Ten pads of white felt
April 1. William J. Tingue, William E. Brown, and Ammiel F. Decker form a partnership in NYC. First order on record: ten pads of white felt, shipped to Wallach Laundry, Manhattan.
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Tingue is a family-owned company that has been finishing what it starts since April 1, 1902. This is the short version of how that happened — and where it’s going next.

April 1, 1902. New York City. A partnership is formed at 99 Chambers Street between three men: a 24-year-old fresh out of Brown University named William J. Tingue, alongside William E. Brown and Ammiel F. Decker.
Their job was to sell what the Tingue Manufacturing Co. of Seymour, Connecticut made: wool felt, printers’ blankets, tapes, litho flannels, molleton and moleskin. The Tingue family had already been a major factor in American textiles for thirty years before young William opened the door to that first office.
The first order on record? Ten pads of white felt, shipped to Wallach Laundry in NYC. Family legend says William’s wife Lilian had come home from the laundry with her clothes badly pressed.
Ten pads of felt. One laundry in Manhattan. That’s where this whole thing began.
Three of the first four were named William, which has tripped up every reporter who’s ever tried to tell this story. Click through the roster — all the way down to the fifth Tingue, who’s on the floor right now.
Started the company at twenty-four, fresh out of Brown University. The first order — ten pads of felt to a Manhattan laundry. Forty-six years later, he was still its chairman.
We have one job, and we have had it for 124 years: be the company commercial laundries can count on — every shift, every season, every generation. This is how we keep that promise.
Five generations on the laundry floor. Our reps, our products, our processes — second nature to the operators who count on them. Familiarity shortens downtime and keeps work moving.
Real people answer the phone. Real reps show up on site. Every account is a partnership, not a transaction — which is why most of ours span decades, and a fair number span generations.
Trusted by the largest commercial laundries in North America and beyond — every shift, every season — for the parts, service, and equipment that keep the floor running.
Drag the rail, tap a year, or use the arrows.
April 1. William J. Tingue, William E. Brown, and Ammiel F. Decker form a partnership in NYC. First order on record: ten pads of white felt, shipped to Wallach Laundry, Manhattan.
The decision that defined the company. Decker writes 1,252 family laundries and 300 hotel laundries personally. “Direct-to-laundry” has been the model ever since.
Founder W.J. Tingue becomes Chairman after 27 years as President. The company adopts its first formal logo: “Quality Fabrics — Thread of Gold.”
November. Rotomolded plastic carts and baskets debut and become Tingue's most famous product line. (Manufacturing of the carts moves to MODRoto in 2020; Tingue continues to be the distributor that put the product on every laundry floor in North America.)
Tingue acquires Talley Machinery Corp. of Greensboro NC — the other 1902-founded laundry company. Two ninety-year-old houses, finally under one roof.
Centennial. Three hundred employees across three divisions in the U.S., Canada, and beyond — still family-owned, still finishing what it started.
Brand consolidation completes. Tingue, Brown & Co. and Talley Machinery become a single unified company — just Tingue — headquartered in Peachtree City, Georgia.
MODRoto, the rotomolding manufacturer descended from Meese Orbitron Dunne, is divested. Tingue continues to be the exclusive distributor of Poly-trux® — focused on what it has always done best: putting parts, service, and equipment on the laundry floor.
Sligo, Ireland office opens. The first European footprint for a company that has been selling on three continents for most of its history.
John Tingue joins the family business. The line that started with a 24-year-old in 1902 has not broken.
The brand goes modern. New website, new resources platform, new podcast — the same company you call when the laundry floor needs something today.
Anniversary year. The book is being written.
“Knowhow in Action” isn’t a tagline somebody printed on a poster. It’s the reason Tingue reps don’t just spec ironer pads, felts, roll covers and belting — they install them, on your floor, on your machine.




For most of its history this company was actually two: Tingue, Brown & Co. and Talley Machinery — both founded in 1902, both with a hand on the wheel of the commercial laundry industry. Around 2018, after twenty-seven years under the same ownership, the family quietly folded them into a single name.
Today, Tingue is a global organization built around the distribution, installation, and service of hundreds of products for commercial laundries and a long list of related industries. Metal fabrication and machining. Textile converting. Product design and development. The reps still install what they spec.
Led by David Tingue, fourth-generation CEO, alongside President Ty Acton. Recently recognized by TRSA, the industry’s trade association, with the Responsible Supplier Assurance Program designation. With John Tingue, the fifth generation, taking the stage at industry conferences about where AI and automation take a 124-year-old company next.
Peachtree City GA · Greensboro NC · Toronto, Canada · Sligo, Ireland.

Tingue has earned the TRSA Responsible Supplier Assurance Program (RSAP) designation — a trusted industry standard that recognizes our commitment to ethical business practices, supply chain integrity, and sustainability in the textile services industry.
Learn about the RSAP standard
“In these days when the very civilization of the world seems broken asunder, is there not some spark deep in our hearts that gives us comfort in the realization that we have tried our best?”