Lenox (company)

By 2020, it was the last significant manufacturer of bone china in the United States, until the COVID-19 pandemic forced the closure of the company's only remaining American factory.

Lenox pieces were the only American porcelain chosen for display in 1928 by the National Museum of Ceramics in Sèvres, France.

[3] Brown-Forman acquired Dansk International Designs and its Gorham Manufacturing Company division in 1991, which were incorporated into Lenox.

Its manufacturing capabilities included enamel dot, etch, color, and microwave metals, and eventually became Lenox's only American factory until its closure in 2020.

[7] In a bankruptcy auction conducted in April 2015, the operating assets of Reed & Barton, a competing maker of flatware, were acquired by Lenox.

Lenox "Ming" fired in 1929 (discontinued)
Lenox blank band bone china with floral inlay cir. 1932
The Wilson service, introduced in 1918, was the first American-made presidential bone china service.
The Reagan service, introduced in 1982, was modeled on Woodrow Wilson's and selected by Nancy Reagan .