Chats on Old Earthenware

CHAPTER XIV

Chapter 299,907 wordsPublic domain

LATE STAFFORDSHIRE WARE

The School of Colour--Josiah Spode the Second (1798-1827)--Davenport (1793-1880)--Thomas Minton--Semi-porcelain--Ironstone China--The Masons--Early nineteenth-century Commemorative Ware--The revival of Stoneware--Messrs. Doulton--The twentieth-century Collector--Table of Marks--Prices.

The latest phases of earthenware are mainly concerned with the school of colourists, the chief of which was Josiah Spode the Second, who controlled the factory on the death of Josiah his father, in 1797, and took William Copeland as partner. It was this Spode who introduced into earthenware decorative patterns of Japanese colouring in which reds and yellows and dark cobalt blue predominate, following the style of the Crown-Derby Japan style. About 1800 Spode commenced the manufacture of porcelain as well as earthenware, and his richly gilded Japan patterns began to rival those of Derby. In regard to the light-blue-printed ware of a fine quality turned out by Spode, an illustration is given in the chapter on Transfer-printed Ware (p. 331). It was this second Josiah Spode who standardised the body used in English porcelain, which is to-day practically the same as Spode's formula. It may be said, roughly, to consist of the constituents of true porcelain plus a proportion of bone ash. Enoch Wood, when an apprentice with Palmer, was the first to use bone with earthenware, about 1770.

It is obvious that with these rich colours of Staffordshire porcelain side by side in the same factory, with earthenware, the latter began to assume all the decorative appearance of porcelain. A reign of colour set in. Earthenware was as lavishly decorated in colours, and as richly gilded as any of the contemporary porcelains, and in putting on these colours it lost all its old characteristic features and became an echo of porcelain.

Before leaving the Spode family, it may be mentioned that Josiah Spode the second, who died in 1827, aged seventy-three, was succeeded by his son, Josiah Spode the third, who died within two years.

William Copeland had died in 1826, and in 1833 the factory at Stoke came into the hands of W. T. Copeland, known as Alderman Copeland, as he then was, of the City of London. He became Lord Mayor of London in 1835, and in that year took Thomas Garrett into partnership. Copeland and Garrett is the name of the firm till 1847. For twenty years it was known as "W. T. Copeland, late Spode," and is now at the present day Messrs. W. T. Copeland & Sons.

The marks belonging to the firm at various dates are given at the end of this chapter. We illustrate a row of five remarkably fine earthenware vases decorated in rich colour in the Derby style, so perfectly simulating the brush work of that famous porcelain factory, that upon a hasty examination they would pass for Crown-Derby. They evidently belong to the days when Josiah Spode was turning out at Stoke more Japan patterns than were produced at Derby.

At the same time a good deal of less ornate earthenware for cottage use was being made, and specimens may frequently be met with, such as tea-sets with old-fashioned teapot and two-handled sugar-bowl made about 1825. Their homely English rural subjects are very pleasing, and show that there was still a large market in the country for simple ware without any great pretensions to foreign taste. It was the last stage of the great tradition of old English earthenware.

=Davenport (1793-1880).=--John Davenport, of Longport in Staffordshire, began potting in 1793. There is no doubt that he was a great potter with artistic instincts. He went to France prior to 1800, and on his return introduced a porcelain body superior to anything then produced in England. With Josiah Spode the second he claims more attention as a maker of porcelain than of earthenware. But his earthenware is highly prized by collectors. His blue-printed ware was exceptionally fine, and he followed in his plates and dishes the style of Turner and of Minton in the perforated rims. His stone china is well potted and carefully painted, and in design he was not loth to follow Mason of whom we shall speak later. Many specimens of the familiar type of jug associated with Mason's name, of octagonal shape are found in porcelain. Some collectors noticing the great similarity to Mason have been inclined to attribute these porcelain jugs to him, and doubtless, as Mason made china, many are his, but Davenport who made replicas of the Mason stoneware jugs, being a maker of porcelain too, is likely to have produced these porcelain replicas also. None of these porcelain jugs appears to be marked.

Davenport ware is strong in colour, and follows the rich designs of Spode. Some pieces of stoneware are richly gilt, and have finely painted fruit-pieces and landscapes, some probably by Steel from the Derby factory. The illustration (p. 447) of the highest flight of Mason typifies this class of landscape ware. Swansea, in common with Staffordshire, had not hesitated in painting earthenware with landscape subjects hitherto employed only by artists who decorated porcelain.

The Davenport marks are given at the end of this chapter, and are always prized when found on specimens, as Davenport did not mark his ware so freely as did Spode. From 1835 the firm became "William Davenport & Co.," and later "Davenport & Co.," and ceased about 1880.

=Semi-porcelain.=--This is found as a term in some of the marks of the early-Victorian period; sometimes the title "opaque china" appears. These descriptions are always puzzling to the collector. As a matter of fact they tell of the later and more modern development of earthenware. It had snatched the china glaze, it had employed the enamel colours, and had adopted the designs of the English porcelain factories. The rivalry of the Staffordshire potters and the English porcelain factories was coming to an end. This stage of semi-porcelain and semi-china represented the last word of earthenware. It now simulated porcelain in its body, with one drawback, it was not translucent as is porcelain. It was naïvely termed "opaque china." But the potters were proud of their latest achievement, and accordingly marked their wares with the above terms. As has been shown, Swansea came to the front, and Haynes in the closing years of the eighteenth century produced a hard, white earthenware termed "opaque-china," and Riley's "semi-china" about 1800 was the Staffordshire equivalent.

But, as we have seen, the Staffordshire potters not only imitated porcelain, continuing a long trade rivalry extending over nearly a century, but many of them had commenced to make porcelain themselves. Even the firm of Wedgwood succumbed to the temptation, and made porcelain from 1805 till 1815, which manufacture was revived again in 1878.

=Thomas Minton (1765-1836).=--Minton was one of Spode's engravers, and commenced as a master potter at Stoke in 1793.

Minton had been apprenticed to Thomas Turner, of Caughley, as an engraver, and it was he who designed the celebrated "Broseley dragon" pattern on the Caughley porcelain, and it is held by some authorities that Minton engraved the "willow pattern" too. At first, at Stoke, he made only earthenware, and his blue and white ware in imitation of the Nankin porcelain won him distinction. About 1800 porcelain was made and was continued throughout the nineteenth century. His son, Herbert Minton in 1836, took into partnership John Boyle, who joined the Wedgwoods in 1842. Herbert Minton raised the quality of the productions, being one of the greatest of the Staffordshire modern potters.

In the latter half of the century Mintons obtained a world-wide reputation. From 1850 to 1870 a band of French modellers and painters executed some fine work, but this trespasses on the field of porcelain.

Among the earthenware of Minton some of the early pieces such as plates and dishes enamelled in colours with Chinese subjects, are marked with the letter M in blue and a number. Some of the earliest-known examples in earthenware of the celebrated "willow pattern," such as plates with perforated edges (similar to that illustrated, p. 331) and baskets, are by Thomas Minton.

_Ironstone China._--This again is a term used by Mason and others in regard to an earthenware body for which the firm of Mason, of Lane Delph, took out a patent in 1813. It is a ware, heavy in weight, and possessing great strength. In pieces of important size, such as punch bowls of huge proportions, and posts for old-fashioned bedsteads this was of no little value. We have already alluded to the Mason series of octagonal-shaped jugs of pleasing shape, undoubtedly following the Spode scheme of colour in Japanese style, but lacking the finer finish of Spode ware. Although undoubtedly original in design, these jugs were easily excelled in potting and colouring by copyists such as Davenport. But Mason's blue in his imitations of old Nankin ware is exceptionally fine. There are dinner-services consisting of a great number of pieces painted in under-glaze blue which are very rich in tone, and stand comparison with any of the blues of Staffordshire, not excepting those of Adams and Minton.

We illustrate a large vase obviously a replica of a Chinese model, and enamelled in very rich colours. It shows a remarkable facility in potting, and although strongly coloured conveys without caricature the decorative qualities of the Chinese potter.

The vase is two feet in height. The ground is grass green. The panels have painted landscapes in Imari colours. The base and the top are a rich blue heavily gilded, and the dragon handles are a salmon pink. Obviously this, although imitative, is a very ambitious piece.

The mark of this vase stamped on the bottom (illustrated p. 451) is interesting. An outline design represents the pottery works. It is marked "Fenton Stone Works C. J. M. & Co." and in the outer rim is the inscription "Granite china," "Staffordshire Potteries."

The initials C. J. M. stand for Charles James Mason, who together with G. Miles Mason applied for the ironstone china patent in 1813.

Among other ware, similar to the early cream ware is a body termed "Mason's Cambrian-Argil." This evidently is in direct rivalry to the Swansea cream ware marked "Cambrian." Earlier jugs by him are rarely marked, and are not of the octagonal form, though the sides are prismatic, and usually seven in number. They are of a buff-coloured, soft, and chalky body, but the decorations are obviously his in similar style to his series of stoneware jugs. The handle of this earlier form is not of the snake or lizard form, but follows in design the metal handle of teapots of the period.

That the Masons could and did produce earthenware of a very high, artistic quality is shown by the illustration (p. 447) of three pieces marked with the impressed mark running in one line across the back of the examples "MASON'S PATENT IRONSTONE CHINA." The gilding in the floral design in the borders is well done, and the landscapes in the centre are finely painted. They are in the brush work patiently stippled with as much minuteness as the work of Birket Foster. A dessert service of which this forms portion, is a very desirable acquisition, and represents stone china at its high-water mark.

The various marks used by the Masons are given at the end of this chapter. In 1851 the pottery was purchased by Francis Morley, and it was incorporated with Ridgway, Morley, Wear & Co., and at a later date passed into the hands of Messrs. C. E. Ashworth and Taylor Ashworth, who to this day revert to the original patterns of the Mason jugs which have become so deservedly popular. Most of these old patterns are being produced, although of course they have not the charm for the collector whose interest ends with the original period under Mason.

"Stone china" became a term used by many other potters who produced strong and durable earthenware, heavy in weight, and extremely suitable for domestic use. Mintons had a series of patterns in this ware decorated in Oriental style in colour. The most popular of these is one termed "Amherst, Japan," following the old anglicised versions of Japanese Imari designs and colours. This was at the date when Lord Amherst was in the public eyes. It will be remembered that he headed an embassy to China, and was requested to perform the _ko-tou_, or act of prostration, nine times repeated with the head touching the ground. Sir George Staunton and other members of the Canton Mission protested, and the mission was admitted to the Emperor's presence on their own terms, which consisted of kneeling upon a single knee. Lord Amherst was later appointed Governor-General of India. There are a great many potters whose names are found on earthenware of mid-Victorian days. They cannot be said to exhibit much originality in design, and their value as collectors' specimens is infinitesimal.

We illustrate two finely-potted stoneware plates, by Messrs. C. Meigh and Sons, made about 1850. They are printed in blue with designs of English primroses twined with peacock feathers! Here is East and West in strange combination. Fortunately the plates are not in colours or the result might have been disastrous; as it is they are very pleasing for the blue is of a very excellent tone. There is nothing hasty about the potting; the finish and the minor details suggest work of the old days long gone. It is evident that in the treatment of the design the inspiration came from the Japanese potter whose influence was beginning to make itself felt in pictorial art even so far back as the middle of the nineteenth century. Whistler's peacocks and the dawn of the later æstheticism were at hand.

=Nineteenth Century Commemorative Ware.=--It has been previously shown how fond the potters became of recording events and creating figures of popular heroes in earthenware. The story is continued in the nineteenth century, which covers, one is apt to forget, the last twenty years of the reign of George III., includes the ten years of George the Fourth's reign, and the seven of William IV., commencing the Victorian Era in 1837 on the accession of the late Queen.

So that the term early nineteenth century is not the same as early Victorian; as a matter of fact a good deal of very good porcelain and earthenware comes well within the nineteenth century, but very few examples that appeal to the artistic collector belong to the early-Victorian period.

The nineteenth century as a whole was crowded with incident, and in the class of earthenware with which we are now dealing the record is a full one. From Nelson to Garibaldi; from Maria Martin the victim of the Red Barn murder to Moody and Sankey, the American revivalists; from Napoleon crossing the Alps to George III., as the King of Brobdingnag, looking at Napoleon through a telescope; from Burns's _Souter Johnny_ to Dickens's _Sam Weller_; from punch bowls, inscribed "Rum and Water" and "Health to all," to figures of Father Mathew, the temperance reformer--all sub-heads are touched, and although the artistic may be absent the human touch is ever present.

There are jugs and mugs with a portrait of "Orator Hunt," with inscriptions "Universal Suffrage," "No Corn Laws," dating from 1818. A lustre mug has a print with a dragoon represented as riding over a woman, and has the legend, "Murdered on the plains of Peterloo, near Manchester, 16th August, 1819." The woman carries a flag inscribed, "Liberty or Death."

A puzzle jug of Staffordshire earthenware is inscribed, "Hatfield shot at George III., 1800. God save the King." The trial of Queen Caroline produced a crowd of figures and mugs and plates with portraits and verses. The Crimean War had its ceramic record. There is a Newcastle earthenware butter-dish printed and coloured, with an English soldier greeting a French soldier, and motto, "May they ever be united."

The transfer-printed jugs and mugs with nautical subjects we have already alluded to in a previous chapter. The unfamiliar uniform of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century "Jack Tar" is a study in costume. This silent ceramic world of old three deckers and ships of the line and barques and brigantines is all that is left of a fleet of ships which have long since sailed their last voyage--an armada of non-existent craft as ghostly as the phantom ship of Vanderdecken.

Nelson jugs are of many types; we illustrate two varieties (p. 459). Some of them are as early as 1797, and others as late as 1820.

The top jug illustrated is of Staffordshire cream ware, and is in date after Trafalgar (1805), made to commemorate this victory. The portrait of Nelson has an inscription over it, "England Expects every Man to do his Duty." On the reverse is a plan of the Battle of Trafalgar with the disposition of the ships and a slight description which ends in the sentence "in which Action the Intrepid Nelson fell covered with Glory and Renown."

The lower jug is of the same period and the portrait of Nelson is more authentic. It is transfer-printed, the uniform being slightly touched in colour. On the reverse there is a female figure and two children, and the sad human touch in the inscription, "Behold the Widow casting herself and Orphans on benevolent Britons." This is, indeed, the reverse of the medal. The glory of war is exalted unduly. But the awful reality does not always come home so pointedly as in this homely jug, which in its way records the "simple annals of the poor." We are reminded of the lines of that forgotten poet, Amelia Opie, and of the wood-engraving by Dalziel in Willmott's "Poets of the Nineteenth Century," published in the sixties. "The Orphan Boy's Tale," who tells how pleased he was--

"When the news of Nelson's victory came, Along the crowded streets to fly And see the lighted windows flame!"

The shouts of the crowd rejoicing drowned the widow's tears. In simple, but none the less poetical, language the child continues:

"She could not bear to see my joy; For with my father's life 'twas bought, And made me her poor orphan boy."

It is undoubtedly such human touches as these on the domestic crude ware which stir the heart's blood quicker than all the gods and goddesses ever turned out in Staffordshire.

The age of steam and steel and its inventions did not come unheralded. We illustrate a plate of one of the earliest steam carriages (p. 463). The plate is of Staffordshire origin and evidently was intended to be sold in Germany as a "present from London," as the inscription runs, "Dampf Wagen von London nach Bristol. Ein Geschenk für meinen Lieben Jungen" ("Steam Coach from London to Bristol. A Present for my dear boy"). In date this is about 1827 as the accompanying engraving, entitled the "New Steam Carriage," is from a periodical publication of that date.

Equally interesting is the Staffordshire blue-printed _Jug_ marked at back "Liverpool and Manchester Railway" showing the famous _Rocket_ steam-engine invented by George Stephenson. The date of this is 1830. A fine _Cyder Mug_ printed in black with touches of colour shows an early passenger train. The luggage, as will be seen, is on the roofs of the carriages. The aristocratic company at the rear are seated in their own carriage, the ladies of the party are noticeable by their old-fashioned poke bonnets. There is something very interesting in these old railway mugs and jugs. They are modern, that is in regard to technique and artistic beauty, but the subjects are of sufficient interest to make the ware important enough to find a treasured place of honour in the collector's cabinet.

=Lambeth Stoneware.=--Mention should be made of the revival of artistic stoneware at Lambeth about 1850 by Henry Doulton, of the Lambeth pottery. An attempt was made to make vessels for ordinary use as ornamental in character as the old Flemish stoneware. Some of the early pieces are in brown stoneware with incised decoration filled with blue-glaze. Tankards and vases and jugs were made of very pleasing character. Under Sir Henry Doulton great advances were made, and mugs with hunting subjects and many grotesque brandy bottles of stoneware were made. Light brown stoneware flasks modelled to represent Lord Brougham, and impressed "The True Spirit of Reform," and "Brougham's Reform Cordial," are often of Lambeth origin. In date these are about 1830, other factories made similar ware, including the Derbyshire potteries.

Of the Doulton and Watts period which commenced 1815, from 1815 to 1832 some fine Napoleonic stoneware was turned out. There is, in particular, a small stoneware, brown jar of Napoleon made about 1825, which is finely modelled and an excellent portrait. In the Reform days of the early thirties they produced, to supply a public demand, many spirit jars with more or less grotesque models of Earl Grey, Lord Brougham, William Cobbett, and Lord John Russell. In the museum at Messrs. Doulton's at Lambeth are some fine examples of the early period.

We illustrate a strongly modelled jug with Bacchanalian subject in high relief (p. 471), showing the excellence of some of this early work at its best.

=The Twentieth Century Collector.=--The story of the triumphs and sometimes of the decadence of English pottery cannot be ended without a passing reference to the wondrous ware being produced at the end of the nineteenth century and now. It should appeal to-day to the prescient collector. It will appeal to the collector fifty years hence.

Under the name of the Lancastrian Pottery Messrs. Pilkington, at Clifton Junction, near Manchester, have during the past few years produced some of the most beautiful ware ever seen in this country. At the exhibition of this ware in London in 1904 they astonished all experts. The indescribable variety of exquisite colours, ranging from faint pink and sky blue to the richest purple and dark green and amber, showed at once that modern scientific methods and painstaking research had rediscovered the lost glazes of the old Chinese potters.

The starry crystalline glazes so well known in the Copenhagen porcelain have been faithfully reproduced, recalling the patterns traced on the window-pane by frost--sometimes brilliantly coloured blue or green against a background of pale lavender blue, at other times having a sheen like bronze. Other crystalline glazes are the _Sunstone_ in which brilliant prismatic and golden crystals are disseminated through rich green yellow or olive brown glazes. The fiery crystalline glazes display brilliant red crystalline formation through purple and grey glaze in dazzling patches.

Opalescent clouded, or curdled, or veined, or serpentine glazes have countless variations of colours--copper-green, turquoise-blue, or deep lapis-lazuli broken with white curds, or opalescent veinings, or fine lines of variegated colour shot through the glaze from top to bottom--this alone suggests a dream of colour schemes, and the wise collector will realise without further ado that we are in a period of great ceramic triumphs in pottery of this nature.

Texture glazes of chicken-skin, fruit-skin, and orange-skin are highly prized, and vellum or egg-shell glazes splashed and marked like Nature's own handiwork in the most beautiful birds' eggs. Or there are metallic effects of peculiar beauty and golden lacquer glazes resembling the old gold lac-work of Chinese and Japanese artists so cunningly imitated by Martin, the French cabinet-maker, in his Vernis-Martin, so beloved of collectors of furniture and fans.

Of purple glazes of the transmutation class some of the richest effects have been obtained in colour and in splashed effects. Wine purple, mulberry, and other alluring tones have burst upon an astonished circle of connoisseurs. Of the _flambé_ specimens it is not too much to say that their like, for which the Chinese potters were so famous, have never been seen before in Europe.

The Havilands of Limoges, Copenhagen, and Sèvres, and Berlin potters, as well as the artists in the Rookwood Pottery in America, have worked in the same field; but it is pleasant to think that English potters have produced greater variety, including Lancastrian lustre ware of wealth of glowing colour not surpassed by the Hispano-Moresque potters nor by the lustrous majolica of the Italian renaissance. To the scientific activity in wresting from the past the lost secrets of the old Chinese potters, a great tribute of praise should be accorded to Mr. William Burton and his brother, Mr. Joseph Burton.

Other workers in the same field of glazes are Mr. Bernard Moore, of London, whose glorious _flambé_, rich red, and _sang-de-boeuf_ glazes are of unsurpassed beauty. Mr. William de Morgan has for many years been known for his lustrous tiles and work of fine originality and strength. Another pottery known as the Ruskin Pottery conducted by Mr. W. Howson Taylor at West Smethwick, Birmingham, is a bright spot in recent ceramic enterprise, and has won distinction for ware which is of great beauty.

In bringing the story of English earthenware to a conclusion, it is the hope of the writer that the ground has been sufficiently covered to provide an outline history of a complex subject. It may be that much appears that might have been omitted, and that much is omitted that might have appeared within these covers. But it must be allowed that personal tastes play an important part in selection either by the collector or by the student. But in matters of fact and in the mass of details relative to the potters and their wares no pains have been spared to make this little handbook worthy of its subject.

MARKS FOUND ON LATE STAFFORDSHIRE EARTHENWARE.

The first half of the nineteenth century in earthenware included a variety of types: (1) the last output of the classical school; (2) cream ware transfer-printing in under-glaze blue; (3) the school of colourists in imitation of English porcelain.

In the following list a great many names appear of potters not well known nor worthy of more than passing allusion. But their trade marks often puzzle collectors.

=Adams.=

One of the oldest firms in Staffordshire.

Early mark for cream ware, plain and enamelled, 1770-1790.

Mark used for solid jasper ware, 1780-1790.

Mark for printed ware, stoneware, and jasper, 1787-1810.

Mark used for deep blue-printed ware, 1804-1840, so much collected by American connoisseurs.

=Spode.=

Josiah Spode the second, who introduced Derby-Japan patterns into earthenware. The name is found impressed, or printed, or painted in colours on back.

At the introduction of ironstone china other marks were introduced, and they were printed on the ware.

Similarly the "new fayence," another of Spode's improvements, was printed on ware of that character.

Other marks, both impressed and printed, in the ware are SPODE, SON & COPELAND, or SPODE & COPELAND.

COPELAND & GARRETT NEW FAYENCE]

From 1833 to 1847 these, among other trade marks, were used.

From 1847 to 1856 this mark was used.

The present day mark of Messrs. W. T. Copeland & Sons.

=Davenport= (1793-1886).

These marks are found on the earthenware, stamped or printed, in small letters in red, and other Davenport marks, such as that with the anchor and the stone china design used after 1805, are frequently puzzling to collectors, especially when partially obliterated.

=Minton.= Established at Stoke, 1790.

In 1800 porcelain was made, and was continued throughout the century and at the present day.

From 1790-1798 blue and white earthenware in imitation of common Nankin largely made. In 1798 semi-porcelain was made. Felspar china, similar to Spode and stone china, in common with other Staffordshire potters, was largely produced. From 1836-1841 the firm was Minton & Boyle, and afterwards Minton and Hollins, and at the present day Minton is one of the best-known English firms.

Not many of the early earthenware pieces were marked, and it is difficult to distinguish Minton's firm from some of the fine blue-printed ware of Adams and of Mason.

This +B B+ mark appears on all stone china of Minton from 1845-1861, signifying _Best Body_.

The name MINTON was not stamped nor impressed on the ware till after 1861.

About 1823 the _Amherst Japan_ pattern was made, and has a printed mark in a scroll. It is frankly imitative of Spode and the Derby-Japan style.

A rhomboidal mark with the letter +R+, sometimes "+R^D+," signifying that the design is "Registered," and having +M & Co+, is not confined to Mintons, as other potters used the same mark with their names or initials underneath. It is quite late and on ware not likely to appeal to the collector.

=Mason.=

The marks of Mason are found, after 1813, either impressed in a straight line or having the mark under a crown and in scroll, on his celebrated ironstone china printed in blue.

His semi-porcelain or Cambrian-argil bears the name on the ware, and was intended to compete with Swansea.

An illustration of the mark on stone china, marked "Fenton Stone Works, C J M & Co," is given on page 451.

It should be mentioned that the blue-printed mark with a crown and scroll does not necessarily mean that the ware (especially in the hexagonal set of jugs) is old. It is still used at the present day by Messrs. Ashworth, who are reproducing some of the old and favourite patterns. Collectors are advised to buy one of these jugs as a model to compare it with the older work.

The mark of Pindar, Bourne & Co., of Burslem, who made red terra cotta spill vases decorated in colours and gold with arabesque designs, about 1835. In 1880 the factory passed into the hands of Messrs. Doulton.

Mark of Dale Hall Pottery, John Rogers & Son, 1815-1842. Notable for light blue printed "Willow" and "Broseley Dragon" series.

J. Edwards & Son, Dale Hall, 1842-1882.

=W. Brownfield & Son= (Cobridge) 1808-1819.

Bucknall & Stevenson and A. Stevenson alone during part of above period.

_James Clews_, 1819-1829. His mark was a crown above his name.

_Robinson, Wood & Brownfield_, 1836.

_Wood & Brownfield_, 1836-1850. _W. Brownfield_, 1850-1870. _W. Brownfield & Sons_, 1871 to present day. China has been made since 1871.

We append some of the marks of this firm, including the Staffordshire knot, which has been used by other Staffordshire potters.

=Ridgway=, founded in 1794.

J. & W. Ridgway and Ridgway & Sons, 1814-1854.

Many of these marks have puzzled collectors, as only the initials are used in many cases.

The firm subsequently became T. C. Brown-Westhead, Moore & Co., and has had a distinguished career in the ceramic world, gaining honours at the various international exhibitions.

(_See Table p. 349_).

These marks are found impressed in ware of Messrs. Powell & Bishop, 1865-1878, of Hanley. They are often confused with Pindar, Bourne & Co., when only initials are used.

Another form is a Caduceus, the emblem of Mercury, impressed in the ware and sometimes printed.

(_Messrs. Powell & Bishop._)

A seated figure is another trade mark which has given rise to a good deal of speculation among tyros in collecting.

(_Messrs. Powell & Bishop._)

_Heathcote & Co._ is a mark found in early nineteenth century ware. The blue-printed earthenware was of a fine quality.

=Late Nineteenth Century Earthenware.=

The three marks of the Lancastrian Pottery, the Ruskin Pottery, West Smethwick, and of the earthenware of Mr. William De Morgan, are known to connoisseurs of what is great in latter-day English earthenware, and they are given here for the information of collectors who may be interested.

PRICES.

LATE STAFFORDSHIRE. £ s. d.

=Spode= (Earthenware).

Spode felspar, ice pails and covers painted with flowers and richly gilded. Puttick & Simpson, March, 1907 12 1 6

=Davenport= (Earthenware).

Toby Jug, marked "Davenport." Sotheby, November, 1904 3 12 6

=Minton= (Earthenware).

Set of Chessmen, in form of mice, drab and ivory coloured, decorated with black and gold. Kings and Queens crowned, Knights with swords, Bishops with croziers, and Castles with warder on top and a mouse imprisoned below. Sotheby, July, 1908 2 0 0

=Mason.=

Vases, pair, large, decorated in gold with kylin tops. Debenham, January, 1906 8 5 0

Ironstone china dinner service (197 pieces) floral decoration in colours. Christie, March, 1906 53 11 0

Vases, pair (12 in. high), mazarin blue ground, decorated with Oriental birds, &c. Bradby, Perth, September, 1906 7 7 0

Ironstone china bowl, decorated in flowers blue, red and gold. Puttick & Simpson, January, 1907 5 0 0

EARLY VICTORIAN.

=Staffordshire= (Earthenware).

Red Barn (scene of well-known murder of Maria Martin), very scarce. Sotheby, February, 1907 2 10 0

Jug, with portrait of Lord Nelson, marked HOLLINS. Sotheby, November, 1908 1 19 0

Jug with figures of Volunteers, and a smaller jug with portrait of Wellington. Sotheby, May, 1907 3 0 0

Three Jugs, brown ground, with Madonna and Child in relief, marked "Meigh," and three jugs with Tam o' Shanter subjects marked "Ridgway." Sotheby, May, 1907 1 3 0

INDEX

A

Abbey, Richard (Liverpool), 403

Absalon, decorator at Yarmouth, 378

"Adam and Eve" delft dishes, 67, 109

Adams (marks), 263

Adams (prices), 282, 283

Adams & Bromley, 260

Adams & Co., marks, 260, 473

Adams, Benjamin, mark, 263, 348

Adams, William (of Cobridge), 260, 329

Adams, William (of Greenfield), 260

Adams, William (of Greengates), =259-263=, 279, 330, 340, 348 (mark)

Adams, William, & Sons (of Burslem), 348

Adams, William, & Sons (of Stoke) (mark), 348

Æsop, _Fables_ of, reproduced on earthenware, 321, 322

Agate ware, definition of, 27; summary of, 70, 169; _solid_ and _surface_ (Wedgwood), 228

Alexander, Czar of Russia, bust of, 374

Allen, of Lowestoft, Leeds ware decorated by, 301

America and England (in earthenware), 337, 338; independence of, jug relating to, 350; views in (Clews), 349

"Amherst, Japan" (Minton), 454

Anchor as a mark, Fell, Newcastle, 350; Middlesbro', 350

Animals, figures of, 174

Antony and Cleopatra, Swansea figures, 395

Ashworth, C. E., Messrs., 454

Astbury, John, =147-151=; the successor of Elers, 164; early salt glaze, 204

Astbury, Thomas, 147; flint, 232; figures, 361; as a mark, 298

Astbury ware, definition of, 27; summary of, 68; prices, 155, 191, 192

Aynsley, John, 348; lustre ware, 430; mark, 279

B

Bacon, John, 248

Baddeley, 222, 232

Baddeley, J. and E., 349

Baddeley (R. J.), basket-work, salt glazed, 212

Baddeley, R. and J., 349

Baddeley, W. (Eastwood), 280

Bailey and Batkin (lustre ware), 436

Balloon ascent depicted on delft, 113

Bamboo ware (Wedgwood), 230

Barberini Vase, 249

Barker (mark), Leeds ware, 289, 310

Barnes, Zachariah, 67, 125, 403

Basalt ware, definition of, 27; Wedgwood, 228

Basket-work, Leeds, 297; salt glaze, 212; Wilson, 266

"Bat" printing, 347

Battersea enamels, 318

Batty & Co., 280

B B. New stone (Minton mark), 476

Bear hugging Bonaparte (Nottingham), 152

Bear jugs, Nottingham, 69, 152

Beauclerk, Lady Diana, 248

Beehive as a mark (Ridgway), 479

Bellarmine jugs, 68, 134; prices, 152

Benson, Thomas, use of flint, 232

Bentley, his influence on Wedgwood, 244

Bentley, G., modeller (Swansea), 395

Bevington (Swansea), 399

Biblical subjects in delft, 67

Billing, Thomas (1722), 207

Birch, E. J., 280

Birch, black basalt ware, 274

Bird as a mark, 417

Birds, figures of, 174

Bingley, Thomas, & Co., 302, 305

Biscuit, definition of, 27, 51

Black basalt (E. Mayer), 269

Black printed ware, its mission, 333

Blue dash decoration (delft), 109

Blue enamelled salt-glazed ware (Littler), 207

Blue printed ware, =338-347=

Body, definition of, 28

Bonaparte, bust of, 374; caricatures of in earthenware, 337; lustre ware, 435; Russian bear hugging, 152; stoneware, 465

Bone-ash, first use of, 444

Bordeaux earthenware, 215

Books, quaint titles of Puritan, 95

Booth, Enoch, 182; improved glazing, 232

Boscage school of figures (Walton), 378

Bott & Co., 280; lustre ware, 436

Boyle, John, 449

Brameld, Rockingham, 305, 311

Brampton pottery, 69, 412

Brislington lustre, 424

Bristol delft, summary of, 67, =113-118=; prices, 129

Bristol earthenware prices, 419

Bristol pottery, 404; mark, 418

British Museum, mediæval tiles at, 84

Britton & Sons (Leeds), 288, 310

Bromley (Adams & Bromley), 260

Bronze busts imitated, 229

Bronze lustre ware, 435

Brookes, engraver for earthenware, 347

Brougham, Lord, stoneware flask, 465

Browne, Sir Thomas, quoted, 163

Brown-Westhead, T. C., Moore & Co., 479

Burns's _Souter Johnny_ in earthenware, 458

Busts and figures, stoneware, 68

Butler, Samuel, _Hudibras_, quoted, 366

C

C as a mark, 408, 418; Caughley, 349; Wilson, 266

"Cadogan" teapots, 305, 311

Caduceus as a mark, Powell & Bishop, 480

Cambria as a mark, Heathcote & Co., 480

Cambrian-Argil (Mason), 453

Cambrian pottery (Swansea), 395; marks, 415

Camel pattern teapots, 208

C. & H. (Cookson & Harding) mark, 280

"Canary" bottles, fraudulent, 110

Caricatures in earthenware, 337

Castle Acre Priory, tiles from, 84

Castleford Pottery (D. D. & Co.), 174, 270, 302, 311; prices, 313

Catalogues printed in several languages (Leeds), 288; Wedgwood, 224

Cats, figures of, 174; slip decorated, 358; agate, 359

Caughley earthenware, 407; prices, 419; marks, 417, 418

Caughley, transfer-printing at, 318

Cauliflower ware, 169; teapots, 208

Caylus, Count, 259

Chaffers (Liverpool), 403

Chalk introduced into cream ware, 269

Champion (Bristol), 235-237

Chapel, Stephen (Leeds), 288

Chatterly, William, 66

Chertsey Abbey, tiles from, 83

Chester, Grosvenor Museum, Toft dish at, 88

Chesterfield, 69

China, definition of, 28

China clay, definition of, 28

China stone, definition of, 28

Chinese pottery as a model for delft, 102; inspires English potters, 196; old glazes of, rediscovered, 466

Chippendale, his similarity to Wedgwood, 259

Christian, Philip (tortoiseshell ware), 70

Chronological table of chief events, eighteenth century, 158

Church, Professor, quoted (Lambeth delft), 113; Dwight ware, 138

C J M as a mark (Mason), 453

Classicism, eighteenth century, 243; foreign to Staffordshire, 160; the passing of, 276

Classic ware, summary of, 73, 74; Greek designs (Turner), 263; figures, Staffordshire, 370

Claude landscapes on earthenware, 344

Clays used for pottery, 28; various, how used, 47

Clementson, 79

Clementson, J., 280

Clews, 280

Clews, James, 349

Close & Co., 280; mark, 348

Close, Mort & Co. (Liverpool), 403

Cobalt blue used in salt-glazed ware, 208

Cobbett, William (stoneware flask), 465

Cockspur-mark, definition of, 31, 298

Collecting, the field of, 52; reasons for, 35

Cologne ware, 134

Colour, its adoption, 273; _versus_ Form in earthenware, 178

Coloured salt-glazed ware, 211

Cookson & Harding, 280

Cookworthy (Plymouth), 235

Copeland, 443, 444

Copland & Garrett, 444; marks, 474, 475

Continental potters, indebted to Staffordshire, 177; imitations of Wedgwood, 247

Copenhagen porcelain, 293, 466

Copper lustre ware, 435; Wilson, 282; prices, 439

Copyists--earthenware imitating china, 43; of Wedgwood, 257, 265

Cornish clay mines, 235; kaolin, its use in cream ware, 237

Cottage ornaments, figures for, 378

"Crabstock" handles, 212; jug and handle, 185

Cream ware, =230-240=; definition of, 28; its experimental stage, 169; its later white body, 44; Leeds, =293-301=; Queen's ware, 232; revival of old Wedgwood designs, 231; summary of, =71-73=

Crich ware, 204

Cricket match depicted in earthenware, 338

Crouch ware, 204

Crown in circle as a mark (Stevenson), 348

Crown as a mark, 266

D

Dale (mark), 381

Dalehall as a mark, 477

Daniel, Ralph (salt-glaze), 207

Daniel, Thomas, painter, 232

Davenport marks, 475; prices, 481

Davenport, John, 445

Davenport (of Longport), 269; mark, 280

Davenport, Thomas, 348

Davenport, Henry and William, 348

Davenport & Co., 446

Dawson, Samuel (lustre), 428

D. D. & Co., Castleford mark, 302, 311

Decadent period Staffordshire figures, 378

Delft ware (_Bristol delft_), 113-118; definition of, 28; general characteristics of, 67; how made, 101; its foreign origin, 102; its introduction into England, 105; (_Lambeth delft_), 106-113; (_Liverpool delft_), 118-125; prices, 129-130; summary of, =67-68=; (_Wincanton delft_), 125

De Morgan, William, pottery of, 481

Denny Abbey, tiles from, 84

Derby (earthenware), 408; (Pot Works) mark, 349; transfer-printing at, 318

Dickens, _Sam Weller_ in earthenware, 458

Dillwyn, L. W. (Swansea), 399

Dillwyn & Co. (marks), 415, 416

Dipping-house, the, 51

Dixon, Austin, & Co., Sunderland, 309

Dixon & Co., Sunderland, 306

D. J. Evans & Co., Swansea, 400; marks, 416

D. M., mark of William De Morgan, 481

Don Pottery marks, 289, 310, 311

Dorset, Earl of, arms on jug, 92

Doulton, Lambeth stoneware, 151, 465

Drug pots, 106

Dunderdale, David, 302

Dunderdale & Co. (D D & Co), 174

Dutch enamellers employed on salt-glaze, 211

Dwight, John, 68, 134, =138-142=; prices, 155

E

Eagle as a mark (Leeds), 311

Early English ware, =83-98=

Early pottery, summary of, 66

Early salt-glazed ware, 203

Early-Staffordshire ware, =159-192=; prices, =187-192=

Early-Victorian earthenware (prices), 482

Earthenware, definition of, 29, 40; figures compared with china, 382; how made, 44; imitating porcelain, 273; its appearance, 43; method of studying, 55; the nine classes of, 55; _versus_ porcelain, 182

East India Company, 106

Eastwood mark, 280

Edwards, J., & Son, Dale Hall, 477

Egyptian ware, definition of, 27

E. I. B. mark, 280

Eighteenth century, chief events of, table, 158

Election plates (_Bristol delft_), 67, 114

Elers, David, 142, 146

Elers, John Philip, 144

Elers Brothers (_not_ the inventors of salt glaze), 204; prices 155; their effect upon Staffordshire, 164; Wedgwood's opinion of, 163

Elers ware, definition of, 29, =142-147=; summary of, 68

Elizabethan silver mounts on earthenware, 126; coats of arms on jugs, 134

Enamel colours, definition of, 29; use in salt glaze, 211; kiln (enamel), description of, 52

Engine turned ware, 148

English character in early Staffordshire ware, 160; costume subjects, 264; porcelain factories largely imitative, 196; scenery (on earthenware), 277; national spirit in earthenware, 186

Engravers employed to decorate earthenware, 325

Etruria Museum, catalogue of, 227

Etruscan ware, Dillwyn's (Swansea), 400; prices, 418

Evans, painter (Swansea), 399

Evans & Glasson (Swansea), 400

Exhibition, Great, of 1851, hideousness of, 358

F

F as a mark (Newcastle), 350

Fable subjects in earthenware, 321, 322; Liverpool tiles, 125

Factory system, the, its origin, 249

Falstaff, earthenware figure of, 374

Fell (Newcastle), 306

Ferrybridge, 309

Fifield, William and John, painters (Bristol), 404

Figures (Astbury), 361; Astbury prices, 192; earthenware and china compared, 382; Leeds prices, 385; Salopian, 407; salt-glazed, 181; Staffordshire, best period, 362; Staffordshire, =357-389=; decadent period of, 378; prices, 385, 386; summary of, =74-77=; Wedgwood, 240; Whieldon, 361; prices, 192

Firing, period of duration, 51

Fitzwilliam family, crest of, as a mark, 311

Flaxman, John, 248; his designs in cream ware, 231; designs of, copied, 274

Fletcher & Co. (Shelton), 348

_Fleur-de-lis_ as a mark, 400

Flint introduced into body, Thomas Astbury, 207; use of, 232

Ford (South Hylton Pottery), 309

Forgeries (in general), 59

Forgeries--Slip ware, 60; sack bottles, dated, 60; salt-glaze coloured, 60; Toby jugs, 63; "Fair Hebe," 63; "Vicar and Moses," 63; Whieldon ware, 63; Leeds, 63.

Form _versus_ Colour in earthenware, 178

Fowke, Sir Francis (Lowesby), 400

Frank, Richard (Brislington), 424

Freeth, Mr. Frank, quoted (Toft ware), 91

Frog, green, on Catherine II. service, 239

Frog mugs, 309

Fulham stoneware, =151=; summary of, 68, 70; prices, 155

Funeral cups (lustre), 428

Furniture decorated with Wedgwood ware, 247

G

Gateshead Potteries, 306

Gilding used in salt-glazed ware, 208

Gillray's caricatures in earthenware, 337

Glazes, various, definition of, 29; rich, used by Whieldon, 169

Glazing, description of process, 51; improvement by Booth, 232

Glost oven, description of, 48, 51

Godwin, Francis, Bishop of Hereford, 117

Goethe, quoted, 259

Gold lustre ware, 427

Gonsales, Domingo, Voyage to Moon, 117

Granite ware, 170; Wedgwood, 228

Greatbach, William, 166, 248

Great Malvern, tiles from, 84

Green (mark), Leeds ware, 289; signature of, Liverpool tiles, 121

Greens, Bingley & Co., 302

Grenzhausen, stoneware of, 137

_Grès de Flandres_ ware, 137, 151

Grey, Lord (earthenware flask), 465

Greybeard jugs, 134

Griffin as a mark (Rockingham), 311

Grotesque design, in early Staffordshire ware, 160; in English pottery, 208

Growan stone, its use in cream ware, 237

H

Hackwood, 280

Hackwood, William, 248

Hamilton, Sir William, 244, 259

Hancock, John (lustre), 430

Hancock, Robert, 329; his "Tea Party," Worcester, 318

Harding, 280

Harley, 280

Hartley, Greens & Co., 288

Haynes, 79

Haynes, George (Cambrian Pottery), 395

Haynes, Dillwyn & Co., marks, 415

Heath, 280; prices, 284

Heath family, Derby potters, 408

Heath & Bagnall, 280

Heath, Warburton & Co., 280

Heathcote, C., & Co., mark, 480

Herculaneum Pottery (Liverpool), 403; marks, 417; figures of, 77

Hewitt, painter (Wood figures), 373

Hicks & Meigh, 349

Hicks, Meigh, & Johnson, 349

Historical events, chronicled in earthenware, 333

Hollins, Samuel, 269, 275, 280

Hollins, T. & J., 281; mark, 275; prices, 482

Howe, Earl, portrait of, 334

Hudson River, American views (Clews), 349

Humble & Green, 288

Humour in pottery, 208

Hylton Potteries, 300

I

I. Dale, mark on figures, 381

Identification of earthenware, 65; =Table=, =66-79=

I. E. B. as a mark, Baddeley, 349

Imitation of porcelain in earthenware, 273; bronze busts (by Wedgwood), 229; Chelsea and Derby figure of Falstaff 377; Chinese pottery (at Leeds), 290; Crown Derby, 443; Japanese incised work (salt-glaze), 212; Oriental porcelain styles, 196, 215; Plymouth group by Staffordshire, 377; silversmiths' work (by Elers), 195; at Leeds, 294; by Wedgwood, 196; Wedgwood, 257, 265; Wedgwood's Queen's ware at Swansea, 396

Imitativeness of English potters, 196

Imitativeness, black basalt ware, 274

Incised decoration, salt glaze, 208

"Indian Temple," J. W. R. (Ridgway), 479

Ireson, Nathaniel, 125

Ironstone china, 450; definition of, 30; prices, 482

Isleworth pottery, 411; marks, 418; prices, 419

"Italian Garden" (W. and B.), mark, 478

J

Jackfield pottery, 305; prices, 313

Jacobite toasts, 215

James II., Dwight bust of, 141

Japanese decoration adopted in Staffordshire, 273

Japanese incised work imitated, salt glaze, 212

Jasper ware, definition of, 30; Adams, 259-263; Turner, 263-265; Wedgwood, 240-249; _solid_ and _dip_, definition of, 247

J. E. & S. as a mark, 477

Jervaulx Abbey, tiles from, 84

Jinkcuson, name on salt-glazed jug, 212

Jonson, Ben, quoted, Bellarmine jugs, 134

J. R. as a mark, Ridgway, 479

J. W. R. as a mark, Ridgway, 479

K

Keeling, A. and E., 281

Kilns, the various, description of, 48

L

L., Leeds mark, 289, 310

Lakin, 281; prices, 284

Lakin & Poole, 281 (lustre ware), 433; mark, 381; prices, 284

Landré, Mrs., figure designer (Wedgwood), 240

Late Staffordshire ware, 443-483; marks, 473

Lambeth delft, =106-113=; summary of, 67; prices, 129

Lancastrian Pottery, 466

Landscape subjects after Claude, in earthenware, 276

Lead-glaze, definition of, 29; early experiments, 174; improvements in, 232

Leeds ware, =287-301=; basket-work, 297; best period of, 290; decorated at Lowestoft, 301; decorated at Yarmouth, 378; figures, 76; figures, prices, 385; a fine collection of, 56; fraudulent, 63; marks, 289, 310; prices, 312

Leeds Pottery Co., 288

Leeds Pottery (lustre), 436

Lewes Priory, tiles from, 84

Lion as a mark, 289, 311

Littler, William, lead glaze, 232; salt glaze, 207, 208

Liverpool, fine collection of, 56; (_cream ware_), =402-404=; figures, 77; prices, 419; (_delft_), =118-125=; prices, 130; tiles, subjects of, 125

Lockett, J. and J., 281

Lockett, J., & Sons (lustre ware), 436

London as a mark, 350

Longton Hall, blue used on salt-glazed ware, 207

Lovers' teapots, 208

Lowesby Pottery, 400; prices, 419

Lowestoft, Leeds ware decorated at, 301

L. P. (Leeds), mark, 288

L. P., monogram, as a mark, 481

Lustre ware, =423-439=; definition of, 30; first use of lustre, 430; marks, 430, 433, 435, 436, 439; prices, 439; summary of, =77=, =78=; copper lustre, 435; Wilson, 269, 282; silver lustre as a decoration to figures, 377; silver or platinum, =429-436=; silver, J. Aynsley, 279; various classes of, 424

M

M. as a mark (Minton), 450

M. & Co. as a mark (Minton), 476

M. & B. as a mark (Minton & Boyle), 476

M. & N. as a mark (Mayer & Newbold), 281

Malling jug (Tudor earthenware), 130

Marbled ware, definition of, 30; summary of, 70

Marbling on early vases, 68

_Marks_ (see under special class of ware), their use and value, 30; used fraudulently, 64

Marseilles earthenware imitates Dresden models, 43

Martin, Maria, of Red Barn, in earthenware, 482

Mason (ironstone china), 450; marks, 477; prices, 482

Mason, Miles, 349

Masonic plates (J. Aynsley), 348

Mary, Queen, portrait of, on jug, 137

Mayer, E., lustre, 430; prices, 284

Mayer & Newbold, 281; lustre ware, 436

Mayer, E., & Son, 281

Mayer, E. J., 281

Mayer, Elijah, 151, 269, 274; glazed black ware, 305

Mayer & Elliott, 281

Mediæval tiles, 83; summary of, 66

Meigh, 79

Meigh, C., & Sons, 457; lustre ware, 436

Meir, F., 281

Meir, John, 66

Meissen, imitation of Wedgwood by, 247

Metal imitated: Wedgwood, silver lustre, 229

Metal designs copied at Leeds, 294

Metal dies used by Elers, 195

Metal stamps, used for ornament in earthenware, 142

Metal workers, influence of, upon pottery: Elers, 195; Wedgwood, 196

Metropolitan slip ware, 95

Meyer, Joseph (mark), 275

Middlesbrough Pottery (mark), 350

Milton, bust of (R. Wood), 369; prices, 386

Minton, 79; marks, 476; prices, 482; (Thomas), 330, 348, 449; (Herbert), 449

Modern, earthenware when considered, 30

Modern silver lustre teapots, 423

Modern spirit, the beginning of the, 249

Monglott, Swiss artist (Adams), 260

Moore & Co. (Sunderland), 306

Morley (Nottingham) (seventeenth century), 69

Morley, Charles (Nottingham), 151

Morley, John (of Nottingham), 146

Morr & Smith, 281

Mortlock as a mark, 305, 311

Moseley, 281

M. P. Co. as a mark (Middlesbro'), 350

Museums where earthenware is exhibited, 56

Musicians, earthenware figures of, 381

Myatt, 281

N

Namur, stoneware of, 137

Napoleon, bust of, 374; caricatures of 152, 337; in lustre ware, 435; in stoneware, 465

Nash, Joseph, 66

National character in early Staffordshire ware, 160

National spirit in earthenware, 186

Nautical subjects in earthenware, 334

Neale & Co., figures, 370; marks, 266

Neale & Palmer marks, 266; prices, 283

Nelson jugs, 461

Newcastle lustre, 428; transfer-printing at, 330

Newcastle ware, =306-310=; prices, 313

New stone B B. (Minton), 476

Nineteenth-century commemorative ware, 457

Nineteenth-century developments, 78, 79

Niderviller earthenware imitates Dresden models, 43

Nottingham ware, early, 204; summary of, 69; prices, 155-156; stoneware, 151-152

O

Omar Khayyam quoted, 48

Opaque china, 79, 446; Haynes (Swansea), 399

Opie, Amelia, quoted, 461

"Orator Hunt" on late earthenware, 458

Oriental decoration adopted in Staffordshire, 273; designs at Leeds, 298; styles imitated (Leeds), 290

"Oriental ivory" as a mark (Powell & Bishop), 480

Oven, description of, 31, 48, 51

Over-glaze, definition of, 29; printing, description of, 325

P

P as a mark (Lancastrian Pottery), 481

Palmer, Henry, 265; marks, 266; prices, 283

P & B as a mark (Powell & Bishop), 480

P. & U. (Poole & Unwin), lustre ware, 436

Pardoe, Thomas, painter (Swansea), 399

Parson and Clerk group, 365

Paste, definition of, 31

P. B. & Co. as a mark (Pindar, Bourne & Co.), 477

Pearl ware (Wedgwood), 238

Peasant pottery of nineteenth century, 381

"Pelican in her Piety" (Toft dish), 95

Pennington (Liverpool), 403; marks, 417

Pharmacy jars, 106; (Lambeth), 113

Phillips, J. (Hylton Pottery), 306

Phillips (Longport), 281

Phoenix as a mark (Clementson), 280

Pilkington, Messrs., 466

Plagiarists of Wedgwood, 257, 265

Plaster of Paris moulds first introduced, 207

Political events chronicled in earthenware, 333

Poole & Unwin (lustre ware), 436

Porcelain colours imitated in earthenware, 273

Porcelain copied in earthenware, 43; made by earthenware potters (Caughley), 407; (Minton), 449; (Rockingham), 305; (Staffordshire), 444; (Swansea), 399

Portland Vase, 249

Porto Bello Bowl, the, 147

Portraits in earthenware: Bonaparte, 337, 435, 465; Brougham, 465; Cobbett, 465; Duke of York, 321; Grey, 465; James II., _bust_, 141; King of Prussia, 318; Nelson, 461; Prince Rupert, _bust_, 138; Rousseau, _bust_, 240; Washington, 338; Wesley, _bust_, 374; William III., 137; Young Pretender (salt-glaze), 215

Posset-pot inscribed "Wm. Simpson, 1685," 95

Potter's wheel, the, 48

Pountney & Allies (Bristol), 407

Pountney & Co. (Bristol), 407

Powell & Bishop (mark), 480

Powell & Sons, Messrs. James, 231

Pratt, 281

Prices, hints concerning, 59; dealers', 59

Prince of Wales's Feathers as a mark, 480

Prince Rupert, Dwight bust of, 138

Printed ware, =317-350=

Printing on earthenware, at Leeds, 293; over-glaze, description of, 325; under-glaze, description of, 326

Prussia, King of, mugs and jugs (Worcester), 318

Puritan influence on earthenware, 95

Q

Queen's ware (Wedgwood), 232

Queen's ware, its decoration, 238, 239

Quin as _Falstaff_, figure of, 374

R

Railway mugs, 462

Railway, Liverpool and Manchester, inscription on jug, 462

Raren, stoneware of, 137

Rathbone, Mr. Frederic (Wedgwood), 24, 25, 227

R. B. & S., Leeds mark, 289, 310

Reasons for collecting, 35

Red Barn murder, in earthenware, 482

Redrich & Jones, patent of, 170

Red ware, Wedgwood, 230

Reform days, commemorative ware, 465

Reid, W. & Co., Liverpool, 403; marks, 417

Renaissance of Staffordshire, 165

Resist pattern, definition of, 31

"Resist" silver lustre, how made, 434

Rhodes, salt-glaze enameller, Leeds, 211

Ridgway, 79; prices, 483

Ridgway, J. & W., 349; marks, 479

Ridgway, Morley, Wear & Co., 454; mark, 349

Riley, 79, 281; semi-china, 449

Riley, J. & R., 349

Ring, Joseph, Bristol, 404

R. M. W. & Co. as a mark, 349

Robinson, salt-glaze enameller (Leeds), 211

Rockingham, 302; prices, 313

Rogers, 281

Rogers, John, & Son (mark), 477

Rous, Thomas, 138

Rousseau, bust of, 240

Royal portraits, on delft, 109; on stoneware, 137; on Toft ware, 91; bust of James II., 141; King of Prussia, 211, 318; bust of Prince Rupert, 138; Duke of York, 321

Ruskin Pottery, mark, 481

S

S as a mark, 408, 418

"Sack" bottles, 106; fraudulent, 60, 110

Sadler & Green, 122

Sadler Liverpool tiles, signature of, 121

Saggers, definition of, 31; description of, 48

St. Alban's Abbey, tiles from, 84

St. Anthony's as a mark, 306

Salopian earthenware, 407; prices, 419

Salopian, earthenware figures, 77

Salt, 281

Salt, Ralph, figures of, 378; School of, figures, 76

Salt-glaze, definition of, 29; description of process, 199

Salt-glazed ware, =195-217=; classes of, 207; coloured, fraudulent, 60; defects of, 222; figures, 74, 181; prices, 216; rivalry with early Staffordshire, 178; summary of, 69

S. & G. (mark), Isleworth, 411, 418

Satire, earthenware the medium for political, 333

S. B. & S. (mark), Leeds ware, 289, 311

Scieux earthenware imitates Dresden models, 43

Scott Brothers (Sunderland), 306

"Scratched blue," salt glaze, 208

Semi-china, definition of, 31

Semi-porcelain, 446; definition of, 31

Sewell, 306

Sewells & Donkin, 306

Sèvres, imitation of Wedgwood by, 247

Shakespeare, quoted (potter's wheel), 48; willow pattern, 343

Shaw (Liverpool), 403

Shaw, Ralph, 148, 207

Shaw, Robert, 66

Shell forms used in earthenware, 238

Ships as decoration on delft (Liverpool), 67

Shore & Goulding, 411

Shore, Joseph, 411

Shorthose, 281

Shorthose & Co., 348

Shorthose & Heath, 282

Siegburg, stoneware of, 137

Silver designs, in earthenware, 195, 196, 229; copied at Leeds, 294; imitated (Hollins), 275

Silversmith, influence of, upon earthenware (Elers), 195; (Wedgwood), 196

Silver lustre as a decoration to figures, 377

Silver lustre ware, =429-436=; J. Aynsley, 279; marked pieces, 430, 433; prices, 439; summary of, 78

Simpson, Ralph, 95

Simpson, William, 95; petition of, 137

Slip, definition of, 31, 47

Slip ware, 87; prices, 97; summary of, 66

Sneyd, 282

Solid agate ware, 170; Wedgwood, 228; definition of, 27

"Solid" jasper, definition of, 247

Solon, Mr., quoted (mediæval tiles), 84

Spode, Josiah (the first), 269, 330, 339; Josiah (_the second_), 270, 348, 443; marks, 474; prices, 481

Sporting subjects in earthenware, 269, 270, 338

"Spur" marks, 298; definition of, 31

Squirrel pattern teapots, 212

Staffordshire delft, prices, 129; early ware, =161-192=; figures, =357-389=; figures, best period of, 362; figures, decadent period of, 378; potters ahead of the Continent, 177; potters confined to earthenware, 237; pottery, its renaissance, 165; the transfer-printers of, 329

Steam carriages, on earthenware, 462

Steel, 282

Steele, David, painter, 232

Stevenson, A., 348

Stevenson, W., 282

Stockton-on-Tees potteries, 306

Stone china, 79; marks, 474-477

Stoneware, =133-156=; definition of, 32, 40; Lambeth (nineteenth century), 465; prices, 152; summary of, =68-70=

Stothard, Thomas, 248

Stuart, stump work pictures, similarity to Toft ware, 91

Stubbs, George, 248

Stubbs, Joseph (mark), 349

Sunderland School, figures of, 77

Sunderland ware, 306-310; lustre, 428; Moore & Co., 306; prices, 313; transfer-printing, 330

Surface agate ware, 169; definition of, 27; Wedgwood, 228

Swansea, =395-400=; figures, 77; marks, 415; prices, 418; transfer-printing at, 330

Syntax, Dr., tour of (on earthenware), 280

T

=Tables=, chief events of eighteenth century, 158; dividing earthenware into classes, 55

Tabor, William, 66

Tassie, James, 248

Templeton, Lady, 248

Tennyson, quoted, 258

Thrower, the, 48

Thursfield, Maurice, 306

Tiles, Bristol delft painted, 67, 114; printed, 121; mediæval, 83; transfer-printed (Liverpool delft), 67

Titles of Puritan books, strange, 95

Toby, jugs, 366, 374; fraudulent, 63

Toft, John, name on teapot, 212

Toft, Thomas, Toft, Ralph, 66

Toft, ware, =88-95=; prices, 97; summary of, 66

Tomlinson & Co., 309

Tortoiseshell ware, 170, 177; summary of, 70; Castleford, 302; Castleford (D. D. & Co.), 174; Liverpool, 174

Transfer-printed ware, =317-350=; marks, =347-350=; prices, 350

Transfer-printers, the Staffordshire, 329

Transfer-printing, definition of, 32; description of, 322; in outline, 347; its adoption in Staffordshire, 321; at Battersea, 318; at Caughley, 318; at Derby 318; at Leeds, 293; at Liverpool, 318; at Newcastle, 330; in Staffordshire, 329; at Sunderland, 330; at Swansea, 330, 396; at Worcester, 318

Triangle as a mark (Powell & Bishop), 480

Tudor jugs, 126; prices, 130

Turner, John (Lane End), 235, =263-265=, 330; marks, 348; prices, 283

Turner, Thomas (of Caughley), 270, 329, 339; marks, 418

Turner, William and John, 348

Turnor, Ralph, 66

Twentieth century collector, the, 466

Twyford, early salt glaze, 204

U

Under-glaze, definition of, 29

Under-glaze printing, description of, 326

V

Van Hamme (Lambeth), 67; his patent (Delft), 106

Variegated ware, =169-174=; summary of, 70; "tesselated" style, 173; Wedgwood, 228

Vernon, Admiral, victory of Porto Bello, 334

Verse on earthenware, 334, 337

Vicar and Moses group, 362, 365; fraudulent, 63

Viellard & Cie (Bordeaux), 215

Voltaire, bust of, 240

Voyez, modeller, 265, 370

W

W as a mark (lustre ware), 435; (Myatt), 281

Wainwright & Co. (Leeds), 288, 310

Walton, 282; (John), figures by, 378

Walton School, figures of, 76

Warburton, 222, 232, 282

Warburton, Peter (lustre ware), 430, 435

Warburton, Britton & Co. (Leeds), 288

Washington, portraits of, 338

W & B as a mark (W. Brownfield), 478

W B as a mark, 478

W B & S as a mark, 478

Wedgwood, Aaron (lead glaze), 232

Wedgwood, Josiah, as a potter, 227; his views of Elers, 163; influence of, 249; gold lustre, 427; under-glaze blue, 330; Josiah _the second_, 348

Wedgwood, Ralph, 348

Wedgwood, Dr. Thomas, salt glaze, 207

Wedgwood ware, =221-254=; figures, 370; influence, the wane of the, 276; marks, 251-253; printed at Liverpool, 240; prices, 253, 254; school, 257; figures of, 75; old cream ware designs, revival of, 231

Wedgwood & Co. (of Burslem), 348

"Wedgwood & Co.," spurious mark, 309

"Welsh" ware (Isleworth), 411

Wesley, John, busts of, 374

Wheel, the potter's, 48

Whieldon (Thomas), =159-193=; prices, 187

Whieldon School, figures of, 75

Whieldon ware, definition of, 32; prices, 187-192

Whitefriars Glass Works, 231

Whitfield, George, busts of, 374

Wilcox, Mrs. (Etruscan ware), 248

Wilkie's pictures on earthenware, 280

William III., portrait of, on jug, 137

Willow pattern at Caughley, 329; at Leeds, 298; at Swansea, 396; Chinese original of, 339; where first made in England, 329; story of the, 340

Wilson, 282; (D. Wilson & Sons) marks, 269

Wilson, Robert (marks of), 266

Wincanton Delft, 125; summary of, 68

Wood (Aaron), salt-glazed basket-work, 212; salt glaze, 207

Wood, E., 282; prices, 284

Wood, Enoch, 373; mug, 186; (Turner jugs), 264; use of bone ash, 444

Wood, Enoch, & Sons, 282, 349

Wood & Caldwell, 282, 373; lustre, 430, 433

Wood and Caldwell School, figures of, 75

Wood family, the, Staffordshire figures, 362-370

Wood, Ralph, 362; prices, 284; variegated ware, 173

Wood School, figures of, 75

Worcester, transfer-printing at, 318

Workmen, trained, transferred to new factories (Liverpool), 403; (Minton), 330; (Shelton), 404; (under-glaze blue printing), 329

Worthington, Liverpool, 403

Wright, John, 66

Wrotham (Kent) ware, 87; prices, 97; summary of, 66

W. S. & Co. (William Smith & Co.), 309

Y

Yarmouth, Staffordshire figures decorated at, 378

Young, W. W., painter (Swansea), 399

UNWIN BROTHERS, LIMITED, THE GRESHAM PRESS, WOKING AND LONDON.

Transcriber's Notes

In the text version of this book, italic text is marked _italic_ and bold marked =bold=. The text also contains some single character pottery marks and these are represented as e.g. +C+

Blank facing pages to illustrations are included in this books page numbering system (although they are not marked). These page numbers are not shown in the html version of the text.

Minor punctuation errors and inconsistencies in spelling and hyphenation have been corrected.

p 488. Derby (earthenware), 408; (Pot Works mark, 349; changed to: Derby (earthenware), 408; (Pot Works) mark, 349;

p 496. ((under-glaze blue printing), 329 changed to: (under-glaze blue printing), 329

p 153. Raised medallion with crown and G.R. (Period of George I. changed to: Raised medallion with crown and G.R. (Period of George I.)

p 243. Added a closing quote to _à la Grecque_."

p 365. including bust of _John Wesley_ changed to: including a bust of _John Wesley_

p 395. Caughley or Salopian (1751-1775) Derby, changed to: Caughley or Salopian (1751-1775)--Derby,

End of Project Gutenberg's Chats on Old Earthenware, by Arthur Hayden