Curtis Mathes Corporation
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Industry | Electronics |
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Founded | 1957 - Relaunched in 2013 |
Founder | George Curtis Mathes |
Headquarters | 6201 Technology Drive, Frisco, TX 75033 |
Key people | Eric Hill, Paul Williams, Michael Chester, Joseph Kupke |
Products | LED Lighting |
Parent | Connor and Mathes (est 1919) |
Website | CurtisMathes.com |
Curtis Mathes, Inc is a North American electronics retailer initially based in Garland, Texas, and specializing in the sale of private label brand electronics and repair services. It manufactured its own brand of televisions in Athens, Texas until July 31, 1982; ten years later, it filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy and reorganization which allowed it to stay in business and use future earnings to pay off creditors. The company is now based in Frisco, Texas.
Known for its commercials touting its televisions as the "most expensive television set in America, and darn well worth it", the company was credited with introducing longer warranties to electronics retailing.[1][failed verification]
History
Early products
The Curtis Mathes Corporation started in 1919 as Connor and Mathes, a manufacturer and retailer of automobile and tractor parts. By the late 1920s, the company moved into the air conditioning industry. It also manufactured wooden cabinets and eventually furniture, acquiring Hub Furniture in 1942. The leading product through the 1930s and '40s were electrical fans, many styles built into custom cabinets and permanent-type window fans. In the early '50s the company added a "central" or "attic fan" to its inventory. It pulled air from all open windows into the attic where it also ventilated the attic making the house much cooler.
As compressors were commercially introduced in the late '40s, Curtis Mathes' Fort Worth factory began making a wide variety of compressors that could be used in cars or buildings. Leonard L. Northrup, Jr., became one of the leading distributors of Curtis Mathes Products including developing and selling an add-on air conditioning unit first used in Cadillacs.
By the late 1940s, the Curtis Mathes Company had diversified into radios, having developed the large centerpiece radio for the living room to an artform. It was therefore logical that this approach would work in televisions as well.
Televisions
The Curtis Mathes Corporation was founded in 1957 and shortly thereafter entered the television industry, founding plants in Tarrant and Dallas Counties and in Athens, Texas, eventually moving most of its manufacturing to a huge Athens facility. From 1968 to 1988 it was the only fully American-owned electronics firm and the only American television manufacturer.
In the late 1960s, Leonard L. Northrup, Jr., bought a controlling interest in Donmark Corporation, a manufacturer of residential air conditioning and heating equipment from his lifelong friend Curtis Mathes, Sr., as Curtis Mathes moved toward electronics.
During the next few years Curtis Mathes worked to design a modular TV and modular TV parts and chassis, so that warranty service would involve quickly switching a part, tube, tuner or picture tube. These all had snap-in connectors and were held in place by brackets instead of solder or screws. He envisioned a TV that would never require costly repairs, and early on started offering a 4-year warranty on picture tube, parts and labor.
By the mid-1970s and the advent of solid-state electronics, Mathes had achieved results. The TV consisted of 11 parts: 7 circuit boards, a tuner, a picture tube and a transformer, plus the cabinet. A repairman carried all ten electronic parts in his truck and a repair call seldom lasted more than 20 minutes. In home the fee was $20, and free in the shop.
Curtis Mathes TVs that were used for rentals (such as ColorTyme) were sometimes rebranded "Rutherford".
The company began to decline, going from a peak of 5000 employees and seven manufacturing facilities to about 50 employees in 1988 when it was sold to Enhanced Electronics. At the time of this sale, it was the last remaining fully U.S.-owned electronics company.
For a time, the company sold equipment sourced from Matsushita, Pioneer, Thomson, Samsung, Daewoo, Toshiba, and other manufacturers.
2000s
In the late 1990s to early 2000s, the Curtis Mathes brand became an in-house brand for the Kmart discount chain. As of late 2007, Curtis Mathes had re-emerged with products marketed at several discount retailers such as Wal-Mart, Sam's Club, Meijer and Target. Beginning in 2013, Curtis Mathes expanded its portfolio into LED lighting.
In popular culture
The TV sets were used for the monitors in the 1990 science fiction film Total Recall.
The TV set was used in a late scene in the 1985 movie To Live and Die in L.A..
In the ending scene of the 1985 movie Real Genius, a large box can be seen with the name "Curtis Mathes" in the trailer being towed by the RV.
In the film "At Close Range" 1986 at the forty three minute mark Curtis Mathes boxes can be seen, being part of the stolen goods cache.
References
- ^ "Curtis Mathes". Retrieved 5/9/2013.
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External links
- 1919 establishments in Texas
- 1988 mergers and acquisitions
- Companies based in Garland, Texas
- Companies that filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 1992
- Consumer electronics brands
- Consumer electronics retailers in the United States
- Electronics companies established in 1919
- Electronics companies of the United States
- Defunct manufacturing companies based in Texas