Beat your foreign competition by becoming a member!
We help Made in America manufacturers beat their foreign competition
Google Page 1 Keywords Made in USA Content Calculator Join Us Why Join Categories Members
Join our organization and beat your foreign competition!

Beat Your Competition with MadeInTheUSA.Org






The following members sell Made in America Products in the Kitchen & Dining Category
eshop at Lamson and Goodnow's web store for Made in the USA products
One of the products Lamson and Goodnow sells is Made in the USA Cutting Boards. A more complete list of their products is provided by Made in America Secrets, to review their list click here.

For more information about Lamson and Goodnow and its American Made products see the following:


Lamson & Goodnow, maker of LamsonSharp? cutlery, is the oldest cutlery manufacturer in the United States. Lamson & Goodnow was established in Shelburne Falls, Massachusetts in 1837, and rapidly became the premier cutler in the United States. We manufacture both stamped and forged cutlery. As the American passion for home and hearth grew, so did Lamson & Goodnow.

In 1999, Lamson & Goodnow purchased TreeSpirit?, a company that handcrafts professional-quality hardwood cutting boards, bowls, kitchen utensils, and kitchen care products. HotSpot? silicone for the home was added to the Lamson & Goodnow family of brands in 2002. Unusual at the time, silicone is now regarded as a staple of the modern kitchen for its high heat resistance, superior flexibility, and nonstick properties.

In 2010, PaperStone? was added to provide an eco-friendly line of cutting boards and kitchen tools.

eshop at Little Miss Mason Jar's web store for Made in the USA products
One of the products Little Miss Mason Jar sells is Made in the USA Cookbooks. A more complete list of their products is provided by Made in America Secrets, to review their list click here.

For more information about Little Miss Mason Jar and its American Made products see the following:


I'm Randi, but you can call me LITTLE Miss Mason Jar! Little Miss Mason Jar is a wife, mother of two busy boys and a kindergarten teacher. In an effort to help ease the dinnertime drama that comes with working full time and wanting home-cooked meals, she started making mason jar meals to cut down on the kitchen chaos during the work week. Cooking for the week ahead and storing delicious dinners and lunches in the cute and convenient mason jars was the solution to making life less stressful and ensuring the family was fed. Once Little Miss Mason Jar got the hang of preparing main dishes meals in mason jars, her mason jar a madness took over and More has over 75 recipes and ideas for cooking with mason jars.

eshop at Lodge's web store for American Made products
One of the products Lodge sells is American Made Grill Pans. A more complete list of their products is provided by Made in America Secrets, to review their list click here.

For more information about Lodge and its Made in the USA products see the following:


100 Years and Still Cooking...

image discription
Nestled alongside the Cumberland Plateau of the Appalachian Mountains is the town of South Pittsburg, Tennessee (population 3,300). It was here that Joseph Lodge and his wife settled and, in 1896 opened his first foundry. Originally named The Blacklock Foundry after Joseph Lodge's friend and minister, the company gained success until May of 1910 when it burned down. Just three months later and a few blocks south, the company was reborn as Lodge Manufacturing Company.

Joseph Lodge created a legacy of quality that has thrived through two World Wars and the Great Depression and is still carried on by his family today. Both our CEO and President are Joseph Lodge's great-grandsons who continue to evolve our product line and improve manufacturing methods. While many worthy competitors have fallen by the wayside, Lodge's dedication to quality, technology, and employees have helped it not only survive but flourish.

image discription
Even during the hard times of the 1930s, the Lodge family found ways to keep employees above water. Novelty items such as cast iron garden gnomes and animals were produced and sold to keep the furnaces burning and the paychecks issued.

As the economy bounced back, Lodge responded to growing demand, and in 1950 converted its foundry from a hand-pour operation to an automated molding process in order to keep up with demand. This led to safer and more efficient manufacturing that at the time was very rare.

Continuing a dedication to technology and conservation, Lodge once again updated its foundry in 1992. The replacement of coal-fired cupola furnaces with an electro-magnetic induction melting system earned a Tennessee Governor's Award for Excellence in Hazardous Waste Reduction.

image discription
Well into our second century in business, Lodge continued to innovate. In 2002, the legendary Lodge Logic line of pre-seasoned cookware was introduced, eliminating the hassle of its unseasoned counterparts. It was an industry first that has since become an industry standard.

With the proliferation of television cooking shows and a rise in consumer demand, Lodge broadened its variety of cookware by importing vibrant Porcelain Enameled Cast Iron from China. After several years of searching for the right partner foundry, Lodge introduced the elegant L-Series in 2005, and has since expanded its assortment, earning positive reviews from Good Housekeeping and Fine Cooking magazines, test kitchens, and our valued customers.

A labor of love, the Lodge Signature Series was born in 2007, combining graceful stainless steel handles with sleek cast iron vessels. This was another industry first that gained Lodge two design awards from the International Housewares Association including Best in Show among all thirteen categories.

2011 was a big year at Lodge, with the launch of two new cookware lines. Inviting a whole new audience to fall in love with Cast Iron, Lodge Elements combines premium Stainless Steel cookware with our traditional Cast Iron Skillet in one set. The Lodge Seasoned Steel line features Carbon Steel skillets that are American-made and seasoned at the Lodge foundry. We hope to advance the culinary lives of chefs and campers alike with these brutally tough pans.

With consumer demand now exceeding foundry capacity, Lodge has unveiled plans for a considerable expansion of their South Pittsburg plant. These will include new melting systems, sand systems, an additional molding line, and expanded seasoning lines. We are excited to be able to grow to new heights with our feet still firmly planted at home.

eshop at Longaberger's web store for American Made products
One of the products Longaberger sells is American Made Rolling Pins. A more complete list of their products is provided by Made in America Secrets, to review their list click here.

For more information about Longaberger and its Made in the USA products see the following:


In 1896, when the Longaberger family moved to Dresden, Ohio, the tiny village was a rural transportation and industrial hub in the rolling foothills of the Appalachian Mountains. There was a hotel on Main Street, three railroad stations, a woolen mill and a paper mill. 4A small canal connected the community with the historic Ohio Canal, transforming the village into a bustling town.

In the early 1900s, baskets were as commonplace as paper bags and plastic containers are now. Ware baskets, made at the Dresden Basket Factory, were used to carry pottery ware for the region's booming pottery industry.

In 1919, a young man named J.W. Longaberger took a job with the Dresden Basket Factory. As a full-time apprentice, he meticulously learned the basket making art by first crafting basket bottoms. Later, he mastered the precise, tight weaving style that would become his trademark. J.W. grew to love the art of basket making.

In 1934, a fifth child was born to J.W. and his wife Bonnie ? Dave Longaberger. Early in life, Dave had three strikes against him. His family was economically disadvantaged, he stuttered so badly people had difficulty understanding him, and he had epilepsy in a time when the condition was not widely understood.

Dave's liabilities did not stand in the way of his ambition, however. As a youngster he worked in a grocery store, shoveled snow, delivered newspapers, mowed grass and hauled trash. He ran the projectors at the local movie house too. Because Dave was always making money from one job or another, his family called him the 25-cent millionaire.

At age 21, Dave finally graduated from high school. He began his career by driving a bread truck for several years for two different bakeries. From 1961-1962, Dave served in the U.S. Army.

2In the early 1960s, his first daughter, Tami, was born. Dave was eager to take the many lessons he had learned over the years and put them to work to create his own business to support his family. In 1963, when Harry's Dairy Bar in Dresden came up for sale, Dave and his wife bought it. The restaurant had two booths, two tables and eight stools.

Later, Dave bought the defunct A&P grocery store in town. He remodeled and expanded the building, and opened the Dresden IGA Foodliner. As always, Dave worked very hard during those years. Between both businesses, he earned a solid living for his family.

In the early 1970s, Dave noticed that baskets were becoming very popular. He also noticed that many department stores were beginning to sell imported baskets. Dave wondered if people would appreciate locally-made baskets like the fine handcrafted ones his father used to make. So, he asked his father to make a dozen market baskets, and then took them to a nearby town. They sold immediately and the shop requested more!

J.W. made several dozen more baskets. Sadly, however, J.W. died at the age of 71, just as the family trade was ramping up.

Dave opened J.W.'s Handwoven Baskets in 1976 in Dresden. Interest in these beautiful handmade baskets continued to grow. Eventually, Dave had to find a place to expand his small basket factory. He found a very unlikely building: the old woolen mill where his mother had worked, built in the 1890s. It had been vacant since 1955, and had broken windows, uneven floors and a sagging roof. But the brick walls were solid and strong.3

In this humble building, Dave envisioned a basket factory with hundreds of craftsmen and craftswomen weaving, tacking, talking and laughing. He knew from his previous business ventures that he had a knack for envisioning the unlikely. So he attacked his new venture with enthusiasm.

Dave became increasingly convinced that American consumers wanted the handmade craftsmanship and quality of Longaberger baskets. He tried different ways to sell baskets at malls, department stores and other retail outlets, with varying degrees of success. In 1978, Dave discovered that the most effective way to sell the company's baskets was not through retail outlets but through home shows, where an educated home consultant could show Longaberger baskets, share the history and explain the craftsmanship that each basket holds.

With that discovery, the Longaberger Company's direct sales organization was born.

5In 1984, Tami Longaberger joined the company full-time after her graduation from The Ohio State University. Tami worked in virtually every area of the company and, in 1994 Dave appointed her president. Working side by side with Dave until his death in 1999, Tami learned her father's management principles firsthand. Clearly cut from the same visionary cloth as her father, she diversified the company into other home lifestyle areas, which now account for nearly half of the company's revenues.

Over the years, customers have developed an amazing passion for Longaberger baskets. The family's tradition of philanthropy is continued each year through The Longaberger Foundation, which has donated millions of dollars to local charities and educational institutions since its inception in 1998. The company's Horizon of Hope initiative has raised more than $18 million over the past 15 years for breast cancer research.

Today, The Longaberger Company remains America's premier maker of handcrafted baskets and offers other home and lifestyle products, including pottery, wrought iron and fabric accessories. The company is based in Newark, Ohio, and there are thousands of independent Home Consultants located in all U.S. states who sell Longaberger products directly to customers.

eshop at Luxe Liberty's web store for Made in the USA products
One of the products Luxe Liberty sells is Made in the USA Bakeware . A more complete list of their products is provided by Made in America Secrets, to review their list click here.

For more information about Luxe Liberty and its Made in America products see the following:


Luxe and Liberty strives to be the first resort for American-made home furnishings by offering the most compelling combination of value, selection, service and convenience.

Value & Selection

Every item offered at Luxe and Liberty is beautifully designed, produced with premium-quality materials, and proudly made in America. We select only superior products, representing our customer's discerning taste, which are intended for a lifetime of use.

Customer Service

Our dedication to our customers is reflected in our unparalleled customer service and by providing the best possible shopping experience. We strive to exceed your expectations whenever possible, and are happy to assist you in any way we can.

Convenience

We believe that time is the ultimate luxury. By compiling an extensive collection of fine American-made home furnishings, we can offer you a luxurious, convenient shopping source.

At Luxe and Liberty, you can expect nothing but the best in quality and service. Thank you for shopping with us and for helping to bring American Quality home!

Previous   1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12  13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   Next