»memos Serta Restokraft celebrates three generations of mattress making. Allan Nahajewski Contributing Writer M attresses have come a long way in 100 years. Larry Kraft, 64, third-gener- ation president and CEO of the Romulus- based Serta Restokraft Mattress Company, tells how his grandfather Harry made them a century ago. "The original mattresses were burlap sacks stuffed with corn husks:' he says. "They would put something over the surface of the corn husks so you wouldn't have lumps. My grandfather would crawl inside, smooth it out and crawl out. Then they would sew it across:' Many of today's mattresses use gel-infused memory foam — quite a difference from the $1.90 mattresses of yesteryear. This is the centennial for the family busi- ness that Harry Kraft began in Detroit at age 17. He came to America alone from Lithuania through Ellis Island. He worked briefly for Henry Ford but could not slow his working pace down to assembly line speed, so he was fired. He then bought a used industrial sewing machine and, with two partners, started making mattresses in a woodshed. Fifteen million mattresses later, the company is still going strong. Fifty years ago, Harry presented then- Michigan Gov. George Romney a mattress to commemorate the company's 50th year. Plans for the company's centennial celebra- tion are still in the works. The company has a lot to celebrate. Larry says a few smart business moves kept the company successful even during the recent rough years in the state's economy — the launch of a private-label mattress, the cre- ation of the iComfort line of gel-infused mattresses and a commitment to investing in national advertising. Serta Restokraft is a licensee of Serta, which became the nation's leading mattress maker in 2011. Larry Kraft is on Serta's board of directors. If you're buying a Serta mattress in Michigan, there's a 98 percent 26 February 14 • 2013 chance it was made in the Serta Restokraft factory in Romulus. The Kraft family has been active in the Jewish community. Larry is on the board of directors of the Holocaust Memorial Center in Farmington Hills. A lobby in the build- ing is named after his parents, who pro- vided seed money for the center. The Krafts worship at Temple Beth El in Bloomfield Township and Temple Shir Shalom in West Bloomfield. Worker loyalty is a key part of the 100- year Serta Restrokraft story. Larry was just 18 during the 1967 riots, but he has a strong, lasting memory of a drive with his father down to the mattress factory in Detroit. "It was in the Warren-Grand River area, across the street from a fire training station, which was a depot for the National Guard. As we were getting out of the car, I could see that the employees had already driven down and had stationed themselves on top of the building with guns. They weren't going to let anyone torch the factory. I know there were several people killed just outside our building, and I was quite astonished by the affection and love for my grandfather and my father and our business that they would jeopardize their lives just to protect the building:' Larry says his grandfather set the tone for the company's relationship with the workers. "He was a very strong man," Larry recalls. "He would make a point of going down into the factory when the rail car came and would help unload it. He would take these big hooks and grab the cotton bales, some of them close to 600 pounds. The employees developed a tremendous amount of respect for him. There wasn't this distant feeling between employer and employee. And that's how I've tried to run my business:' Larry's introduction to the family business came early. "When I was very young, my father would take me down to the factory on a Saturday and let me run loose. That's how the employ- ees really got to know me. As I got older, during the summers, I worked in the factory at various positions, making mattresses, packing mattresses. I didn't know it at the time, but it was the way for my grandfather and father to see what it was like for the employees to work with me, so I wouldn't be seen as the guy with the silver spoon." Larry graduated from Dondero High School in Royal Oak, then the Ohio State University. "After I graduated, my father wanted me to work elsewhere first:' says Larry. He went to work six months at the Serta operation in Landover, Md. He came back to Detroit in 1972 and began working in the company's sofa division, which has since been dis- continued. He later served as the mattress plant manager, a sales representative and did almost every job in the company before being named president and CEO in 2002. The company outgrew its Detroit location and moved to Romulus in 2000. "We tried to stay in Detroit, but there really wasn't any interest at the time in keeping us:' he recalls. Describing the move, he calls it beshert — or "meant to be:' He began a search for a location that would be convenient for employees. The search took him to Romulus, where the street names caught his eye. He checked out a site on Kraft Boulevard and noticed a nearby street named Hannan, the name of his father's brother who had helped develop the business. "When I drove around with the mayor of Romulus, we came across this parcel of land:' he recalls. "The street name is Jay Kay Drive. My wife's first name is Jackie. I thought this must be the right place:' After the move, all but one employee stayed on. Today, the 120 employees at the 148,000-square-foot facility produce about 230,000 mattresses a year. Larry and his wife, Jackie, have two grown daughters, a son-in-law, a grandson and another on the way. Will the business stay in the family? "We're working on that:' he says. "I happen to absolutely love coming into work:' he says. "I've got the greatest bunch of friends here. It's a real pleasure:' ❑ Dickinson Wright PLLC is pleased to announce the election of Jill S. Ingber to Member in the firm's Troy Ingber office. She focuses her practice on the areas of commercial and business liti- gation, business torts, real estate litigation, trademark and copy- right infringement litigation, and creditor's rights. She is involved in JARC and the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit. She received her B.A. from the University of Michigan and her J.D. from Wayne State University Law School. Barry Goodman of Farmington Hills and Gerald Acker of Huntington Woods, found- ers and senior Goodman partners of the Southfield, Mich.-based personal injury firm Goodman Acker P.C., have both once again been named Acker Michigan Super Lawyers in the 2013 rank- ing by the publication of the same name. The two, who founded their namesake firm in 1993 and specialize in personal injury litigation, are receiving the Super Lawyers endorsement for the sixth consecutive year. Alan H. Harris of Grosse Pointe Farms has been named assis- tant chief investment officer of the Harris Fisher Group, where he will help expand the depth of the company's team as it broadens its scope beyond the Max M. and Marjorie S. Fisher Foundation and the Fisher fami- ly. Harris, 46, has nearly 25 years' experience in various financial markets and was vice president and chief investment officer of the Skillman Foundation for the past 10 years.