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A local photographer captured several images June 17 of the former Jamestown-Royal Upholstery Corp. on Crescent Street. Before a merger, the building opened in 1913 as Jamestown Upholstery Co. Photos by Jared Paxton
Photo by Eric Tichy
Friday’s fire on Crescent Street in Jamestown has been ruled arson following an investigation. Two teenage girls were seen on surveillance video entering and exiting the building. Photo by Dan Kohler


Friday’s fire on Crescent Street in Jamestown has been ruled arson following an investigation. Two teenage girls were seen on surveillance video entering and exiting the building. Photo by Dan Kohler
Two teenage girls, one 14 years old and the other 15, have been identified for their alleged involvement in Friday’s massive fire that destroyed the former Jamestown-Royal Upholstery Corp. building.
The Crescent Street blaze was officially ruled arson by Jamestown police Monday. The two juveniles were captured on surveillance video entering the four-story brick building prior to the fire starting and then exiting as it started to burn.
Firefighters were called around 6:45 p.m. and remained on scene for almost 27 hours. A bevy of mutual aid assisted in the city.
The juveniles, after the fire started, fled the area east on the railroad tracks and “past several surveillance cameras at area businesses.” After their identification, both were interviewed and released to a parent; arson charges via Chautauqua County Family Court are expected.
City firefighters are pictured on Crescent Street after fire broke out at a former furniture manufacturing plant Friday, P-J photo by Eric Tichy
It’s hard to tell if the building that had been home to Jamestown-Royal Upholstery Corp. — a 24,000-square-foot brick structure — stood out in its heyday in a city known for its furniture manufacturing.
Nestled along the narrow Crescent Street, the plant was among several in Jamestown that produced high-quality furnishings for the public, businesses, schools, and a variety of public and private organizations. But this company, dating back to 1913, may be best known today for creating chairs sold to some high-profile clientele — mostly notably the White House and U.S. Supreme Court.
The history of Jamestown-Royal is again being discussed after Friday’s fire. The company has been documented in The Post-Journal for decades and was noted by author Clarence Carlson in a book: “The Jamestown Furniture Industry: History in Wood, 1816-1920.”
The company was established in 1913 as Jamestown Upholstery Co. As Carlson wrote, its first officers included John Prather, president; Fred Nelson, vice president; and Louis Olmsted, secretary and treasurer.
Upon its opening, Jamestown Upholstery Co. employed about 25 workers, growing to about 40 by 1920, Carlson wrote. He also noted the following in his book: “During the First World War, the company manufactured fine leather cushions for U.S. Navy torpedo boat destroyers.”
Shortly before 1930, the company purchased Royal Upholstery, located nearby on Scott Street, with the name officially changing to Jamestown-Royal Upholstery Corp.
The company manufactured “fine living room upholstered furniture” that was sold by dealers throughout the country.
A June 1953 article in The Post-Journal detailed the production of a French Provincial style chair for Mamie Eisenhower, wife of President Dwight D. Eisenhower, to be kept at the White House. “The chair was selected from the firm’s line of chairs by the Republican Women’s Club of the city of Philadelphia and was presented to Mrs. Eisenhower by that organization two weeks ago,” the article stated.
Decades earlier, Jamestown-Royal was selected to build nine leather chairs for U.S. Supreme Court justices. The order was placed during the construction of the U.S. Supreme Court building, which opened in 1935.
The same June 1953 article mentions the moment: “Producing furniture for the nation’s capital is not a new experience for Jamestown-Royal. The corporation made nine leather-covered chairs occupied by members of the United States Supreme Court. The firm also manufactures the Dewey Chair, a replica of which was presented to Senator Mike Monroney of Oklahoma at the time of his appearance here for the annual meeting of the Chamber of Commerce in May.”
In its later years, the building was targeted by vandals, many of whom broke windows by throwing rocks from the nearby railroad tracks. Then-owner Peter Johnson expressed frustration in a January 1999 article, stating that 1,500 windows had been broken in 13 years. “I don’t want to come to work in a boarded-up building,” Johnson told The Post-Journal at the time.
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