Skip to main content
You're logged in with MyAlex  |  Logout

City of Alexandria, VA

Search results cleared

Include archived pages
Most of the content here is written in English. Translate your search to find more content? Translating "" to English... Searching for English phrase ""
  • Live
  • Play
  • Services
  • Business
  • Government
  • Projects & Plans
  • Calendar
  • I want to…

Wayfinding: Alexandria Furniture District

Between 1820 and 1860, Alexandria had a thriving cabinet and furniture-making industry, primarily along King Street, between Royal and Alfred streets
Page updated on December 29, 2021 at 1:15 PM

Historic Sites

  • Historic Alexandria (Home)
  • About Historic Alexandria
  • City Museums
    • Alexandria Archaeology Museum
    • Alexandria Black History Museum
    • Alexandria History Museum at The Lyceum
    • Fort Ward Museum & Historic Site
    • Freedom House Museum
    • Friendship Firehouse Museum
    • Gadsby's Tavern Museum
    • Stabler-Leadbeater Apothecary Museum
  • City Historic Sites
    • Alexandria African American Heritage Park
    • Alexandria Union Station
    • Contrabands and Freedmen Cemetery Memorial
    • Lloyd House
    • Murray-Dick-Fawcett House
    • The Fort: A Post-Civil War African American Community
  • African American History Division
  • Alexandria Oral History Center
  • Archives and Records Center
  • Commissions Supporting Historic Alexandria
  • More Historic Sites
    • African American Heritage Trail
    • Del Ray and the Town of Potomac
    • Historic Cemeteries
    • Union Hospitals during the Civil War
    • Wayfinding: Historic Signs
  • News Releases
  • Stay Connected
  • Support Historic Alexandria
    • Make a Gift
    • Become a Member
    • Join a Commission
    • Volunteer

Share

Bluesky Share on Facebook Share on X Share via Email
Translate icon
Translate icon
XWARNING: You have chosen to translate this page using an automated translation system. This translation has not been reviewed by the City of Alexandria and may contain errors.

Alexandria Furniture District

Wayfinding sign, Alexandria Furniture District

King and Columbus streets

Between 1820 and 1860, Alexandria had a thriving cabinet and furniture-making industry, primarily along King Street, between Royal and Alfred streets. Among the city's best-known furniture makers-and business rivals-were Charles Koones and James Green. Green's first shop was on King Street between Pitt and Royal streets, while Koones' was located at the corner of King and Alfred streets, later moving here to King and Columbus. Their furniture reflected the change in customer taste from the elegant, straight lines of the Federal style to the ornate and curved details of Classical Revival. A prime example of this more ornate design is the pictured Koones sideboard with its carved legs and curved doors. Perhaps what best contrasts Green and Koones as furniture makers and businessmen was their approach to labor. Green hired itinerant workers and invested early in mass production techniques, while Koones employed masters, journeymen, apprentices, pieceworkers, and skilled specialists in a more traditional craftsman model. Other furniture makers operating in the Alexandria furniture district were Harrison and C.C. Bradley, William H. Muir, and Robert Abercrombie; these shops shared Koones' approach to hand-crafted, fine furniture using traditional methods.

Read the Sign

Koones Corner

Koones moved his shop from its original location on King and Alfred streets to the northwest corner of King and Columbus streets in 1844. With the purchase of two more properties, Koones Corner, as it came to be known, included a large residence, a furniture showroom and storage, shop space for manufacturing, and outbuildings, including a long shed for horses and vehicles. The growth of rail lines in Alexandria allowed furniture makers in the city to market and deliver their products to an ever-wider audience. In 1855, a fire devastated the Koones compound,
burning the manufacturing shop, a stable, a lumber shed, and the mill house. Then, the economic impacts of the Panic of 1857 spelled the end for Koones' business; he died shortly thereafter. But, the Alexandria furniture district survived and continued into the Civil War period.

Where to find this sign

In Old Town, mini kiosks are located at designated intersections along King Street, Cameron Street, and the Waterfront to provide an orientation for pedestrians. 

This wayfinding sign is located on the south side of King at Columbus Street. (For those taking the King Street Trolley, please check the schedule as times may have changed.)

See all the wayfinding signs on and around King Street.

 

  • Historic Alexandria
  • Historic Sites
Contact Us
Alex311 | 703.746.4311
Follow Us
  • BlueSky
  • Facebook
  • X
  • YouTube
Visitor Information

VisitAlexandriaVA.com

  • Jobs
  • Payments
  • Departments
  • Newsroom
  • Social Media
  • Emergency Hotlines
  • Accessibility
  • FOIA Requests
  • Privacy & Legal

Alexandria City Hall
301 King Street
Alexandria, VA 22314

City of Alexandria Seal
© 1995–2023 City of Alexandria, VA and others.
Hold on, redirecting...