The “P” in P. Graham Dunn stands for Peter, the company’s
founder. He is the son of missionaries Marvin and Miriam Dunn, who met and
married in China while serving with China Inland Missions. Their
adventures in the mission field were many. For example, during World War
II, Marvin and Miriam were serving in a small village helping a young couple
prepare for their wedding. Unfortunately, due to the war, the bride couldn’t
get silk for her wedding dress. American aviators, under the charge of
Lieutenant Colonel James Doolittle, had just completed a harrowing mission over
Japan. As the “Doolittle Raiders” ran out of fuel, they parachuted and
crash-landed in China. Locals helped the soldiers to safety and Marvin
and Miriam gathered up some of the silk parachutes and helped transform them
into the bride’s gown.
China continued to be turbulent
and dangerous in the 1940’s and 1950’s. Japan invaded China and intense civil
war followed. With the lives of missionaries at risk, the mission board ordered
the evacuation of all who were serving in southwestern China. The route to
safety would mean a bumpy DC-3 flight over the Himalayas into India.
Marvin and Miriam were scheduled to fly out on the same plane as another
missionary couple, Mr. and Mrs. Graham Hutchinson; however, the plane ran out
of seating before everyone was loaded. The childless Hutchinsons noticed that
Miriam was pregnant and had not been seated. They voluntarily gave up their
seats so Miriam and Marvin could take the first flight out of China. After
arriving safely in India, Miriam and Marvin were devastated to learn the
following flight crashed into the Himalayas and that Mr. and Mrs. Graham
Hutchinson, and everyone on board, had perished.
Miriam soon gave birth to a girl,
Rosemary, in India. They returned to China less than two years later to resume
their work where Miriam gave birth to a son. They named him Peter Graham Dunn
in honor of the sacrifice the Graham Hutchinson family made. Marvin and Miriam
continued serving in China until their retirement in 1973.
Peter Graham Dunn journeyed from
China to Three Hills, Alberta where, as a young man, he spotted the woman who
would eventually become his wife, LeAnna Gerber. LeAnna, from the United
States, lived in the world’s largest Amish and Mennonite community. Peter
courted LeAnna for nearly 7 years, never seeming to gain her affection. Nearly
ready to give up, Peter traveled to Ohio to visit LeAnna and her family during
Christmas 1971. Sitting atop the silo on the family farm, LeAnna turned to
Peter and asked, “Are you going to ask to marry me, or what?” And marry her he
did.
In 1972, newlyweds Peter and
LeAnna Dunn accepted a mission to open a home for runaway girls in New York
City. To keep the girls occupied, they initiated a small woodworking business.
The girls carved plaques and gifts that quickly became popular items at the
Greenwich Village outdoor markets. When the mission in New York was complete,
the couple bought the woodworking equipment and installed it on their farm in
Dalton, Ohio.
Peter spent the next two years
building silos for area farmers to support his family, while perfecting his
designs and manufacturing techniques during every spare moment. When it came
time for Peter to choose a name for his new business, he knew that he wanted to
honor the Graham Hutchinson family and, thus, P. Graham Dunn was born. In
1977, he received an order for 3,000 items, allowing him to devote all his
energies to the growing business.
In the early days, the work was
labor-intensive. LeAnna and Peter were busy raising 4 energetic children and
were running the business out of a revamped chicken coop. For twenty years, Peter designed every plaque, gift, and item
of furniture while LeAnna managed the company’s finances.
In time, the company began to computerize carving and laser
operations and found it could successfully compete with offshore manufacturers. Eventually P. Graham Dunn outgrew the chicken
coop and in 2008 the business was moved into a 250,000 square foot
manufacturing facility just minutes away from the family farm that has housed 7
generations.
Another significant change for both P. Graham Dunn and the Dunn
family was in 2019 when the company was sold by Peter and LeAnna to its
employees in the form of an Employee Stock Ownership Program (ESOP). Although he is no longer running the business,
Peter continues to serve as a great coach and visionary for P. Graham Dunn.
Peter and LeAnna's four children are grown. Paul Dunn is
in Arizona with his wife and 3 children studying to become a physical
therapist. Thomas Graham Dunn is lead pastor at a local Mennonite church.
Mary Dunn studied to become a midwife and is currently a nurse at an Amish
birthing center. Anna Miriam Knutson, the oldest, married Joe Knutson in
2004. Together they moved from Portland, Oregon, back to Dalton, Ohio,
where Joe worked to eventually become president of P. Graham Dunn and Anna
worked on her masters in poetry. After a 4-year journey with cancer, Anna
passed away in 2013. Joe served as company
president until October 2020; he lives just steps away from Peter and LeAnna on
the family farm.