WestPoint Home

WestPoint Home, Inc., is a supplier of fashion and core home textile products. WestPoint Home is headquartered in New York City with manufacturing and distribution facilities in the United States and overseas.[1][2][3] Their products include a diverse range of home fashion textile products including: towels, fashion bedding, sheets, comforters, blankets, mattress pads, pillows and more. Some brands that they offer include: Martex, Izod, Ralph Lauren, Hanes, Stay Bright, Vellux, Patrician, Lady Pepperell, and Utica Cotton Mills. Products from Westpoint Home are found in retail stores throughout the United States.

WestPoint Home
Formerly
WestPoint Manufacturing Company
Private
Industrybedding, bath
Founded1880
HeadquartersNew York, NY
Productsbed sheets, blankets, pillows, organic cotton, bath towels, beach towels, egyptian cotton, comforters, mattress pads
ParentIcahn Enterprises
Websitehttps://www.westpointhome.com

WestPoint Home's goal of being the "preferred supplier of fashion and core home textile products"[4] is backed by almost 200 years of textile history. WestPoint Home, Inc. as it is known today is the result of the mergers of three of the oldest companies in the textile industry: J.P. Stevens & Co., Inc. (est. 1813 in Massachusetts), Pepperell Manufacturing Company (est. 1851 in Maine), and West Point Manufacturing Company (est. 1880 in Georgia).[5]

The company was led by the Lanier family through the late 1980s. The Laniers originally incorporated the Westpoint Manufacturing Company in 1880.[5] WestPoint Home, Inc. is now owned by Icahn Enterprises, L.P.[3]

Brands

[6]

History

WestPoint Home is a conglomerate of three textile giants. WestPoint Manufacturing Company was formed in the south shortly after the end of the Civil War. J.P. Stevens & Co.[7] and the Pepperell Manufacturing Co were two individual companies that were founded some years earlier in New England. WestPoint Home currently serves as a manufacturer of home fashion textiles.[8]

The Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union was a textile labor union that was founded in 1914. J.P. Stevens & Co had a famous run in with the union, which was documented in the film Norma Rae. The Academy Award-winning movie Norma Rae was based on the real-life story of Crystal Lee Sutton. Sutton, who was a mill worker in a J.P. Stevens mill in Roanoke Rapids, NC, was fired after trying to unionize employees. Shortly after Sutton's famous "stand", The Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union (ACTWU) began to represent workers at the plant on August 28, 1974.[9]

References

  1. "WestPoint Home to Shutter Greenville, Ala., Facility, Textile World, February 8, 2011, 11/17/11
  2. "WestPoint Stevens to Open Shanghai Office, Receives Filing Extension", Textile World, June 2004, 11/17/11
  3. Brent Felgner"Why Icahn Needs Westpoint", Home Textiles Today, March 6, 2008, 11/17/11
  4. Home Textiles Staff, "WestPoint Names Savaria New CEO", Home Textiles Today, June 8, 2011, 11/17/11
  5. WestPoint Stevens, Inc. - Company Profile, Funding Universe, 11/17/11
  6. "Brands - Shop". www.westpointhome.com. Retrieved 2017-11-13.
  7. Minchin, Timothy J. (2006). "The Milledgeville Spy Case and the Struggle to Organize J. P. Stevens". Georgia Historical Quarterly. 90 (1): 96–122. Retrieved 15 February 2018.
  8. "WL Ross-Led Group Seeks to Acquire WestPoint Stevens", Textile World, April 2005, 11/20/11
  9. Fink, Joey (July 15, 2014). "In Good Faith: Working-Class Women, Feminism, and Religious Support in the Struggle to Organize J. P. Stevens Textile Workers in the Southern Piedmont, 1974–1980". Southern Spaces. doi:10.18737/M7J60K. Retrieved 26 August 2014.
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