
HH Global agreed to sell its luxury brands division, including Hickory Chair, Maitland-Smith, La Barge and Pearson, to RHF Investments Inc., owner of Century, Hancock & Moore and Highland House. Heritage said it was planning to sell its Thomasville & Co. HH Global said RHF Investments Inc., owner of Century, Hancock & Moore and Highland House, would buy its luxury brands division. On JHH Global II BV, which operated Heritage, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Henry Bowman would lead the luxury brands division, with Hickory Chair, Pearson, Maitland-Smith and Lane Venture. Thomasville & Co., with Regan Iglesia as president, would include Thomasville, Drexel and Henredon. Harvey Dondale would be president of Broyhill, a position he held from 2005 to 2007. Heritage announced the formation of the three business units. Heritage sold Lane Ventures to Bassett Furniture Industries for $15.1 million in December 2017. signed an agreement to buy Lane Company by the end of 2017. and Speedline Technologies Inc., also KPS companies. On September 8, Heritage Home Group appointed Pierre de Villemejane as President and Chief Executive Officer after he served as CEO of WWRD Holdings Ltd. Heritage headquarters was temporarily located in Thomasville until work was completed on the former showrooms. In May, Richard Lozyniak became interim CEO after Glazer left the company. When finished, the headquarters was to be 100,000 square feet. In April 2015, the company began $2.7 million in improvements on a 70,000-square-foot showroom built in the 1990s for Drexel-Heritage, and later used by Henredon, Maitland-Smith and La Barge, on Eastchester Drive in High Point. Ī bankruptcy filing on Decemshowed United Furniture Industries won the bidding for the 475,000-square-foot Lane Furniture plant in Tupelo. The company was started by the Huffman and Mull families, but in recent years, decisions to move manufacturing to other countries hurt the Morganton area. In June 2014 it was reported that the last Drexel Heritage plant, on Hogan Street in Morganton, North Carolina, was closing July 31, with 87 people losing their jobs. The company also said the Ballwin, Missouri office would close by the end of 2014. The most likely location for the new headquarters was High Point, North Carolina. Late in April 2014, Heritage announced it would close its Clayton headquarters June 25. In March 2014 Heritage said the Pearson Company plant in High Point, started by the Pearson family in 1942, was closing by August, affecting 86 employees. A Saltillo, Mississippi plant making Lane Furniture would close at the same time, meaning 480 jobs lost, though other plants in the Tupelo, Mississippi area would remain open, despite earlier plans to close all the plants. On January 21, 2014, Heritage announced the closing of Thomasville Furniture's operations in Thomasville, North Carolina, as of March 21, with 84 jobs cut. Ira Glazer became Heritage president and CEO. Also announced at that time was the resignation of Furniture Brands chairman and CEO Ralph Scozzafava. KPS announced the name Heritage Home Group LLC for the new owner of "substantially all of the assets" of Furniture Brands on November 25. On November 4, Samson Holding Ltd., the largest stockholder, announced its intention to bid but that bid never took place, and on November 22, a judge approved the KPS bid. On October 2, a judge approved a $280 million stalking horse offer by KPS Capital Partners. The company planned to sell all businesses other than Lane Furniture to a group managed by Oaktree Capital Management LP. On September 9, 2013, Furniture Brands International filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. It owned the brands Broyhill, Lane, Thomasville, and Drexel Heritage. Heritage Home Group LLC, formed to purchase most assets of the defunct Furniture Brands International, was a High Point, North Carolina-based home furnishings company.
