Nine years after being brought back to life, the Faribault Woolen Mill Co. has a fresh infusion of cash and a new leadership team that pledges to bring more sales and perhaps a bit more flair to the 155-year-old company.
Former Allen Edmonds turnaround chief Paul Grangaard is leading a new ownership group that plans to add more apparel and accessories to Faribault, which is one of two woolen manufacturers in America.
Grangaard will join forces with Paul Mooty, who reopened the mill in 2011 and, with his family, has worked to shore up the decrepit factory and relaunch the label known for its signature wool blankets and throws. The name has been tweaked to add a tagline: Faribault Woolen Mill Co. — Since 1865.
"I call it a broadening of the brand rather than pulling it up," said Grangaard, who is taking over as chairman and chief executive of the company. "It's already got a great reputation for quality and an incredible heritage."
Grangaard has spent the past two years trying to build his own upscale American-made menswear line, CircleRock, from scratch, which he said proved difficult and expensive.
He and Mooty met over a business deal several years ago, Grangaard said, and the two have spent the past year discussing a partnership in which Grangaard could bring more capital as well as his marketing, retailing and product development experience to the Faribault Woolen Mill brand.
Mooty said he loves Faribault Woolen Mill "like another child," but acknowledged that the business is solid but not profitable. The time was right, he said, to bring in additional local investors who respect its history; it was founded at the end of the Civil War.
"We've done a great job of getting this business back on its feet, building visibility and investing in the infrastructure around it," Mooty said Friday. "We've been building the foundation. Now Paul is coming in to build on top of that."