Milo Baughman

Purchase with confidence.

Modern Hill selects items that excel in quality, style, and creativity from a period that transformed the art of decorating. They undergo careful examination and restoration by specialists at our Chicago facility.

It’s like they belong together.

Products labeled "Vintage Restored" can be customized and matched in color, tone, and texture as though they were an original set. And with Modern Hill’s flat rate shipping, additional pieces ship for free.

Hassle-free delivery.

Our pieces ship anywhere nationwide for one low flat rate. You only pay for shipping on one piece per order—anything else we can fit on the same truck ships for free.

Frequently Asked Milo Baughman Questions

Authentic Milo Baughman pieces typically carry a manufacturer label or stamp on the underside identifying the production: a Thayer Coggin label (most common – look for the High Point, North Carolina address), a Directional label (for walnut case goods), a Glenn of California label, or a Drexel marking on case goods. Construction tells include heavy chromed steel frames on the chrome-base lounge and swivel chairs (not chrome plating over thin stock), modular dimensions on sectional sofas, and the period-correct upholstery hardware. Many Baughman pieces in our inventory carry the original manufacturer label and are documented with model numbers when present.

Milo Baughman’s most-prolific manufacturer partnership was with Thayer Coggin of High Point, North Carolina, which produced his chrome-base chairs, sofas, and modular seating from the 1950s into the 1980s. He also designed for Directional Furniture (walnut case goods, dining suites), Drexel (the Today’s Living and other Drexel mid-century lines), Glenn of California (chrome-and-walnut dining and console pieces), Murray Furniture, James Inc., Lane, and Design Institute, among others. The Thayer Coggin partnership accounts for the majority of his collected mid-century output, and our Milo Baughman inventory reflects that distribution.