joiners, turners, and coffermakers, and woven seats were made by basketmakers. In 18th-century London, chair-makers might work on their own account, or within the workshop of upholders, as members of the upholstery trade were called.

In 1803 Thomas Sheraton observed a division of labour that was of long standing in London and county towns:

"Chair-making is a branch generally confined to itself, as those who professedly work at it, seldom engage to make cabinet furniture. In the country manufactories it is otherwise; yet even these pay some regard to keeping their workmen constantly at the chair, or to cabinet work. The two branches seem evidently to require different talents in workmen, in order to become proficients."

In Paris, a chair-maker was a menuisier, or joiner: guild regulations forbade menuisiers to engage in cabinet making. Some menuisiers produced the planed and carved wood paneling for rooms (boiseries), while others, menuisiers en sièges, produced the frames for seat furniture, which would be upholstered by other craftsmen, such as huissiers.