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+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #63771 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/63771)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Clay Industries, by John Randall
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: The Clay Industries
- including the Fictile & Ceramic Arts on the banks of the Severn
-
-
-Author: John Randall
-
-
-
-Release Date: November 15, 2020 [eBook #63771]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CLAY INDUSTRIES***
-
-
-Transcribed from the 1877 Salopian and West-Midland Office edition by
-David Price.
-
-
-
-
-
- THE
- CLAY INDUSTRIES
- INCLUDING THE
- FICTILE & CERAMIC ARTS
- ON THE
- BANKS OF THE SEVERN:
-
-
- WITH NOTICES OF THE
-
- Early Use of SHROPSHIRE CLAYS, the History of
- POTTERY, PORCELAIN, &c., in the District.
-
- BY
-
- JOHN RANDALL, F.G.S.,
-
- AUTHOR OF
-
- ‘The Severn Valley,’ ‘Old Sports and Sportsmen,’ ‘Life
- of Captain Webb,’ ‘John Wilkinson,’ &c.
-
- * * * * *
-
- MADELEY, SALOP:
-
- Printed and Published at the Salopian and West-Midland
- Office.
-
- 1877.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-DEDICATION.
-
-
- TO
- Alexander H. Brown, Esq., M.P.
-
-SIR,
-
-The following treatise on the “Clay Industries” of the Borough you
-represent may scarcely appear at first sight of that importance to
-warrant the usual form of a dedication, and I confess I cannot but wish,
-for present purposes, that its merits were more commensurate with the
-object. As a large number of your constituents however are engaged in
-these various branches of trade—in one of which you too have more than a
-general interest, and as I have been at some trouble to collect facts
-bearing upon their general history, the work itself may not be without
-some value.
-
-The motive which dictates the dedication will not, I think, be
-misconstrued, inasmuch as the prominent part I took more than nine years
-ago in introducing you to the constituency, as one likely to become a
-representative of the “Commercial Element” of the Borough, and the highly
-satisfactory way in which those predictions have been verified and
-fulfilled, as well as the very general regard and esteem all feel who
-have observed your public and private character, justify me in feeling a
-special pride in the result, and hereby making this public
-acknowledgement of services so faithfully and honourably rendered.
-
-I have the honour to remain,
-
-Dear Sir,
-
- yours faithfully,
-
- JOHN RANDALL.
-
-MADELEY, JAN. 1ST, 1877.
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION.
-
-
-THE Borough of Wenlock comprises places not only rich in historic
-interest but important also as centres of manufacturing industry; and
-none more so than those grouped within a mile or two of the Iron-bridge,
-itself a work of world-wide fame. “Broseley Pipes” and “Broseley
-Bricks,”—the latter including all similar productions emanating from
-Coalbrookdale, the Woodlands, Lady-Wood, Coleford, &c.—possess
-acknowledged merits which create for them a constant demand, whilst in
-higher branches of the art, where similar natural and other clays are
-used, Messrs. Maw, Craven, Dunnill, and Co., and Bathurst, find a still
-more extensive market for their goods.
-
-From time immemorial the merits of these clays seem to have been known
-and recognised; if not from Early British, at any rate from the period
-when the armies of imperial Rome penetrated the Valley of the Severn,
-through intermediate ages, these beds of clay which give employment to
-thousands seem to have been used for some purpose or other, either for
-articles of ornament or of use. At Caersws, near Llandinam, on the left
-bank of the Severn, we have seen Roman bricks apparently with the
-initials of the workmen’s names upon them; whilst of pottery, cart loads
-have been found there and at Wroxeter, including a number of jars,
-bottles, urns, lamps, vases, &c., with hunting and other subjects. Some
-of the mortars, colanders, dishes, and similar kitchen utensils, are of
-coarse white clay, similar to that now used at Broseley. It is therefore
-evident from modern excavations that fifteen hundred years ago the value
-of these clays was known to the brick-makers and potters introduced by
-that enterprising people. Specimens of Norman and of later periods are
-rare, but certain evidences concur to make it clear that not only fifteen
-hundred years ago was the worth of these clays established, but that from
-that period to the present they have been used in one way or another.
-
-The subject is therefore one of historical as well as of industrial
-interest, although those at present engaged in the various branches of
-manufacture may be too absorbed in turning the material to account to
-pause to note the stages the trades in which they are engaged have gone
-through.
-
-It was the value of these clays which led to the establishment of works
-for the manufacture of porcelain at Caughley, Jackfield, Coalport, and
-Madeley, historical notices of which works will be found in the following
-pages, which are for the most part a reprint of articles that have
-appeared in the “Salopian and West-Midland Magazine.”
-
-
-
-
-NATIVE CLAYS:
-OR THOSE USED FOR
-BRICKS & TILES, TESSELATED TILES,
-POTTERY, &c.
-
-
-CLAY, as commonly understood, means earth of sufficient ductility to
-allow of its being kneaded by the hand into useful shapes or forms, and
-ranks as a _raw_ material, or one not worked up or prepared for use.
-Some clays are soft, others are indurated, or hard and rocky: but all
-have, nevertheless, been in one sense prepared by poundings, washings,
-and mixings, carried on by Nature on a much larger scale than that on
-which they are now fitted for use. They differ in quality, in degree of
-firmness, and in colour, and show certain relationships by which it is
-clear that they are derived from sand, just as sand is derived from a
-hardy race of pebbles, which in turn bear a close relationship to rocks,
-from which undoubtedly they are also derived. Surface clays, used for
-making inferior bricks and tiles, whose earthy odour gives evidence of
-alumina, are often derived from red sandstone rocks, which have been
-ground down by machinery of waves or streams; whilst the deeper
-coal-measure clunches, used for firebricks and pottery, were originally
-the sediment thrown by rivers at their embouchures into inland lakes or
-seas. Common red clays, deriving their colour from iron, have many
-impurities, and contain a large percentage of alumina. Fire-clays are
-nearly free from iron, and contain a large amount of silica, whilst
-china-clay, or _kaolin_, contains felspar, sometimes with the impurities
-of soda and potash.
-
-Let us first take brick and tile Clays. Of the three substances
-expressed by the three words of four letters—clay, coal, and gold, we
-question whether the first does not rank highest in importance. The
-latter may be the most coveted, but the former, we imagine, contributes
-most to the conveniences and comforts of mankind. It is in one form or
-another universally attainable. There is a great difference in its
-qualities; and when it is remembered that a porous brick made from bad
-clay will hold nearly a quart of water, the advantage of good clays
-producing good bricks which will protect health and property from the
-injurious effects of a fickle climate, becomes apparent. In addition to
-ordinary clays used for the manufacture of building materials, we have
-throughout the whole coalfields of Shropshire and Staffordshire superior
-fire-clays, which occur in a tough indurated state, and are known by the
-familiar name of clunches. They possess but a small portion of iron,
-which gives a red colour to ordinary clays, at the same time that they
-are distinguished by an almost entire absence of lime and alkalies; yet
-contain, on the other hand, that proportion of silica and alumina which
-although they cannot be melted by the strongest heat, form ingredients
-which during the process of burning combine to form an artificial stone
-capable of sustaining great heat. The following is an analysis of one of
-these fire-clays:—
-
-Silica 61.91
-Alumina 21.73
-Protoxide of Iron 4.73
-Lime 0.09
-Magnesia 0.59
-Potash 3.16
-Soda 0.25
-Chloride of sodium 0.08
-Organic matter 0.70
-Water 6.73
- 99.97
-
-These shales or clunches, now indurated, were originally the soft soils
-from which the roots of plants of the coal-measure period drew their
-nourishment; and they still retain the impression of such roots in great
-abundance, as any one may satisfy himself who takes a piece in his hand
-to examine it. The vegetable matter derived from roots, and from the
-plants themselves, give them a dark colour; but this burns away in the
-firing, and the bricks come out of the kiln nearly a pure white. It is
-almost invariably found that where the vegetation of a seam of coal grew
-on the spot, and was not transported, as was the case in some instances,
-that one of these underclays is to be found still retaining very
-beautiful casts of the roots of plants, and not unfrequently the seeds as
-well as the plants themselves that grew above them. As fire-clays, they
-are little if at all inferior to the famous Stourbridge clays, and they
-supply an invaluable material for crucibles, for bricks for the interior
-of our blast and puddling furnaces, for the kilns of our potteries, and
-for various other purposes where intense heat is required.
-
-With regard to clays in general, and the art of working in them, it may
-be remarked that archæologists have told us little. They have divided
-the past history of the race into the stone, bronze, and iron periods,
-but have told us nothing of the age of clay, or of an art which we
-venture to say was one of the oldest invented by man. Clay and
-clay-workers are found everywhere; and the material is one of the most
-abundant provided by Nature. The first man would find it soft, yielding,
-and ready to his hands, with the impressions of birds and beasts,
-suggestive of the use to which it might be put, and the act of moulding
-it into form would be as natural as that of plucking fruit from a tree,
-or that of taking up a stone to strike a harder blow than the hand could
-give. Hardening it in the sun or baking it in a wood fire would be
-equally simple; whilst the act of fashioning a shapeless mass into an
-enduring form would yield so much pleasure that it would be repeated.
-That the art is pre-historic, and began before the race commenced a
-record of its doings, is evident from specimens which accompany the
-remains of men of whose tribe and nation we know nothing. Living beings
-stronger than man had been masters of the globe before he came, and
-ignobly perished, leaving but the impressions of their bones to tell of
-their existence; but man brought with him a new element by which to
-subjugate and subdue the materials he saw around him to his use, and left
-behind him more enduring monuments.
-
-Other enduring materials pressed into the service of architects of
-ancient and modern times were once as incoherent a mass of atoms, and as
-unshapable as these clays, and were either earths, clays, or sands, which
-Nature by the processes of kneading, pressing, and baking, in her great
-laboratory, converted into stone. We find them to some extent ready
-shaped to hand in the quarry, and we cut them into cubes or blocks, and
-pile them up in buildings, according to the humour or taste of the time.
-Bricks are artificial stones, and in making them we follow the example
-Nature set us only that we cut the plastic material first of all to the
-size we desire it, then convert it into stone by heat; and this
-artificial stone, we venture to say, for durability and beauty, is equal
-even to Nature’s own production, and quite as suggestive to the mind.
-Nature’s finished material may be deemed more suitable for churches; but
-artificial stone, fashioned into shape by man, is quite as appropriate
-for a dwelling in which the highest social sanctities gather. Indeed the
-art of using artificial stone appears to have been roused from the torpor
-into which it had fallen since Roman and Flemish authorities set such
-good examples. People had been so long accustomed to see brickwork used
-only for inferior houses, and stone for buildings of greater pretensions
-that, till recently, English bricks have scarcely had justice done them.
-
-The antiquity of brickmaking is so well-known that it is scarcely
-necessary to allude to it. It will suffice to remind the reader of the
-tower of Babel, built about 400 years after the period assigned to the
-flood. That bricks were made in Egypt at an early period of her history
-is well known; and that this same people had faith in their durability is
-clear from the fact that they impressed them with hieroglyphics, or
-historical records, transmitting to us the names of their kings. Mr.
-Smith of the British Museum, has brought home clay cylinders which the
-Assyrians used for writing upon. Again, the way in which Jewish writers
-speak of pots and potters, comparing humanity to lumps of clay fashioned
-into vessels of honour and dishonour, and the silly and wicked portion of
-humanity to potsherds, good for nothing but to be cast upon the highway,
-shows that they drew much of their philosophy from the art. With them,
-as with other nations of antiquity, the art of working in clay ranked
-high. Potters of the tribe of Judah “dwelt with the king.” And one very
-noticeable feature is the fact that the same simple means are still
-employed to effect the same object; for illustrations in the catacombs of
-Thebes show that forty centuries ago clay was kneaded with the feet,
-turned upon a wheel, and baked in a circular oven, as at present. The
-praise of those who out of rude clay fashioned things of use and beauty,
-and impressed upon plastic materials the living thoughts that stirred
-men’s minds was loudly sung, whilst the more successful cultivators of
-the art were honoured with medals and statues, and their names
-transmitted by poets and historians to posterity. The Greeks and Romans
-gave a dignity to the art by raising it to a level with that of
-sculpture. A Corinthian potter, Pliny tells us, was in his day regarded
-as the first who contrived making likenesses in clay by pressing the
-material up to the outlines his daughter had drawn of her lover’s shadow
-on the wall and placing it with other pottery to be hardened in the fire.
-Other authors ascribe to the art a higher antiquity and speak of it as
-the parent of sculpture. The estimation in which it was held is shown by
-the fact that exhibitions of the best works in clay were frequently held
-in Athens; and amongst the ruins of that city statues of clay have been
-found, some in groups, representing Grecian Mythology; and some of large
-size retaining portions of the paint with which they were coloured on the
-eyes and eyebrows. In the Townley Gallery of the British Museum, No. 38
-is a statue of a Muse, three feet eleven inches high; and also a
-terra-cotta statue of a Muse resting her left arm upon a pile of writing
-tablets, which are placed upon a square column, but the head is gone.
-The former represents Orania, the latter Calliop, whose office it was to
-note down the worthy actions of the living, as it was that of Clio’s to
-celebrate those of departed heroes.
-
-Celts, Etruscans, and Chinese made early and great advances in the art of
-using clay: the latter had even an imperial porcelain work at
-King-te-Ching, a hundred and eighty-four years Before Christ, and thirty
-years B.C. they introduced the same art into Japan.
-
-With regard to bricks and tiles we know that among Roman and mediæval
-builders bricks made of clay were held in high estimation. The former
-enterprising people having penetrated into our valleys and excavated our
-hill sides in search of lead and iron were not likely to neglect the
-clays with which the ore for the latter was associated; and evidences of
-the extent to which they worked them on the banks of rivers, where such
-seams were exposed, particularly on the banks of those flowing through
-the great centres of their occupation, confirms this view. Their armies
-were accompanied by men learned in the art; and in the relics dug up at
-Malmesbury, Salisbury, Romsey, Malvern, and Uriconium, modern workers in
-clay may learn much of the early history of their craft. The still
-upstanding walls at Wroxeter, with string courses of tiles, and the
-numerous specimens of bricks, tesseræ, and pottery in different coloured
-clays, brought to light by excavations within its shadow, are interesting
-from the fact that some are supposed to have been manufactured from clays
-still in use in the neighbourhood.
-
-At Caersws, a little village on the banks of the Severn, between
-Llandinam and Newtown, well made bricks, both of composite and simple
-clay, may be seen stamped with Roman letters, probably the initials of
-workmen’s names; and, as a test of the durability of both, it may be
-remarked that after having done duty in buildings in which the Roman
-masons placed them, they have been rebuilt by British workmen into the
-chimneys of the village. These, of course were burnt; but, favoured by
-the extreme dryness and heat of their own climate, the Romans, like the
-Egyptians, used clay mixed with chopped straw, to assist the tenacity of
-their bricks, which, without being at all artificially heated, have
-lasted thousands of years. The material of which Roman bricks in this
-country were formed was usually a strong clay, such as brickmakers call
-tile-clay; well tempered, well pressed, and well burnt, producing a heavy
-tough brick, indefinitely durable, and of a good deep-red colour.
-
-Roofing tiles have been made in a similar way to bricks, one would
-imagine, looking at the specimens found at Wroxeter and other places from
-the time of Roman occupation down to the present. They are found in
-double layers, forming slightly projecting string-courses in the
-buildings, but larger and thicker than ours; some of those dug up at
-Wroxeter being 17 inches by 12, and 4 inches thick, whilst some are 21
-inches square. One of these larger ones has the impression of the foot
-of an ox, evidently received whilst in the process of drying. Very many
-interesting specimens of bricks, tiles, and pottery are found here, and
-the art of working up the clays of the district has no doubt been
-practised from that time to the present.
-
-Formerly clays were allowed to lie during the winter to weather as it is
-called; and a statute now obsolete required, under a penalty, that bricks
-should not be made unless the clay for making them had been turned over
-at intervals, three times at least before the 1st of March. But
-brickmakers now, not having patience to wait for the action of the
-weather, have invented machinery to do the work, and the clay is taken
-direct from the pit to be crushed by iron rollers, and conveyed by coarse
-canvas screens to the pug-mill. This is an upright cylinder, with a
-revolving vertical shaft, fitted up with horizontal knives following each
-other at an angle so as to cut, amalgamate, temper the material, and fit
-it for use. The process of forming the brick itself requires more tact
-than the reader would imagine, as the yielding clay has to be thrown into
-the mould so that every part shall be filled up with a body of equal
-consistency. To cause the clay to leave the mould, the latter is each
-time dipped into water, in which case the process is called
-slop-moulding, or is sprinkled over with sand or coke-dust; and when so
-made the brick is placed lengthways with others on smooth flats, half an
-inch or an inch apart and allowed to dry. The best kind of bricks are
-subjected to considerable pressure in the mould by means of a machine,
-and a hollow is left inside for the mortar, to enable them to fit close
-in the joint. Ornamental bricks of elaborate design for architectural
-purposes require more delicate manipulation, and the clays for these
-undergo more careful preparation. Machines also are used which take the
-clay from the crushing-rollers, temper and thoroughly amalgamate it, and
-convert it into the finished article.
-
-The old methods of preparing clay for bricks and tiles, still practised
-by some firms, is probably the best where a good tough article is
-required: that is treading and hand-tempering by the workman, who kneads
-it with his naked feet, and “slaps” or “wedges” it by breaking off pieces
-and beating one against another. Machinery, however, is extensive used,
-and horizontal rollers are set so as to secure different degrees of
-fineness, in conduction with the pug-mill.
-
-Lime is a great enemy to good bricks, as small portions escape both
-rollers and pug-mill, and being converted into quicklime by burning, it
-slacks and bursts bricks subject to rains and frosts. Compare the sound,
-and hard durable bricks made here with those made near London, into which
-Cockneys knock their nails without troubling themselves to look for a
-joint, and say whether, with less freights, they might not be made to
-supersede the rubbish passing under the name of London bricks, which are
-soft, damp, and perishable, and some of which, like others of inferior
-quality, will hold from a pint to a quart of water. Stone, as shewn by
-the new Houses of Parliament, will not withstand the action of the
-corroding acid to be found in a London atmosphere; but good hard
-Shropshire bricks will, and for public buildings, to say nothing of
-ordinary domestic structures, they are invaluable.
-
-The Staffordshire blue bricks which of late years have come into such
-general use, particularly in buildings connected with railways, are made
-from a clay containing a large proportion of peroxide of iron, a clay
-which produces a red, a buff, or a blue brick according to the process of
-firing and the degree of heat it undergoes in the kiln; but it will in no
-case stand a terra-cotta heat, in consequence of the iron acting as a
-flux. But the great centres of the art of brick making are on the banks
-of the Severn. Clay and clay workers are to be found at Lilleshall,
-Lightmoor, Horsehay, and the Woodlands, where, as at Broseley, clays are
-found on the surface. Here, on the valley side the surface is
-honeycombed by burrowings after clay and coal. One of the most important
-beds of clay for making ordinary bricks and tiles is one 17 feet in
-thickness, worked in many places by shallow shafts, and levels driven
-into the hill sides, which when abandoned cause the surface to collapse,
-and the ground to crack, as if by an earthquake. A very pretty church,
-built a century since on the brow of the hill overlooking some of the
-brickfields, is now a complete wreck, in consequence of these burrowings
-after clay. The chancel is falling away from the body of the building,
-the walls are torn from the roof to the foundation, and the windows have
-fallen from their places, leaving the oak pews and handsome marble
-monuments a prey to the elements. Clays and coals are being pared away
-from around it as a mouse would pare a cheese. Of course the bishop
-cautions and threatens, but as long as his lordship declines to go into
-the mines these sappers and miners are safe; and to them must succumb not
-only the church, but the graveyard—
-
- “Where the rude forefathers of the hamlet sleep.”
-
-In conversation with the President of the Academy of Science at St.
-Petersburgh, who some years ago visited this district, and with other
-gentlemen distinguished in science and art, we have heard the highest
-admiration expressed of these clays of the Severn Valley. Indeed, the
-very handsome public structures—now that prejudice is giving way, and
-that improved and more artistic treatment of the material
-predominates—which we see in towns erected upon true architectural
-principles, and by professors of classical and constructive styles of
-decoration, are sufficient indications of the capability of the material
-in all its varieties for producing works of a very high order of merit,
-with a light and aerial effect not found in the old red brick, nor even
-in many of the stone erections, of former times.
-
-Besides bricks and tiles, these clays have been turned to account from
-very early periods in other ways, as for pottery, for instance, of
-different kinds.
-
-We have no reliable authority for fixing the date at which the art of
-potting was first practised in Shropshire, but it appears clear that the
-articles were of the simplest kind, being almost uniformly domestic:
-those in daily use, such as milk-pans, dishes, tea-pots, jugs, and mugs.
-The latter were substitutes for the drinking horns, which later
-improvements in the plastic and ceramic arts have driven out of use. We
-have an ancient specimen of one made at the Pitchyard, and a drawing of
-another made at Haybrook, well _potted_, and elegant in shape. The
-latter is the best manipulated, and probably it was from this
-circumstance that the latter work was called “The Mug-House.”
-
-In evidence adduced sometime since in an Election Scrutiny at Bewdley, a
-public-house referred to was called the “Mughouse,” which house is
-situated on the Severn, at a point where the bargemen, who formerly drew
-the vessels up the river instead of horses, were in the habit of stopping
-to get mugs of ale. “Tots” were made out of the same kind of clay, but
-smaller, and were used when the men drank in company; hence a person who
-had drank too much was supposed to have been with a convivial party, and
-was said to have been “totty,” a word often found in old works. Tots had
-no handles, and some of the old drinking cups, more particularly those of
-glass of Anglo Saxon make, were rounded at the bottom that they should
-not stand upright, and that a man may empty them at a draught,—the custom
-continuing till later times gave rise to our modern name of tumbler. The
-small tots had no handles; the mug had a “stouk,” as it is called,
-consisting of a single piece of clay, flattened and bent over into a
-loop. The ware was similar to the famous “Rockingham ware” made on the
-estate of Earl Fitzwilliam, near Wentworth.
-
-The discovery of a salt glaze took place in 1690, and the manufacture of
-that kind of ware must have commenced here soon after, as traces of works
-of the kind are abundant. This method consisted in throwing salt into
-the kiln when the ware had attained a great heat, holes being left in the
-clay boxes that contained it in order that the fumes may enter and
-vitrify the surface. Evidences of the manufacture of these old mugs and
-tots, together with milk-pans and washing-pans, having been made at an
-early period, are numerous; and the old seggars in which they were burnt
-often form walls of the oldest cottages in Benthall and Broseley Wood.
-
-A considerable number of old jars, mugs, and other articles, have from
-time to time been found in places and under circumstances sufficient to
-indicate great antiquity; as in mounds overgrown with trees, and in old
-pits which for time immemorial have not been worked. One large earthen
-jar, with “George Weld,” in light clay, was found in an old drain at
-Willey, and is now in the possession of Lord Forester. Mr. John
-Thursfield, who lived at Benthall hall, was at one time proprietor of
-these works.
-
-Three quarters of a century ago these works were carried on by Messrs.
-Bell & Lloyd; afterwards by Mr. John Lloyd, one of the best and most
-truly pious men we ever knew, who some time before his death transferred
-them to a nephew, Mr. E. Bathurst. His son succeeded him, and after a
-time sold them to the present proprietor, Mr. Allen, who to the ordinary
-red and yellow ware, which finds a ready sale in North and South Wales,
-has added articles of use and ornament in other ways, including forcing
-pots, garden vases, and various terra cotta articles.
-
-Of the Pitchyard works we know little, only that they stood where the
-late Mr. E. Southorn carried on his Pipe Works, and where we remember
-them in ruins more than fifty years ago; but the numerous seggars, now
-found in cottage garden walls, shew that they must have been continued
-for some considerable time.
-
-But, besides the manufacture of bricks, tiles, and pottery, these clays
-have been raised to a trade within the past few years in this district
-which is every day increasing, and which is capable of much further
-expansion: we refer now to the important department of encaustic or
-inlaid tiles and mosaics. The art of producing tiles of this description
-is only recently revived in this country, and is one which in point of
-antiquity is not to be compared with its sister branches. The first
-attempt, so far as we are aware, to revive the art in Shropshire, was at
-Jackfield; but the first designs were crude, quaint, and spiritless, and
-altogether wanting in those nicer distinctions and qualities which, not
-being perceived by the mind of the producer, could not be wrought by the
-hand. In this as in many other branches of fictile art _insight_ into
-the principles as well as eyesight is required, and the mistake—as in
-many other instances—was committed of attempting something which, with
-the expenditure of thought and time, might catch the uneducated eye—the
-object being to produce _quantity_ rather than _quality_. But the call
-made upon the art by the enlightened demands of the age soon gave a
-wonderful impetus to the improvement, and men of educated artistic
-taste—like the Mintons and the Maws—soon called to their aid the
-assistance of the greatest genius and the highest designing talent at
-command; at the same time that they directed their efforts to definite
-points in which utility might be made the instrument of beauty, and by
-which originality and intelligible design might be made to rise out of
-the most common-place wants. But although the modern manufacture of
-geometric and encaustic tiles is recent, it already far surpasses the
-ancients in variety and arrangement, in geometric patterns, and in beauty
-of design in encaustics as well as in mechanical finish; although it may
-be doubted whether the same breadth of general effect is studied as in
-many ancient examples. Mintons, of Stoke, Maw and Co., of Benthall,
-Hargraves and Craven, of Jackfield, and Mr. Bathurst, of Broseley, have
-each produced beautiful encaustic tiles for pavements—both for
-ecclesiastical and domestic use; and there is yet a large field for
-development of the use of similar tiles to colour and enrich the details
-of our street architecture, as well as in that of more elaborate and
-important structures.
-
-The Coalbrookdale Co., have recently manufactured some admirable
-terra-cotta entablatures, with historical subjects for costly buildings
-in the metropolis. The erection of the Literary and Scientific
-Institution also, of different coloured clays shews their adaptation to
-works of great architectural beauty.
-
-
-
-
-MAW AND CO’S TESSELATED, MOSAIC, AND MAJOLICA WORKS.
-
-
-It was the excellency of the Broseley and Benthall clays, above referred
-to, which attracted the Messrs. Maw to the spot and led them to remove
-from Worcester, to where they had been in the habit, first of all, of
-having them conveyed by barges on the river, to the present site of their
-works, fashioned out of the old Benthall Iron Works, carried on a century
-ago by Mr. Harries, then owner of the Benthall estate. Notwithstanding
-the additions made by them, the trade has so wonderfully developed itself
-that after building upon or in some way occupying every inch of ground,
-they are cramped for room, and have purchased a piece of ground at the
-Tuckies on which they are about to erect more commodious premises.
-
-In addition to those classical and other adjuncts of architectural
-comfort and embellishment, embracing encaustic tiles—the reproduction of
-an art limited in mediæval times to church decoration, but now having a
-much more extended application, and the manufacture of tesseræ, used in
-the construction of geometrical mosaic pavements, similar in character to
-those found in the mediæval buildings of Italy, also moresque mosaics,
-like those occurring in Roman remains in this country and on the
-continent, they now manufacture a superior majolica, and faience of great
-purity, in both of which departments they have recently received first
-class medals at the Philadelphia exhibition. The accompanying engraving
-will convey an idea of the adaptation of faience to articles of domestic
-utility.
-
- [Picture: The adaptation of faience to a fireplace]
-
-
-
-
-JACKFIELD POTTERY AND PORCELAIN.
-
-
-Older even than the Haybrook Mug House are the Pot Works of Jackfield,
-which, according to the parish register of Stoke-upon-Trent, quoted by
-Mr. Jewitt and Mr. Chaffers, supplied a race of potters to that great
-centre of early pot-making in the year 1560. Excavations made too, some
-years ago, brought to light on a spot near which the present works of
-Craven, Dunnill & Co., now stand, an oven, or kiln, with unbaked ware,
-which appeared to have been buried by a land-slip; and in an old pit,
-which it was said had not been opened for two centuries, a brown mug was
-discovered, which had upon it the date 1634. If Jackfield supplied early
-potters for Stoke, Stoke sent pot masters to Jackfield. One of these was
-Mr. Richard Thursfield, an ancestor of Greville T. Thursfield M.D., who
-took these works and carried them on in 1713. He was succeeded by his
-son John, of whom we have spoken as afterwards living at Benthall and
-carrying on works there. The late Richard Thursfield, Esq., had in his
-possession some good examples of Jackfield ware. Among them was a
-handsome jug, gilt, having on it, we believe, the name of one of the
-family.
-
-In 1772, or soon after, Mr. Simpson carried on the works; and he appears
-to have further improved the manufacture, for in addition to the “black
-decanters,” as his mugs were called, he made various articles of superior
-quality, which prior to the breaking out of the war with America found a
-ready sale there. The old mill turned by the waters of the Severn, where
-he ground his materials, has just been taken down.
-
-Mr. Blakeway afterwards carried on the works, and was joined by Mr. John
-Rose, upon leaving Caughley, and, after carrying them on a short time by
-himself, he removed them, as he did the Caughley Works, to Coalport, on
-the opposite bank of the river.
-
-The site of the old pottery was on the ground which is now occupied by
-the Jackfield Encaustic Tile Works, the clays of which are specially
-adapted for geometrical and encaustic tiles; and such tiles have been
-made here for a number of years; but since the old works, came into the
-possession of the present firm of Messrs. Craven, Dunnill and Co., great
-changes have taken place. The firm took a lease of about four acres of
-ground, and adjoining the old works built a large and commodious
-manufactory, which has been in operation for nearly two years. They have
-since taken down all the buildings of the old works, and have erected on
-their site and joining up to the new works, large warehouses, show room,
-offices, and entrance lodge. The plan of the works is very complete, so
-as in every way to economise in the process of manufacture, and they are
-now among the most complete works of the kind.
-
-As shewn in the accompanying engraving, the buildings consist of four
-blocks, one detached and the others connected, each block accommodating a
-separate branch of the manufacture.
-
- [Picture: Craven Dunnill & Co.’s new works]
-
-In the detached block the raw materials are reduced to a state ready for
-the workman.
-
-The second block contains the damping places, where the clays are kept in
-a certain degree of moisture; pressers’ shops for the various colours of
-geometrical tiles, and the encaustic tile makers’ shops, with their
-stoves.
-
-The next block provides for the drying and firing of the goods and
-decorating shops.
-
-On the first floor are workshops employed for painting, printing and
-enamelling, or other decorative purposes.
-
-The fourth block provides for the sorting and stocking of goods and for
-packing them for despatch; also the offices and showroom.
-
-Near to the detached block first described a small gas-works has been
-erected, which supplies the whole of the buildings.
-
-
-
-
-CAUGHLEY.
-
-
-Like the works previously mentioned, those of Caughley were upon the
-outcrop of the coals and clays of the Shropshire coal-field. They were
-established about the middle of the 17th century, on the estate of Mr.
-Brown, who lived at Caughley Hall, and was an ancestor of T. Wylde Brown,
-Esq., of the Woodlands, near Bridgnorth. An opaque stone china appears
-to have been made there in the first instance.
-
-The works appear to have been carried on by Mr. Brown, in the first
-place, and then by Mr. Gallimore, a relative of Mr. Brown’s; and
-afterwards by M. Turner, who succeeded in producing an article of very
-superior merit, and one which will always hold a distinguished place in
-the history of the ceramic art. Mr. Turner was the son of the Rev.
-Richard Turner, D.D., rector of Cumberton, vicar of Emley Castle and
-Norton, and Chaplain to the Countess of Wigtown. Thomas his son, was
-born 1749, and married in 1783, Miss Dorothy Gallimore, a niece of Mr.
-Brown, of Caughley Hall. Mr. Turner was a gentleman of great taste, a
-good draughtsman, and an excellent engraver, having learned the latter
-art at Worcester, probably under Robert Hancock, some very fine examples
-of whose work are in the possession of Mr. Arthur Maw, of Severn House,
-who also has many very fine productions of Caughley at the best period of
-its existence. In 1780 Mr. Turner visited France, and brought back with
-him several skilled workmen, and an architect, whom he employed in the
-erection of a very handsome _chateau_, in the French style of
-architecture. The works were several years in progress, and were
-completed in 1775, as shewn by a newspaper paragraph of November 1st in
-that year, which, is as follows:—
-
- “The porcelain manufactory erected near Bridgnorth, in this county,
- is now quite completed, and the proprietors have received and
- supplied orders to a very large amount. Lately we saw some of their
- productions which in colour and fineness are truly elegant and
- beautiful, and have the bright and lively white of the so much
- extolled Oriental.”
-
-Printing on porcelain appears first to have been introduced by Dr. Wall
-at the Worcester works, a process soon after taken to Caughley by a
-person named Holdship, a former partner in the Worcester works, where it
-was practised as a great secret, with closed doors.
-
-Mr. Chaffers says:—
-
- “The excellence of Turner’s porcelain and the invention of the
- beautiful dark blue of the Caughley china, attributed to him, gained
- him great patronage. In 1780 he produced the celebrated “willow
- pattern,” which even at the present day is in great demand, and the
- “blue dragon,” another favourite pattern, and completed the first
- _blue printed table service_ made in England for Thomas Whitmore,
- Esq., of Apley Park, near Bridgnorth; the pattern was called
- _Nankin_, and was something similar to the Broseley tea service
- produced in 1782, all in porcelain. Mr. Thomas Minton, of Stoke,
- assisted in the completion of this service, being articled as an
- engraver there.
-
- “Messrs. Chamberlain of Worcester, until the end of 1790, had their
- porcelain in the white from Thomas Turner of Caughley. He at first
- mixed all the bodies himself, but afterwards instructed his sister
- how to do it; subsequently a man named Jones mixed for him.”
-
-The other works at Worcester, Grainger & Co., formerly, when first
-established, merely painted and finished ware manufactured at Caughley.
-The China so sent was marked with the letter “C.” for Caughley; sometimes
-“S.” for Salopian.
-
-Among the chief workmen were the following:—Dontil, painter; Muss and
-Silk, who afterwards attained great celebrity in London, as painters on
-enamel, were landscape painters. Thomas Fennell, and Edward Jones flower
-painters, Thomas Martin Randall, bird painter, Edward Randall, gold
-decorator, Adams, blue painter, De Vivy and Stephan, modellers.
-
-Perry, one of the workmen who was apprenticed to Mr. Turner, states that
-in 1797 they had four printing presses at Caughley, introduced by Davis;
-the patterns at that time and for years previously being birds and blue
-panels; that Turner had been an engraver at Worcester; that he recollects
-a slab on the front of one of the arches of the building at Caughley,
-stating the date of its foundation, 1772, which would be the time he
-succeeded Mr. Gallimore, and that it was not finished for some time
-after.
-
-In the Salopian Mag. we gave an engraving of the old works, from a view
-in the possession of Mr. Hubert Smith, the only lineal descendent of Mr.
-Turner; and also of a “puzzle jug,” now in the possession of Mr. E.
-Thursfield, of Bridgnorth. It is eight inches in height, and is formed
-of the usual body of these works. It is decorated with blue sprigs, and
-bears on its front the name, in an oval border, of
-
- John Geary
- Cleak of the
- Old Church
- Brosley
- 1789.
-
-On the bottom is written in blue “Mathew th v & 16,” though one would
-fail to see any allusion in the text here referred to either to the
-vessel or to its purpose.
-
-The first specimens of Caughley are but little removed from earthenware,
-but the material speedily improved, as did the manipulation or potting;
-the latter to an extent as regards shape and outline so much so as to
-render many of them superior to the same class of articles of the present
-day. Their excellence in this respect is so self-evident as still to
-render Caughley china a great favourite. Choice articles of this
-manufacture are carefully guarded by Shropshire families, with whom they
-have become heirlooms; they are carefully stored in corner cupboards and
-on kitchen shelves, where they were once kept in countenance by rows of
-shining pewter, and are only produced at christenings and weddings, and
-on such red-letter days and rare occasions. Every year will add to their
-value, to the veneration in which they are held; and at distant periods,
-and when compared even with the ordinary productions of our factories at
-the present day, they will serve to show how successful were the
-well-directed efforts at the Caughley Works to produce a porcelain which
-should take high rank and maintain it.
-
-The buildings of the old factory have been razed to the ground; the
-plough passes over where they stood, and a few pitchers turned up now and
-then are the only indications obtained of these interesting works. But a
-class of clever men were educated there; some of whom—as the late Herbert
-Minton’s father, John Rose, and others—have done much to raise the
-character of our English productions.
-
-
-
-
-COALPORT PORCELAIN WORKS.
-
-
-The first works at Coalport were we believe founded and carried on by
-William Reynolds, Thomas Rose, Robert Horton, and Robert Anstice; the
-former William Reynolds, being then Lord of the Manor. The buildings, or
-a good portion occupied by them are still standing.
-
-Mr. Thomas Rose, and Mr. John Rose, were sons of a respectable farmer
-living at Sweeney. The latter was a clerk under Mr. Turner, at Caughley,
-and left him to take the Jackfield works about the year, it is said,
-1780. Having carried them on for a few years, in conjunction with Mr.
-Blakeway, during which time he greatly improved the quality of the
-article manufactured there, he established the present Coalport works on
-the side of the canal, then recently opened, and opposite to those of
-Reynolds, Horton, Thomas Rose, and Robert Anstice. On Mr. Turner
-retiring from the Caughley works in 1799, Mr. Rose and the new company he
-had formed purchased them, and by means of increased capital shortly
-afterwards removed both plant and materials from Caughley and Jackfield
-to the more advantageous position they now occupy, on the banks of the
-canal and the Severn. Even the buildings were pulled down and the bricks
-and timber removed to the opposite side of the Severn, where they were
-used in constructing the cottages now standing opposite to the present
-Coalport Works.
-
-A staff of excellent work-people had been obtained from Caughley and
-Jackfield works combined, but an accident occurred on the night of the
-23rd of October in that year by the capsizing of the ferry, as the
-work-people were crossing the Severn, by which twenty-eight were drowned,
-some among them being the best hands employed at the works. It was a
-dark night, the boat was crowded, and the man at the helm, not having
-been accustomed to put the boat over allowed the vessel to swing round in
-the channel where, with a strong tide running, it was drawn under by the
-rope which went from the mast to a rock in the bed of the river. Some
-managed to scramble out on the Broseley side of the stream; but the
-following were lost, notwithstanding the efforts of those who rushed to
-the river side on hearing the despairing cries raised to save them. Jane
-Burns, Sarah Burns, Ann Burns, Mary Burgess, Elizabeth Fletcher, Mary
-Fletcher, Elizabeth Beard, Jane Boden, Elizabeth Ward, Sarah Bagnall,
-Sophia Banks, Mary Miles, Elizabeth Evans, Catherine Lowe, Jane Leigh,
-Charles Walker, George Lynn, James Farnworth, George Sheat, John Chell,
-Robert Lowe, William Beard, John Jones, Benjamin Gosnall, Benjamin Wyld,
-Richard Mountford, Joseph Poole, and another. The twenty-eight lost
-included some of the best artists; and an unfinished piece of work, left
-by Charles Walker but a few minutes before he lost his life, was till
-within a few years ago reverently kept in the warehouse as a memento of
-the unfortunate event.
-
-The event, as may be expected, created a great sensation at the time, and
-was thus commemorated, by Mr. Dyas, one of the Coalport workmen:
-
- Alas! Alas! the fated night
- Of cold October twenty third,
- In seventeen hundred ninety-nine;
- What cries, what lamentation heard,
- The hour nine, when from yon pile,
- Where fair porcelain takes her form,
- Where energy with genius joins,
- To robe her in those matchless charms,
- A wearied band of artists rose,
- Males and females, old and young,
- Their toil suspend, to seek repose,
- Their homes to gain, they bent along.
- Sabrina’s stream was near to pass,
- And she her frowning waves upraised,
- Her mist condensed to darksome haze
- Which mocked the light; no star appeared.
- Yon boat, which o’er her bosom rides,
- Enveloped in the heavy gloom,
- Convulsive stretch’d along her sides,
- To snatch the victims to their doom.
- Soon e’er on board their faltering feet
- A monster fell who grasped the helm,
- Hove from the shore the distressed crew,
- And so the dreadful overwhelm,
- Swift horror’s wings o’er spread the tides,
- They sink! they rise! they shriek! they cling!
- Again they sink; alarm soon flies,
- Along their shores dread clamours rise,
- But Oh, the bleakest night preventing
- Every means to save their breath,
- Helpless, hopeless, life despairing
- Twenty-eight sunk down in death.
- Alas small time for Heaven’s implorings,
- Quick sealed their everlasting state,
- Or, in misery, or in glory,
- The last tribunal will relate,
- Here fold, O muse thy feeble wings,
- Hope where thou canst, but not decide,
- Dare not approach those hidden things,
- With mercy, justice, these abide.
- Return with sympathetic breath,
- See yon distracted mother stands,
- Three daughters lost, to heaven she lifts
- Her streaming eyes and wringing hands,
- Hark! from those dells how deep the wailings,
- Fathers, Mothers, join their moans,
- Widows, orphans, friends and lovers,
- Swell the air with poignant groans;
- Recluse in grief, those worthy masters
- Silent drop the mournful tear.
- Distress pervades surrounding hamlets,
- Sorrow weeps to every ear,
- Sleepless sighings hail the morning,
- Morning brings no soothing ray.
-
-The author of these verses, Mr. Dyas, was a very clever carver on stone
-and on wood. He engraved the blocks for a work printed by Mr. Edmonds at
-Madeley, entitled “Alexander’s Expedition down the Hydaspes and the Indus
-to the Indian Ocean.” He was the author too of an invention world-wide
-in its benefits, that of the printers’ roller; an invention second only
-to the art of printing itself, and infinitely superior to thousands of
-others out of which vast fortunes have been made.
-
-In 1804 the company consisted of Cuthbert Johnson, William Clarke, John
-Wootton, and John Rose. In 1811 it was John Rose, William Clarke and
-Charles Maddison. In 1820 they bought the famous Swansea works and
-entered into an agreement with Messrs. Billingsley and Walker to make a
-superior kind of porcelain made by them, first at Nantgarw in
-Glamorganshire, and afterwards at the Cambrian Pottery, Swansea, in the
-same county. This was a pure soft paste porcelain, superior to any at
-present produced in the kingdom, and second only to the famous _pate
-tendre_ of Sevres at the very best period of its manufacture. This china
-was first made in 1813 by Billingsley, who went from Derby to Worcester,
-and from there to South Wales. He was an artist, and understood the
-manufacture in all its branches. He produced a fret body, by mixing the
-materials, firing them in order to blend them together, then reducing the
-vitrified substance into clay—a process which was carried on at Old
-Sevres during the reign of Louis XV.—and thereby produced an article fine
-in texture, beautifully transparent, and of a delicate waxy hue, very
-superior to the dingy blue tinge given to much of the best china of that
-day. Connoisseurs were at once attracted by it, and Mr. Mortlock went
-down and entered into an engagement to purchase all that Billingsley and
-his son-in-law could make. Mr. John Rose finding he had lost a customer,
-whilst orders he was wont to receive were going to South Wales, went
-over, bought the plant, moulds, and everything, and entered into an
-agreement with Walker and Billingsley for a period of seven years to make
-the same quality of china at Coalport. The process however was an
-expensive one, from the difficulty of working the clay, which wanted
-plasticity, and also from the loss in the burning, as being a soft body
-it was apt to melt or warp, and to go out of shape, if it had a little
-too much fire in the biscuit kiln. About that time, too, Mr. Ryan
-discovered a very pure felspar in the Middleton, one of the Briedden
-hills, the true _Kaolin_, to which the Chinese were indebted for the
-quality of their egg-shell and other first class china. The fret body
-was therefore abandoned, the _pate tendre_ for a _pate dure_, as the
-French say, and by adding pure felspar to the Cornish stone and clay
-which contains a large percentage, a good transparent body was obtained
-at a less cost than by using a _fret body_. About this time also the
-Society of Arts offered a prize to any one who should find a substitute
-for lead in the glaze, the deleterious effects of which told upon the
-dippers, and produced paralysis; and Mr. Rose by applying felspar to the
-glaze succeeded in obtaining it. He was awarded the Gold Medal of the
-Society; and from that time following, for some years, a badge was either
-attached to the ware or engraved upon it as follows:—“Coalport Felspar
-Porcelain, J. Rose & Co: the Gold Medal awarded May 30, 1820; Patronised
-by the Society of Arts.” The Devonports and other manufacturers competed
-for the prize.
-
-The felspar porcelain however never equalled the original Nantgarw fret
-body ware for purity and transparency, a white plate of which would at
-the present time fetch a couple of guineas. It cannot be said that any
-new element was introduced by using felspar, because the kaolin,
-contained in Cornish stone and clay, as discovered by Cookworthy in 1768,
-had been, and was now used at Plymouth, Derby, Worcester, Caughley, and
-Coalport; and by a judicious admixture of this and a free use of bone
-(phosphate of lime) a good serviceable china was produced. The former
-gave mellowness, and the latter whiteness, which approached in a degree
-the qualities of old and Oriental china. In fact Mr. Rose, who had the
-sole management of the works, spared neither pains nor expense in raising
-the character of the productions of the Coalport Works, which were now by
-far the largest porcelain works in the kingdom, if not in the world.
-Like Minton, he was a man of wonderful energy, being strong in body,
-having a clear head, a cool judgment, and gifted with remarkable
-perseverance.
-
-The works were now in a state of prosperity; warehouses were opened in
-Manchester, London, Sheffield, and Shrewsbury, and a large trade was
-being done with dealers all over the kingdom. There was plenty of
-employment, and a good understanding generally prevailed between masters
-and their work people. Both before and after the strike there were at
-Coalport, as at other works of the kind elsewhere, an intelligent class
-of men, among potters and painters, as well as in other departments.
-Painters, especially, had good opportunities for mental culture and
-obtaining information. Numbers worked together in a room, one sometimes
-reading for the benefit of the others, daily papers were taken,
-discussions were often raised, and in politics the sharp features of
-party were as defined as in the House of Commons itself. The rooms were
-nicely warmed, and a woman appointed to sweep up, to bring coals, to keep
-the tables clean, to wash up dishes, peel potatoes, and fetch water for
-those who, not living near, brought their meals with them. It is not
-surprising, therefore, that men, having such advantages, should sometimes
-rise to higher situations. Some became linguists, some schoolmasters,
-engineers, and contractors; one, breakfasting with a bishop, whose
-daughter he afterwards married, saw upon the table, some time since, a
-service painted by himself when a workman at Coalport. Some were
-singular characters: old Jocky Hill kept his hunter; John Crowther, a
-very amiable fellow, exceedingly good natured, and always ready to do a
-favour to any one who asked him, lived quite a recluse, studying algebra
-and mechanics. He has suggested many improvements in locomotives, steam
-paddles, breaks, &c., &c., and had the honour of submitting to the
-Government the plan of terminating annuities, by which money at that time
-was raised to carry on the war, and by which we have been saved the
-burden—so far—of a permanent debt; also of making other suggestions,
-which have been likewise adopted. He also invented a most ingenious
-almanack applicable to all time.
-
-Coalport men were usually great politicians; Hunt, Hethrington, Richard
-Carlile, Sir Francis Burdett, and Cobbett, had their disciples and
-admirers; and such was the eagerness to get the Register, with its
-familiar gridiron on the cover, that a man has been despatched to
-Birmingham for it from one of the rooms, his shopmates undertaking to do
-his work for him whilst he was away.
-
-The works themselves are ill designed and badly constructed, the greater
-portion of them having been put up at the latter end of the past and
-beginning of the present centuries, whilst other portions were added from
-time to time, with no regard to ventilation or other requirements of
-health. Consequently there are the most curious ins and outs, dropsical
-looking roofs, bulging walls, and drooping floors, which have to be
-propped underneath, to support half a century’s accumulations of china,
-accumulations amounting to hundreds and hundreds of tons in weight. In
-entering some of these unhealthy _ateliers_ and passages strangers have
-to look well to their craniums. Some work-rooms have very stifling
-atmospheres, charged with clay or flint; the biscuit room notably so. We
-have said that a good understanding prevailed generally between masters
-and workmen. There was one notable exception, the great “strike” as it
-was called, which occurred somewhere in November, 1833; a memorable event
-in the history of the works, so much so that in speaking of occurrences
-it is usual to the present time to ask in case of doubt if it happened
-before or subsequent to the strike. The men had their “Pitcher,” a well
-conducted sick society; and a “Travelling Society,” for assisting those
-in search of employment, with branches in all centres of the trade.
-Trades unions, however, were just then coming to the front. The
-Combination Laws had been repealed eleven years previously; otherwise,
-such was the temper of the Shropshire magistrates, and the feeling
-generally in relation to the trades unions, that had they existed on the
-statute book not a few would have had to have experienced the penal
-consequences of their acts. With the men who still adhered to the
-masters the works continued to be carried on to a limited extent; after
-much suffering and privation some of the hands returned, whilst some
-obtained employment elsewhere. The course taken by Mr. John Rose, in
-resisting the men was warmly approved of by his neighbours, who
-subscribed for a handsome silver cup, which is now in the possession of
-Mr. Charles Pugh, who married Miss Martha Rose, daughter of Mr. Thomas,
-and niece of Mr. John Rose. It is a large and massive piece of plate. A
-vine stem entwines around the foot and forms the handles, a vine border
-with grapes also forms a border round the rim of the cover. On one side
-is the following inscription:
-
- Presented to John Rose Esqr.,
- of
- Coalport China Manufactory,
- By his
- Friends and Neighbours
- March 3rd
- 1834.
-
-On the reverse side is the following:
-
- Tribute of respect
- to his
- Public and Private Character
- and to the
- uncompromising firmness
- with which
- he has recently resisted the
- demands of an illegal
- conspiracy.
-
-We have lived to see trades unions legalized, and trade combinations
-adopted by masters as well as men.
-
-Mr. Walker had invented a maroon colour dip for grounds, which was used
-with much success. A good deal was done too about this time in imitation
-of the _Sevres_ style of decoration, and thousands of pounds were spent
-in endeavouring to make the famous torquoise of the French; but a pale
-imitation, called celest, only was obtained; some years afterwards
-however a much better colour was produced, first by Mr. Harvey, secondly
-by Mr. Bagshaw, thirdly by Mr. Hancock.
-
-In 1839 the late William Pugh became one of the firm, it then being John
-Rose, Charles Maddison, and William Pugh. In 1841 it was Charles
-Maddison, William Pugh, Thomas Rose, and William Frederick Rose. In 1843
-William Pugh, and William F. Rose were the proprietors. In 1845 the
-Messrs. Daniell received the command of the Queen to prepare a dessert
-service as a present by herself to the Emperor Nicholas, and it was
-manufactured at the works. It was a magnificent service of _bleu de
-roi_, and had the various orders of the Russian Empire enamelled in
-compartments, with the order of St. Nicholas, and the Russian and Polish
-eagles in the centre. In 1850 the famous Rose-du-Barry was discovered.
-The attempt to do so had been suggested by the Messrs. Daniell, in 1849;
-and after repeated experiments by Mr. George Hancock, who is still the
-colour-maker at the works, it was produced. This colour, so named after
-Mdme du Barry, one of the mistresses of Louis XV, had been formerly made
-at the Sevres Works, but the art had been lost, and its reproduction
-created a demand for very rich dessert services and ornaments of the
-colour. Very costly services of it were produced for the Messrs.
-Daniell, Mortlock, Phillips, Goode, and other London dealers, which
-attracted considerable attention at the Exhibition of 1851. One splendid
-dessert service of it was purchased by Lord Ashburton; others also, after
-special models and designs, of this colour were subsequently produced for
-the head of the State, for the Emperor of the French, and for noblemen
-like the duke of Northumberland, the Marquis of Lansdowne and others.
-
-The following are the remarks of the Jurors on that occasion:—“Rose J.,
-and Co., Coalbrook Dale, Shropshire (47, p. 727), have exhibited
-porcelain services and other articles, which have attracted the special
-attention of the Jury. A dessert service of a rose ground is in
-particular remarkable, not only as being the nearest approach we have
-seen to the famous colour which it is designed to imitate, but for the
-excellence of the flower-painting, gilding, and other decorations, and
-the hardness and transparency of glaze. The same observation applies to
-other porcelain articles exhibited by this firm. The Jury have awarded
-to Messrs. Rose and Co. a Prize Medal.” The company also obtained medals
-at the French Exhibition in 1855, and at that of London in 1862.
-
-A good deal has been done of late years in the Sevres style of decoration
-on vases, the moulds of which came direct from Sevres manufactory. It is
-a pleasing incident, and one worth mentioning, that some years ago Mr. W.
-F. Rose in company with Mr. Daniell visited Paris, and of course went to
-Sevres. Mr. Daniell was at once taken round the works, but Mr. Rose
-feeling some delicacy remained outside. Mr. Daniell mentioned the
-delicacy of his friend, and the manager at once sent for him in, and
-shewed him the greatest respect. He told him he might send his best
-artists to copy any thing he saw, or employ theirs to do so: and sometime
-after he sent over the moulds themselves to Coalport.
-
-In 1862 Mr. Pugh became sole proprietor of the works, and continued so to
-his death, in June 1875. Mr. Charles Pugh, brother of the deceased, and
-Mr. Edmund Ratcliff, brother-in-law, were left executors; and for an
-adjustment of claims by them and others the estate was thrown into
-Chancery and a receiver and manager, Mr. Gelson was appointed. The stock
-which is immense and had been accumulating for half a century is being
-brought into the market. Hundreds of dozens of one pattern, “India
-tree,” for example, which had remained out of sight for forty years, are
-being brought to light. In some instances a hundred dozen or so of
-saucers, (printed,) are found stowed away, without cups to match; whilst
-scores of piles of plates and dishes, sixteen or eighteen feet high, may
-be seen (white) in others, which had been sorted and put on one side from
-some defect or other. It speaks well for the quality of the china that
-the biscuit and glazed are both sound and good. In some cases the floors
-are literally giving way from the immense weight of stock they have to
-sustain. In one place a quantity of old Caughley China was discovered;
-whilst in another were found a number of Caughley copper plates engraved
-by the late Herbert Minton’s father.
-
-It may excite surprise that so large a stock should have been allowed to
-accumulate, but much was the result of a wish to keep the men employed.
-The fact of a number of copper plates being found with his name on,
-confirms what we have previously said about Thomas Minton, who founded
-the important commercial house bearing his name and that of his son at
-Stoke, having been employed as an engraver at Caughley. M. Digby Wyatt,
-also, in his paper read before the Society of Arts and reported in the
-Society’s Journal, May 28th, 1858, on the influence exercised on ceramic
-art by the late Herbert Minton, says:—“Mr. Thomas Minton was a native of
-Shropshire, and he was brought up at the Caughley works, near Broseley,
-as an engraver. He then went to town and worked for Spode, at his London
-House of business.” In 1788 he went to Stoke, bought land, and built the
-house and works which have since become so celebrated. Up to 1798
-however he only made earthenware which was printed and ornamented in
-blue, similar to that at Caughley.
-
-Mr. Wyatt, in the paper just quoted, speaking of John Rose and of the
-late Herbert Minton admitted that in the excellent, rapid, and cheap
-production of porcelain for Mr. Minton to have stood still for a moment
-would have been to have lost his lead in the trade. And Mr. Daniell, in
-the discussion which followed, said:—“With reference to Mr. Minton’s
-predecessors in this branch of art, he might remind the society of one
-whose name was upon their records as the recipient of the society’s gold
-medal for china and porcelain manufactures long before Mr. Herbert
-Minton’s time. He referred to John Rose, of Coalport, who made more
-china in his day than all those who were mentioned in the paper.”
-
-It will be seen from what we have written that Thomas Turner, of
-Caughley, and J. Rose, of Coalport, were the creators, so to speak, of
-new industries which drew around them large populations and gave
-employment to thousands who otherwise might have sought for it in vain,
-or have found it under less advantageous circumstances. It will be seen
-also that not only were they benefactors contributing materially to the
-common stock of national prosperity themselves, but that their energies
-and abilities inspired others who in turn became industrial organisers,
-and through various channels carried on the work of progress.
-
-
-
-
-MADELEY CHINA WORKS.
-
-
-EXCEPTING to the trade, and to some of the old inhabitants, it is not
-generally known that Martin Randall established China Works at Madeley,
-and made porcelain similar to that of Nantgarw and little if at all
-inferior to old Sevres porcelain. He and his brother Edward were
-Caughley men; he left there to go to Derby. He afterwards went to
-Pinxton, and thence with Mr. Robins, a Pinxton man, to London, where they
-entered into partnership and carried on business. They were supplied
-with Nantgarw white china by Mr. Mortlock, till Mr. Rose cut off the
-supply from the Welsh Works, by engaging Billingsley and Walker to make
-it for himself alone at the Coalport Works. They still continued to
-carry on business at Islington, where they erected buildings suitable,
-and fired the ware in box kilns with charcoal.
-
-About this time the demand was great with connoisseurs among the
-aristocracy for old Sevres china; and the London dealers, finding that it
-was not obtainable in sufficient quantities to meet the demand for highly
-decorated specimens, hit upon the expedient of employing agents in Paris
-to buy up Sevres china in white for the purpose of having it painted in
-London, as Nantgarw had been, and selling it to their customers as the
-bona fide productions of Sevres. Slightly painted patterns too were
-procured, and the colours got off with fluoric acid, and rich and
-expensive paintings, grounds, and gilding substituted.
-
-About the year 1826 they dissolved partnership and Mr. Randall came to
-Madeley, where he occupied a house in Park Lane, now the residence of the
-Wesleyan minister. He then took more commodious premises at the lower
-end of Madeley, where he erected enamelling, biscuit, and other kilns,
-and made and finished his own ware. Thomas Wheeler, William Roberts, and
-F. Brewer, were his potters; Philip Ballard, Robert Grey, and the present
-writer, were painters there, and Enos Raby was ground layer. John Fox of
-Coalbrookdale, William Dorsett, of Madeley, also were with Mr. Randall
-for a short time. Not having had experience in the making of china,
-great mistaken were committed, and heavy losses sustained. We have known
-a biscuit kiln fired till tea-pots and cups and saucers were melted into
-a mass before a trial was drawn, crow bars being necessary to remove
-them; in some instances they assumed the most fantastic forms. At other
-times the ware would be short fired in the biscuit kiln and would take up
-so much glaze that on coming out of the glaze kiln it would fly off in
-splinters. These wastrels were buried, broken up, or thrown into the
-canal, to be out of sight.
-
-Mr. Randall however, as the result of repeated and persevering
-experiments, succeeded in producing a fret body with a rich glaze which
-bore so close a resemblance to old Sevres china that connoisseurs and
-famous judges failed to distinguish them. He refused however, from
-conscientious motives, to put the Sevres mark, the initials of Louis.
-Louis, crossed at the bottom, which was done with less hesitation at
-Coalport with much more feeble imitations. When introduced on one
-occasion to a London dealer, of the name of Frost, who had a shop in the
-Strand, as Mr. Martin Randall’s nephew, the dealer in old china observed
-that the old Quaker made the best imitation of Sevres that ever was made,
-but added, “he never could be got to put the double L on it, and we
-cannot sell it as Sevres.” We remarked that he was “too conscientious to
-do so,” upon which he replied, “O, d—n conscience; there is no conscience
-in business.”
-
-Mr. Randall had less hesitation however in putting the Sevres mark on
-what was known to be Sevres; and he did very much for Mortlock, Jarman,
-and Baldock, who had agents in Paris, attending all sales where old
-Sevres was to be sold, in redecorating it in the most elaborate and
-costly manner. The less scrupulous London agents however did not
-hesitate to pass it off as being really the work throughout of Sevres
-artists. Indeed they have been known to have boxes of china going up
-from Madeley, sent on to Dover, to be redirected as coming from France,
-inviting connoisseurs to come and witness them being unpacked on their
-arrival, as they represented, from Paris. A little entertainment would
-be got up, and supposing themselves to be the first whose eyes looked on
-the rich goods after they left the French capital, where it would be
-represented, perhaps, that they had been bought of the Duc-de—or of
-Madame some one, after having been in the possession of royalty, they
-would buy freely.
-
-Sevres porcelain fetched high prices then, but it has risen higher in the
-market, even since, and has gone on rising to the present time. In 1850
-cups and saucers fetched from £25 to £30 each, and bowls £66 or £70.
-Three oval vases and covers at Lord Pembroke’s sale fetched £1020.
-Prices have however since gone up; and at Mr. Bernal’s sale a pair of
-rose Dubarry vases sold for 1850 guineas; and cups and saucers for £100.
-Single plates have since sold for £200; vases for 500 or 600 guineas
-each, and cups and saucers for 150 guineas. A year ago a set of three
-Jardiniers fetched at Christie’s, by auction, £10,000!
-
-We remember seeing an ornament at the Marquis of Anglesey’s at _Beau
-Desert_ which we were assured was old Sevres, and had been purchased at a
-great price on the continent, but which we recognised as one of our own
-painting at Madeley. A man can always tell his own painting; but it is
-not an easy matter for another however experienced sometimes to do so.
-An amusing instance occurred at Coalport. Mr. F. W. Rose who had been
-conversant from a child with china, on one occasion bought a vase,
-painted with birds, believing it to be old Sevres, but which was made at
-the Coalport Works and painted by the present writer at Madeley. Mr.
-Rose, sending for us down to the office said, “here, Randall, is a vase I
-have given a good price for, which is the right thing; can you do
-anything like it?” Our reply was, it would be strange if we could not,
-as we did that when a lad, adding that it was made at his own
-manufactory, that it was modelled by George Aston, and purchased out of
-the warehouse, in the white, by T. Martin Randall. We need scarcely say
-that he was very much astonished on finding he had been duped by a London
-china dealer with a piece of his own ware. It was put out of sight; but
-the late Mr. Pugh did not forget occasionally to remind his partner of
-the incident.
-
-Mr. Randall removed from Madeley to Shelton, in the Potteries, for the
-greater convenience of carrying on his works. He was invited by the late
-Herbert Minton to become a partner, and to make his ware for the benefit
-of both at his extensive works at Stoke. Age however, and a longing for
-retirement led him to decline, and he soon afterwards retired to a
-cottage at Barleston, where he died, and was buried, in a sunny spot of
-his own choosing, within sound of the murmuring waters of the Trent. He
-was a good man; one holding large and liberal views, and one who took an
-active part in various social and religious movements of the day, being
-an active promoter more particularly of Temperance Societies, when first
-established in this country. Specimens of his ware are much prized and
-sought after by collectors. A fine specimen with torquoise ground is in
-the possession of Henry Dickinson Esq.
-
-The chief beauty of Mr. Randall’s porcelain, like that of other fret
-bodies, or _pate tendre_ china, was that it admitted of a complete
-amalgamation of the painting with the glaze, and also of a richness and
-depth of colour, as in the case of torquoise, not to be produced on
-ordinary china.
-
-
-
-
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-
-The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Clay Industries, by John Randall
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: The Clay Industries
- including the Fictile &amp; Ceramic Arts on the banks of the Severn
-
-
-Author: John Randall
-
-
-
-Release Date: November 15, 2020 [eBook #63771]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CLAY INDUSTRIES***
-</pre>
-<p>Transcribed from the 1877 Salopian and West-Midland Office
-edition by David Price.</p>
-<h1><span class="GutSmall">THE</span><br />
-CLAY INDUSTRIES<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">INCLUDING THE</span><br />
-FICTILE &amp; CERAMIC ARTS<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">ON THE</span><br />
-BANKS OF THE SEVERN:</h1>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">WITH NOTICES
-OF THE</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">Early Use of SHROPSHIRE CLAYS, the
-History of<br />
-POTTERY, PORCELAIN, &amp;c., in the District.</p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span
-class="GutSmall">BY</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">JOHN RANDALL, F.G.S.,</p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">Author
-of</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">&lsquo;The
-Severn Valley,&rsquo; &lsquo;Old Sports and Sportsmen,&rsquo;
-&lsquo;Life</span><br />
-<span class="GutSmall">of Captain Webb,&rsquo; &lsquo;John
-Wilkinson,&rsquo; &amp;c.</span></p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<p style="text-align: center">MADELEY, SALOP:</p>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">Printed and
-Published at the Salopian and West-Midland</span><br />
-<span class="GutSmall">Office.</span></p>
-<p style="text-align: center">1877.</p>
-
-<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
-<h2><a name="pageiii"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-iii</span>DEDICATION.</h2>
-<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">TO</span><br
-/>
-<b>Alexander H. Brown, Esq., M.P.</b></p>
-<p><span class="smcap">Sir</span>,</p>
-<p>The following treatise on the &ldquo;Clay Industries&rdquo; of
-the Borough you represent may scarcely appear at first sight of
-that importance to warrant the usual form of a dedication, and I
-confess I cannot but wish, for present purposes, that its merits
-were more commensurate with the object.&nbsp; As a large number
-of your constituents however are engaged in these various
-branches of trade&mdash;in one of which you too have more than a
-general interest, and as I have been at some trouble to collect
-facts bearing upon their general history, the work itself may not
-be without some value.</p>
-<p>The motive which dictates the dedication will not, I think, be
-misconstrued, <a name="pageiv"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-iv</span>inasmuch as the prominent part I took more than nine
-years ago in introducing you to the constituency, as one likely
-to become a representative of the &ldquo;Commercial
-Element&rdquo; of the Borough, and the highly satisfactory way in
-which those predictions have been verified and fulfilled, as well
-as the very general regard and esteem all feel who have observed
-your public and private character, justify me in feeling a
-special pride in the result, and hereby making this public
-acknowledgement of services so faithfully and honourably
-rendered.</p>
-<p>I have the honour to remain,</p>
-<p>Dear Sir,</p>
-<p style="text-align: center">yours faithfully,</p>
-<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">John
-Randall</span>.</p>
-<p><span class="GutSmall"><span
-class="smcap">Madeley</span></span><span class="GutSmall">,
-</span><span class="GutSmall"><span
-class="smcap">Jan</span></span><span class="GutSmall">.
-1</span><span class="GutSmall"><span
-class="smcap">st</span></span><span class="GutSmall">,
-1877.</span></p>
-<h2><a name="pagev"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-v</span>INTRODUCTION.</h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Borough of Wenlock comprises
-places not only rich in historic interest but important also as
-centres of manufacturing industry; and none more so than those
-grouped within a mile or two of the Iron-bridge, itself a work of
-world-wide fame.&nbsp; &ldquo;Broseley Pipes&rdquo; and
-&ldquo;Broseley Bricks,&rdquo;&mdash;the latter including all
-similar productions emanating from Coalbrookdale, the Woodlands,
-Lady-Wood, Coleford, &amp;c.&mdash;possess acknowledged merits
-which create for them a constant demand, whilst in higher
-branches of the art, where similar natural and other clays are
-used, Messrs. Maw, Craven, Dunnill, and Co., and Bathurst, find a
-still more extensive market for their goods.</p>
-<p>From time immemorial the merits of these clays seem to have
-been known and recognised; if not from Early British, at any rate
-from the period when the armies of imperial Rome penetrated the
-Valley of the Severn, through intermediate ages, these beds of
-clay which give employment to thousands seem to have been used
-for some purpose or other, either for articles of ornament or of
-use.&nbsp; At Caersws, near Llandinam, on the left bank of the
-Severn, we have seen Roman bricks apparently with the initials of
-the workmen&rsquo;s <a name="pagevi"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-vi</span>names upon them; whilst of pottery, cart loads have been
-found there and at Wroxeter, including a number of jars, bottles,
-urns, lamps, vases, &amp;c., with hunting and other
-subjects.&nbsp; Some of the mortars, colanders, dishes, and
-similar kitchen utensils, are of coarse white clay, similar to
-that now used at Broseley.&nbsp; It is therefore evident from
-modern excavations that fifteen hundred years ago the value of
-these clays was known to the brick-makers and potters introduced
-by that enterprising people.&nbsp; Specimens of Norman and of
-later periods are rare, but certain evidences concur to make it
-clear that not only fifteen hundred years ago was the worth of
-these clays established, but that from that period to the present
-they have been used in one way or another.</p>
-<p>The subject is therefore one of historical as well as of
-industrial interest, although those at present engaged in the
-various branches of manufacture may be too absorbed in turning
-the material to account to pause to note the stages the trades in
-which they are engaged have gone through.</p>
-<p>It was the value of these clays which led to the establishment
-of works for the manufacture of porcelain at Caughley, Jackfield,
-Coalport, and Madeley, historical notices of which works will be
-found in the following pages, which are for the most part a
-reprint of articles that have appeared in the &ldquo;Salopian and
-West-Midland Magazine.&rdquo;</p>
-<h2><a name="page7"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 7</span>NATIVE
-CLAYS:<br />
-<span class="GutSmall">OR THOSE USED FOR</span><br />
-BRICKS &amp; TILES, TESSELATED TILES,<br />
-POTTERY, &amp;c.</h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">Clay</span>, as commonly understood, means
-earth of sufficient ductility to allow of its being kneaded by
-the hand into useful shapes or forms, and ranks as a <i>raw</i>
-material, or one not worked up or prepared for use.&nbsp; Some
-clays are soft, others are indurated, or hard and rocky: but all
-have, nevertheless, been in one sense prepared by poundings,
-washings, and mixings, carried on by Nature on a much larger
-scale than that on which they are now fitted for use.&nbsp; They
-differ in quality, in degree of firmness, and in colour, and show
-certain relationships by which it is clear that they are derived
-from sand, just as sand is derived from a hardy race of pebbles,
-which in turn bear a close relationship to rocks, from which
-undoubtedly they are also derived.&nbsp; Surface clays, used for
-making inferior bricks and tiles, whose earthy <a
-name="page8"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 8</span>odour gives
-evidence of alumina, are often derived from red sandstone rocks,
-which have been ground down by machinery of waves or streams;
-whilst the deeper coal-measure clunches, used for firebricks and
-pottery, were originally the sediment thrown by rivers at their
-embouchures into inland lakes or seas.&nbsp; Common red clays,
-deriving their colour from iron, have many impurities, and
-contain a large percentage of alumina.&nbsp; Fire-clays are
-nearly free from iron, and contain a large amount of silica,
-whilst china-clay, or <i>kaolin</i>, contains felspar, sometimes
-with the impurities of soda and potash.</p>
-<p>Let us first take brick and tile Clays.&nbsp; Of the three
-substances expressed by the three words of four
-letters&mdash;clay, coal, and gold, we question whether the first
-does not rank highest in importance.&nbsp; The latter may be the
-most coveted, but the former, we imagine, contributes most to the
-conveniences and comforts of mankind.&nbsp; It is in one form or
-another universally attainable.&nbsp; There is a great difference
-in its qualities; and when it is remembered that a porous brick
-made from bad clay will hold nearly a quart of water, the
-advantage of good clays producing good bricks which will protect
-health and property from the injurious effects of a fickle
-climate, becomes apparent.&nbsp; In addition to ordinary clays
-used for the manufacture of building materials, we have
-throughout the whole coalfields of Shropshire and <a
-name="page9"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 9</span>Staffordshire
-superior fire-clays, which occur in a tough indurated state, and
-are known by the familiar name of clunches.&nbsp; They possess
-but a small portion of iron, which gives a red colour to ordinary
-clays, at the same time that they are distinguished by an almost
-entire absence of lime and alkalies; yet contain, on the other
-hand, that proportion of silica and alumina which although they
-cannot be melted by the strongest heat, form ingredients which
-during the process of burning combine to form an artificial stone
-capable of sustaining great heat.&nbsp; The following is an
-analysis of one of these fire-clays:&mdash;</p>
-<table>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Silica</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">61.91</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Alumina</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">21.73</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Protoxide of Iron</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">4.73</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Lime</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">0.09</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Magnesia</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">0.59</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Potash</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">3.16</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Soda</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">0.25</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Chloride of sodium</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">0.08</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Organic matter</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">0.70</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><p>Water</p>
-</td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">6.73</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td><p style="text-align: right">99.97</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p>These shales or clunches, now indurated, were originally the
-soft soils from which the roots of plants of the coal-measure
-period drew their nourishment; and they still retain the
-impression of such roots in great abundance, as any one may
-satisfy himself who takes a piece in his hand to <a
-name="page10"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 10</span>examine
-it.&nbsp; The vegetable matter derived from roots, and from the
-plants themselves, give them a dark colour; but this burns away
-in the firing, and the bricks come out of the kiln nearly a pure
-white.&nbsp; It is almost invariably found that where the
-vegetation of a seam of coal grew on the spot, and was not
-transported, as was the case in some instances, that one of these
-underclays is to be found still retaining very beautiful casts of
-the roots of plants, and not unfrequently the seeds as well as
-the plants themselves that grew above them.&nbsp; As fire-clays,
-they are little if at all inferior to the famous Stourbridge
-clays, and they supply an invaluable material for crucibles, for
-bricks for the interior of our blast and puddling furnaces, for
-the kilns of our potteries, and for various other purposes where
-intense heat is required.</p>
-<p>With regard to clays in general, and the art of working in
-them, it may be remarked that arch&aelig;ologists have told us
-little.&nbsp; They have divided the past history of the race into
-the stone, bronze, and iron periods, but have told us nothing of
-the age of clay, or of an art which we venture to say was one of
-the oldest invented by man.&nbsp; Clay and clay-workers are found
-everywhere; and the material is one of the most abundant provided
-by Nature.&nbsp; The first man would find it soft, yielding, and
-ready to his hands, with the impressions of birds and beasts,
-suggestive of the use to which <a name="page11"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 11</span>it might be put, and the act of
-moulding it into form would be as natural as that of plucking
-fruit from a tree, or that of taking up a stone to strike a
-harder blow than the hand could give.&nbsp; Hardening it in the
-sun or baking it in a wood fire would be equally simple; whilst
-the act of fashioning a shapeless mass into an enduring form
-would yield so much pleasure that it would be repeated.&nbsp;
-That the art is pre-historic, and began before the race commenced
-a record of its doings, is evident from specimens which accompany
-the remains of men of whose tribe and nation we know
-nothing.&nbsp; Living beings stronger than man had been masters
-of the globe before he came, and ignobly perished, leaving but
-the impressions of their bones to tell of their existence; but
-man brought with him a new element by which to subjugate and
-subdue the materials he saw around him to his use, and left
-behind him more enduring monuments.</p>
-<p>Other enduring materials pressed into the service of
-architects of ancient and modern times were once as incoherent a
-mass of atoms, and as unshapable as these clays, and were either
-earths, clays, or sands, which Nature by the processes of
-kneading, pressing, and baking, in her great laboratory,
-converted into stone.&nbsp; We find them to some extent ready
-shaped to hand in the quarry, and we cut them into cubes or
-blocks, and pile them up in buildings, according to the <a
-name="page12"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 12</span>humour or
-taste of the time.&nbsp; Bricks are artificial stones, and in
-making them we follow the example Nature set us only that we cut
-the plastic material first of all to the size we desire it, then
-convert it into stone by heat; and this artificial stone, we
-venture to say, for durability and beauty, is equal even to
-Nature&rsquo;s own production, and quite as suggestive to the
-mind.&nbsp; Nature&rsquo;s finished material may be deemed more
-suitable for churches; but artificial stone, fashioned into shape
-by man, is quite as appropriate for a dwelling in which the
-highest social sanctities gather.&nbsp; Indeed the art of using
-artificial stone appears to have been roused from the torpor into
-which it had fallen since Roman and Flemish authorities set such
-good examples.&nbsp; People had been so long accustomed to see
-brickwork used only for inferior houses, and stone for buildings
-of greater pretensions that, till recently, English bricks have
-scarcely had justice done them.</p>
-<p>The antiquity of brickmaking is so well-known that it is
-scarcely necessary to allude to it.&nbsp; It will suffice to
-remind the reader of the tower of Babel, built about 400 years
-after the period assigned to the flood.&nbsp; That bricks were
-made in Egypt at an early period of her history is well known;
-and that this same people had faith in their durability is clear
-from the fact that they impressed them with hieroglyphics, or
-historical records, transmitting to us the names of their <a
-name="page13"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 13</span>kings.&nbsp;
-Mr. Smith of the British Museum, has brought home clay cylinders
-which the Assyrians used for writing upon.&nbsp; Again, the way
-in which Jewish writers speak of pots and potters, comparing
-humanity to lumps of clay fashioned into vessels of honour and
-dishonour, and the silly and wicked portion of humanity to
-potsherds, good for nothing but to be cast upon the highway,
-shows that they drew much of their philosophy from the art.&nbsp;
-With them, as with other nations of antiquity, the art of working
-in clay ranked high.&nbsp; Potters of the tribe of Judah
-&ldquo;dwelt with the king.&rdquo;&nbsp; And one very noticeable
-feature is the fact that the same simple means are still employed
-to effect the same object; for illustrations in the catacombs of
-Thebes show that forty centuries ago clay was kneaded with the
-feet, turned upon a wheel, and baked in a circular oven, as at
-present.&nbsp; The praise of those who out of rude clay fashioned
-things of use and beauty, and impressed upon plastic materials
-the living thoughts that stirred men&rsquo;s minds was loudly
-sung, whilst the more successful cultivators of the art were
-honoured with medals and statues, and their names transmitted by
-poets and historians to posterity.&nbsp; The Greeks and Romans
-gave a dignity to the art by raising it to a level with that of
-sculpture.&nbsp; A Corinthian potter, Pliny tells us, was in his
-day regarded as the first who contrived making likenesses in clay
-by pressing the material up to the <a name="page14"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 14</span>outlines his daughter had drawn of
-her lover&rsquo;s shadow on the wall and placing it with other
-pottery to be hardened in the fire.&nbsp; Other authors ascribe
-to the art a higher antiquity and speak of it as the parent of
-sculpture.&nbsp; The estimation in which it was held is shown by
-the fact that exhibitions of the best works in clay were
-frequently held in Athens; and amongst the ruins of that city
-statues of clay have been found, some in groups, representing
-Grecian Mythology; and some of large size retaining portions of
-the paint with which they were coloured on the eyes and
-eyebrows.&nbsp; In the Townley Gallery of the British Museum, No.
-38 is a statue of a Muse, three feet eleven inches high; and also
-a terra-cotta statue of a Muse resting her left arm upon a pile
-of writing tablets, which are placed upon a square column, but
-the head is gone.&nbsp; The former represents Orania, the latter
-Calliop, whose office it was to note down the worthy actions of
-the living, as it was that of Clio&rsquo;s to celebrate those of
-departed heroes.</p>
-<p>Celts, Etruscans, and Chinese made early and great advances in
-the art of using clay: the latter had even an imperial porcelain
-work at King-te-Ching, a hundred and eighty-four years Before
-Christ, and thirty years B.C. they introduced the same art into
-Japan.</p>
-<p>With regard to bricks and tiles we know that among Roman and
-medi&aelig;val builders bricks made <a name="page15"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 15</span>of clay were held in high
-estimation.&nbsp; The former enterprising people having
-penetrated into our valleys and excavated our hill sides in
-search of lead and iron were not likely to neglect the clays with
-which the ore for the latter was associated; and evidences of the
-extent to which they worked them on the banks of rivers, where
-such seams were exposed, particularly on the banks of those
-flowing through the great centres of their occupation, confirms
-this view.&nbsp; Their armies were accompanied by men learned in
-the art; and in the relics dug up at Malmesbury, Salisbury,
-Romsey, Malvern, and Uriconium, modern workers in clay may learn
-much of the early history of their craft.&nbsp; The still
-upstanding walls at Wroxeter, with string courses of tiles, and
-the numerous specimens of bricks, tesser&aelig;, and pottery in
-different coloured clays, brought to light by excavations within
-its shadow, are interesting from the fact that some are supposed
-to have been manufactured from clays still in use in the
-neighbourhood.</p>
-<p>At Caersws, a little village on the banks of the Severn,
-between Llandinam and Newtown, well made bricks, both of
-composite and simple clay, may be seen stamped with Roman
-letters, probably the initials of workmen&rsquo;s names; and, as
-a test of the durability of both, it may be remarked that after
-having done duty in buildings in which the Roman masons placed
-them, they have been rebuilt by British workmen into the chimneys
-of <a name="page16"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 16</span>the
-village.&nbsp; These, of course were burnt; but, favoured by the
-extreme dryness and heat of their own climate, the Romans, like
-the Egyptians, used clay mixed with chopped straw, to assist the
-tenacity of their bricks, which, without being at all
-artificially heated, have lasted thousands of years.&nbsp; The
-material of which Roman bricks in this country were formed was
-usually a strong clay, such as brickmakers call tile-clay; well
-tempered, well pressed, and well burnt, producing a heavy tough
-brick, indefinitely durable, and of a good deep-red colour.</p>
-<p>Roofing tiles have been made in a similar way to bricks, one
-would imagine, looking at the specimens found at Wroxeter and
-other places from the time of Roman occupation down to the
-present.&nbsp; They are found in double layers, forming slightly
-projecting string-courses in the buildings, but larger and
-thicker than ours; some of those dug up at Wroxeter being 17
-inches by 12, and 4 inches thick, whilst some are 21 inches
-square.&nbsp; One of these larger ones has the impression of the
-foot of an ox, evidently received whilst in the process of
-drying.&nbsp; Very many interesting specimens of bricks, tiles,
-and pottery are found here, and the art of working up the clays
-of the district has no doubt been practised from that time to the
-present.</p>
-<p>Formerly clays were allowed to lie during the winter to
-weather as it is called; and a statute <a name="page17"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 17</span>now obsolete required, under a
-penalty, that bricks should not be made unless the clay for
-making them had been turned over at intervals, three times at
-least before the 1st of March.&nbsp; But brickmakers now, not
-having patience to wait for the action of the weather, have
-invented machinery to do the work, and the clay is taken direct
-from the pit to be crushed by iron rollers, and conveyed by
-coarse canvas screens to the pug-mill.&nbsp; This is an upright
-cylinder, with a revolving vertical shaft, fitted up with
-horizontal knives following each other at an angle so as to cut,
-amalgamate, temper the material, and fit it for use.&nbsp; The
-process of forming the brick itself requires more tact than the
-reader would imagine, as the yielding clay has to be thrown into
-the mould so that every part shall be filled up with a body of
-equal consistency.&nbsp; To cause the clay to leave the mould,
-the latter is each time dipped into water, in which case the
-process is called slop-moulding, or is sprinkled over with sand
-or coke-dust; and when so made the brick is placed lengthways
-with others on smooth flats, half an inch or an inch apart and
-allowed to dry.&nbsp; The best kind of bricks are subjected to
-considerable pressure in the mould by means of a machine, and a
-hollow is left inside for the mortar, to enable them to fit close
-in the joint.&nbsp; Ornamental bricks of elaborate design for
-architectural purposes require more delicate manipulation, and
-the clays for these undergo more careful preparation.&nbsp;
-Machines also are used <a name="page18"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 18</span>which take the clay from the
-crushing-rollers, temper and thoroughly amalgamate it, and
-convert it into the finished article.</p>
-<p>The old methods of preparing clay for bricks and tiles, still
-practised by some firms, is probably the best where a good tough
-article is required: that is treading and hand-tempering by the
-workman, who kneads it with his naked feet, and
-&ldquo;slaps&rdquo; or &ldquo;wedges&rdquo; it by breaking off
-pieces and beating one against another.&nbsp; Machinery, however,
-is extensive used, and horizontal rollers are set so as to secure
-different degrees of fineness, in conduction with the
-pug-mill.</p>
-<p>Lime is a great enemy to good bricks, as small portions escape
-both rollers and pug-mill, and being converted into quicklime by
-burning, it slacks and bursts bricks subject to rains and
-frosts.&nbsp; Compare the sound, and hard durable bricks made
-here with those made near London, into which Cockneys knock their
-nails without troubling themselves to look for a joint, and say
-whether, with less freights, they might not be made to supersede
-the rubbish passing under the name of London bricks, which are
-soft, damp, and perishable, and some of which, like others of
-inferior quality, will hold from a pint to a quart of
-water.&nbsp; Stone, as shewn by the new Houses of Parliament,
-will not withstand the action of the corroding acid to be found
-in a London atmosphere; but good hard Shropshire bricks will, and
-for public <a name="page19"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-19</span>buildings, to say nothing of ordinary domestic
-structures, they are invaluable.</p>
-<p>The Staffordshire blue bricks which of late years have come
-into such general use, particularly in buildings connected with
-railways, are made from a clay containing a large proportion of
-peroxide of iron, a clay which produces a red, a buff, or a blue
-brick according to the process of firing and the degree of heat
-it undergoes in the kiln; but it will in no case stand a
-terra-cotta heat, in consequence of the iron acting as a
-flux.&nbsp; But the great centres of the art of brick making are
-on the banks of the Severn.&nbsp; Clay and clay workers are to be
-found at Lilleshall, Lightmoor, Horsehay, and the Woodlands,
-where, as at Broseley, clays are found on the surface.&nbsp;
-Here, on the valley side the surface is honeycombed by burrowings
-after clay and coal.&nbsp; One of the most important beds of clay
-for making ordinary bricks and tiles is one 17 feet in thickness,
-worked in many places by shallow shafts, and levels driven into
-the hill sides, which when abandoned cause the surface to
-collapse, and the ground to crack, as if by an earthquake.&nbsp;
-A very pretty church, built a century since on the brow of the
-hill overlooking some of the brickfields, is now a complete
-wreck, in consequence of these burrowings after clay.&nbsp; The
-chancel is falling away from the body of the building, the walls
-are torn from the roof to the foundation, and the windows have
-fallen from <a name="page20"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-20</span>their places, leaving the oak pews and handsome marble
-monuments a prey to the elements.&nbsp; Clays and coals are being
-pared away from around it as a mouse would pare a cheese.&nbsp;
-Of course the bishop cautions and threatens, but as long as his
-lordship declines to go into the mines these sappers and miners
-are safe; and to them must succumb not only the church, but the
-graveyard&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Where the rude forefathers of the hamlet
-sleep.&rdquo;</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>In conversation with the President of the Academy of Science
-at St. Petersburgh, who some years ago visited this district, and
-with other gentlemen distinguished in science and art, we have
-heard the highest admiration expressed of these clays of the
-Severn Valley.&nbsp; Indeed, the very handsome public
-structures&mdash;now that prejudice is giving way, and that
-improved and more artistic treatment of the material
-predominates&mdash;which we see in towns erected upon true
-architectural principles, and by professors of classical and
-constructive styles of decoration, are sufficient indications of
-the capability of the material in all its varieties for producing
-works of a very high order of merit, with a light and aerial
-effect not found in the old red brick, nor even in many of the
-stone erections, of former times.</p>
-<p>Besides bricks and tiles, these clays have been turned to
-account from very early periods in other ways, as for pottery,
-for instance, of different kinds.</p>
-<p><a name="page21"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 21</span>We have
-no reliable authority for fixing the date at which the art of
-potting was first practised in Shropshire, but it appears clear
-that the articles were of the simplest kind, being almost
-uniformly domestic: those in daily use, such as milk-pans,
-dishes, tea-pots, jugs, and mugs.&nbsp; The latter were
-substitutes for the drinking horns, which later improvements in
-the plastic and ceramic arts have driven out of use.&nbsp; We
-have an ancient specimen of one made at the Pitchyard, and a
-drawing of another made at Haybrook, well <i>potted</i>, and
-elegant in shape.&nbsp; The latter is the best manipulated, and
-probably it was from this circumstance that the latter work was
-called &ldquo;The Mug-House.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In evidence adduced sometime since in an Election Scrutiny at
-Bewdley, a public-house referred to was called the
-&ldquo;Mughouse,&rdquo; which house is situated on the Severn, at
-a point where the bargemen, who formerly drew the vessels up the
-river instead of horses, were in the habit of stopping to get
-mugs of ale.&nbsp; &ldquo;Tots&rdquo; were made out of the same
-kind of clay, but smaller, and were used when the men drank in
-company; hence a person who had drank too much was supposed to
-have been with a convivial party, and was said to have been
-&ldquo;totty,&rdquo; a word often found in old works.&nbsp; Tots
-had no handles, and some of the old drinking cups, more
-particularly those of glass of Anglo Saxon make, were rounded at
-the bottom that they should not stand upright, and that a man may
-empty them at a draught,&mdash;the custom continuing <a
-name="page22"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 22</span>till later
-times gave rise to our modern name of tumbler.&nbsp; The small
-tots had no handles; the mug had a &ldquo;stouk,&rdquo; as it is
-called, consisting of a single piece of clay, flattened and bent
-over into a loop.&nbsp; The ware was similar to the famous
-&ldquo;Rockingham ware&rdquo; made on the estate of Earl
-Fitzwilliam, near Wentworth.</p>
-<p>The discovery of a salt glaze took place in 1690, and the
-manufacture of that kind of ware must have commenced here soon
-after, as traces of works of the kind are abundant.&nbsp; This
-method consisted in throwing salt into the kiln when the ware had
-attained a great heat, holes being left in the clay boxes that
-contained it in order that the fumes may enter and vitrify the
-surface.&nbsp; Evidences of the manufacture of these old mugs and
-tots, together with milk-pans and washing-pans, having been made
-at an early period, are numerous; and the old seggars in which
-they were burnt often form walls of the oldest cottages in
-Benthall and Broseley Wood.</p>
-<p>A considerable number of old jars, mugs, and other articles,
-have from time to time been found in places and under
-circumstances sufficient to indicate great antiquity; as in
-mounds overgrown with trees, and in old pits which for time
-immemorial have not been worked.&nbsp; One large earthen jar,
-with &ldquo;George Weld,&rdquo; in light clay, was found in an
-old drain at Willey, and is now in the possession of Lord
-Forester.&nbsp; Mr. John <a name="page23"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 23</span>Thursfield, who lived at Benthall
-hall, was at one time proprietor of these works.</p>
-<p>Three quarters of a century ago these works were carried on by
-Messrs. Bell &amp; Lloyd; afterwards by Mr. John Lloyd, one of
-the best and most truly pious men we ever knew, who some time
-before his death transferred them to a nephew, Mr. E.
-Bathurst.&nbsp; His son succeeded him, and after a time sold them
-to the present proprietor, Mr. Allen, who to the ordinary red and
-yellow ware, which finds a ready sale in North and South Wales,
-has added articles of use and ornament in other ways, including
-forcing pots, garden vases, and various terra cotta articles.</p>
-<p>Of the Pitchyard works we know little, only that they stood
-where the late Mr. E. Southorn carried on his Pipe Works, and
-where we remember them in ruins more than fifty years ago; but
-the numerous seggars, now found in cottage garden walls, shew
-that they must have been continued for some considerable
-time.</p>
-<p>But, besides the manufacture of bricks, tiles, and pottery,
-these clays have been raised to a trade within the past few years
-in this district which is every day increasing, and which is
-capable of much further expansion: we refer now to the important
-department of encaustic or inlaid tiles and mosaics.&nbsp; The
-art of producing tiles of this description is only recently
-revived in this country, and is one which in point of antiquity
-is not to be compared with its sister branches.&nbsp; The first
-attempt, <a name="page24"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-24</span>so far as we are aware, to revive the art in Shropshire,
-was at Jackfield; but the first designs were crude, quaint, and
-spiritless, and altogether wanting in those nicer distinctions
-and qualities which, not being perceived by the mind of the
-producer, could not be wrought by the hand.&nbsp; In this as in
-many other branches of fictile art <i>insight</i> into the
-principles as well as eyesight is required, and the
-mistake&mdash;as in many other instances&mdash;was committed of
-attempting something which, with the expenditure of thought and
-time, might catch the uneducated eye&mdash;the object being to
-produce <i>quantity</i> rather than <i>quality</i>.&nbsp; But the
-call made upon the art by the enlightened demands of the age soon
-gave a wonderful impetus to the improvement, and men of educated
-artistic taste&mdash;like the Mintons and the Maws&mdash;soon
-called to their aid the assistance of the greatest genius and the
-highest designing talent at command; at the same time that they
-directed their efforts to definite points in which utility might
-be made the instrument of beauty, and by which originality and
-intelligible design might be made to rise out of the most
-common-place wants.&nbsp; But although the modern manufacture of
-geometric and encaustic tiles is recent, it already far surpasses
-the ancients in variety and arrangement, in geometric patterns,
-and in beauty of design in encaustics as well as in mechanical
-finish; although it may be doubted whether the same breadth of
-general effect is studied as in many <a name="page25"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 25</span>ancient examples.&nbsp; Mintons, of
-Stoke, Maw and Co., of Benthall, Hargraves and Craven, of
-Jackfield, and Mr. Bathurst, of Broseley, have each produced
-beautiful encaustic tiles for pavements&mdash;both for
-ecclesiastical and domestic use; and there is yet a large field
-for development of the use of similar tiles to colour and enrich
-the details of our street architecture, as well as in that of
-more elaborate and important structures.</p>
-<p>The Coalbrookdale Co., have recently manufactured some
-admirable terra-cotta entablatures, with historical subjects for
-costly buildings in the metropolis.&nbsp; The erection of the
-Literary and Scientific Institution also, of different coloured
-clays shews their adaptation to works of great architectural
-beauty.</p>
-<h2><span class="smcap">Maw and Co&rsquo;s Tesselated</span>,
-<span class="smcap">Mosaic</span>, <span class="smcap">and
-Majolica Works</span>.</h2>
-<p>It was the excellency of the Broseley and Benthall clays,
-above referred to, which attracted the Messrs. Maw to the spot
-and led them to remove from Worcester, to where they had been in
-the habit, first of all, of having them conveyed by barges on the
-river, to the present site of their works, fashioned out of the
-old Benthall Iron Works, carried on a century ago by Mr. Harries,
-then owner of the Benthall estate.&nbsp; Notwithstanding the
-additions made by them, the trade has so wonderfully developed
-itself that after building <a name="page26"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 26</span>upon or in some way occupying every
-inch of ground, they are cramped for room, and have purchased a
-piece of ground at the Tuckies on which they are about to erect
-more commodious premises.</p>
-<p>In addition to those classical and other adjuncts of
-architectural comfort and embellishment, embracing encaustic
-tiles&mdash;the reproduction of an art limited in medi&aelig;val
-times to church decoration, but now having a much more extended
-application, and the manufacture of tesser&aelig;, used in the
-construction of geometrical mosaic pavements, similar in
-character to those found in the medi&aelig;val buildings of
-Italy, also moresque mosaics, like those occurring in Roman
-remains in this country and on the continent, they now
-manufacture a superior majolica, and faience of great purity, in
-both of which departments they have recently received <a
-name="page27"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 27</span>first class
-medals at the Philadelphia exhibition.&nbsp; The accompanying
-engraving will convey an idea of the adaptation of faience to
-articles of domestic utility.</p>
-<p style="text-align: center">
-<a href="images/p26b.jpg">
-<img alt=
-"The adaptation of faience to a fireplace"
-title=
-"The adaptation of faience to a fireplace"
- src="images/p26s.jpg" />
-</a></p>
-<h2><span class="smcap">Jackfield Pottery and
-Porcelain</span>.</h2>
-<p>Older even than the Haybrook Mug House are the Pot Works of
-Jackfield, which, according to the parish register of
-Stoke-upon-Trent, quoted by Mr. Jewitt and Mr. Chaffers, supplied
-a race of potters to that great centre of early pot-making in the
-year 1560.&nbsp; Excavations made too, some years ago, brought to
-light on a spot near which the present works of Craven, Dunnill
-&amp; Co., now stand, an oven, or kiln, with unbaked ware, which
-appeared to have been buried by a land-slip; and in an old pit,
-which it was said had not been opened for two centuries, a brown
-mug was discovered, which had upon it the date 1634.&nbsp; If
-Jackfield supplied early potters for Stoke, Stoke sent pot
-masters to Jackfield.&nbsp; One of these was Mr. Richard
-Thursfield, an ancestor of Greville T. Thursfield M.D., who took
-these works and carried them on in 1713.&nbsp; He was succeeded
-by his son John, of whom we have spoken as afterwards living at
-Benthall and carrying on works there.&nbsp; The late Richard
-Thursfield, Esq., had in his possession some good examples of
-Jackfield ware.&nbsp; Among them was a handsome jug, gilt, having
-on it, we believe, the name of one of the family.</p>
-<p><a name="page29"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 29</span>In
-1772, or soon after, Mr. Simpson carried on the works; and he
-appears to have further improved the manufacture, for in addition
-to the &ldquo;black decanters,&rdquo; as his mugs were called, he
-made various articles of superior quality, which prior to the
-breaking out of the war with America found a ready sale
-there.&nbsp; The old mill turned by the waters of the Severn,
-where he ground his materials, has just been taken down.</p>
-<p>Mr. Blakeway afterwards carried on the works, and was joined
-by Mr. John Rose, upon leaving Caughley, and, after carrying them
-on a short time by himself, he removed them, as he did the
-Caughley Works, to Coalport, on the opposite bank of the
-river.</p>
-<p>The site of the old pottery was on the ground which is now
-occupied by the Jackfield Encaustic Tile Works, the clays of
-which are specially adapted for geometrical and encaustic tiles;
-and such tiles have been made here for a number of years; but
-since the old works, came into the possession of the present firm
-of Messrs. Craven, Dunnill and Co., great changes have taken
-place.&nbsp; The firm took a lease of about four acres of ground,
-and adjoining the old works built a large and commodious
-manufactory, which has been in operation for nearly two
-years.&nbsp; They have since taken down all the buildings of the
-old works, and have erected on their site and joining up to the
-new works, large warehouses, show room, offices, and entrance
-lodge.&nbsp; The plan of the works is very <a
-name="page30"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 30</span>complete, so
-as in every way to economise in the process of manufacture, and
-they are now among the most complete works of the kind.</p>
-<p>As shewn in the accompanying engraving, the buildings consist
-of four blocks, one detached and the others connected, each block
-accommodating a separate branch of the manufacture.</p>
-<p style="text-align: center">
-<a href="images/p28b.jpg">
-<img alt=
-"Craven Dunnill &amp; Co.&rsquo;s new works"
-title=
-"Craven Dunnill &amp; Co.&rsquo;s new works"
- src="images/p28s.jpg" />
-</a></p>
-<p>In the detached block the raw materials are reduced to a state
-ready for the workman.</p>
-<p>The second block contains the damping places, where the clays
-are kept in a certain degree of moisture; pressers&rsquo; shops
-for the various colours of geometrical tiles, and the encaustic
-tile makers&rsquo; shops, with their stoves.</p>
-<p>The next block provides for the drying and firing of the goods
-and decorating shops.</p>
-<p>On the first floor are workshops employed for painting,
-printing and enamelling, or other decorative purposes.</p>
-<p>The fourth block provides for the sorting and stocking of
-goods and for packing them for despatch; also the offices and
-showroom.</p>
-<p>Near to the detached block first described a small gas-works
-has been erected, which supplies the whole of the buildings.</p>
-<h2><span class="smcap">Caughley</span>.</h2>
-<p>Like the works previously mentioned, those of Caughley were
-upon the outcrop of the coals and clays of the Shropshire
-coal-field.&nbsp; They were established about the middle of the
-17th century, <a name="page31"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-31</span>on the estate of Mr. Brown, who lived at Caughley Hall,
-and was an ancestor of T. Wylde Brown, Esq., of the Woodlands,
-near Bridgnorth.&nbsp; An opaque stone china appears to have been
-made there in the first instance.</p>
-<p>The works appear to have been carried on by Mr. Brown, in the
-first place, and then by Mr. Gallimore, a relative of Mr.
-Brown&rsquo;s; and afterwards by M. Turner, who succeeded in
-producing an article of very superior merit, and one which will
-always hold a distinguished place in the history of the ceramic
-art.&nbsp; Mr. Turner was the son of the Rev. Richard Turner,
-D.D., rector of Cumberton, vicar of Emley Castle and Norton, and
-Chaplain to the Countess of Wigtown.&nbsp; Thomas his son, was
-born 1749, and married in 1783, Miss Dorothy Gallimore, a niece
-of Mr. Brown, of Caughley Hall.&nbsp; Mr. Turner was a gentleman
-of great taste, a good draughtsman, and an excellent engraver,
-having learned the latter art at Worcester, probably under Robert
-Hancock, some very fine examples of whose work are in the
-possession of Mr. Arthur Maw, of Severn House, who also has many
-very fine productions of Caughley at the best period of its
-existence.&nbsp; In 1780 Mr. Turner visited France, and brought
-back with him several skilled workmen, and an architect, whom he
-employed in the erection of a very handsome <i>chateau</i>, in
-the French style of architecture.&nbsp; The works were several
-years in progress, and were completed in 1775, as shewn by a
-newspaper paragraph of November 1st <a name="page32"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 32</span>in that year, which, is as
-follows:&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote><p>&ldquo;The porcelain manufactory erected near
-Bridgnorth, in this county, is now quite completed, and the
-proprietors have received and supplied orders to a very large
-amount.&nbsp; Lately we saw some of their productions which in
-colour and fineness are truly elegant and beautiful, and have the
-bright and lively white of the so much extolled
-Oriental.&rdquo;</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Printing on porcelain appears first to have been introduced by
-Dr. Wall at the Worcester works, a process soon after taken to
-Caughley by a person named Holdship, a former partner in the
-Worcester works, where it was practised as a great secret, with
-closed doors.</p>
-<p>Mr. Chaffers says:&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote><p>&ldquo;The excellence of Turner&rsquo;s porcelain
-and the invention of the beautiful dark blue of the Caughley
-china, attributed to him, gained him great patronage.&nbsp; In
-1780 he produced the celebrated &ldquo;willow pattern,&rdquo;
-which even at the present day is in great demand, and the
-&ldquo;blue dragon,&rdquo; another favourite pattern, and
-completed the first <i>blue printed table service</i> made in
-England for Thomas Whitmore, Esq., of Apley Park, near
-Bridgnorth; the pattern was called <i>Nankin</i>, and was
-something similar to the Broseley tea service produced in 1782,
-all in porcelain.&nbsp; Mr. Thomas Minton, of Stoke, assisted in
-the completion of this service, being articled as an engraver
-there.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Messrs. Chamberlain of Worcester, until the end of
-1790, had their porcelain in the white from Thomas Turner of
-Caughley.&nbsp; He at first mixed <a name="page33"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 33</span>all the bodies himself, but
-afterwards instructed his sister how to do it; subsequently a man
-named Jones mixed for him.&rdquo;</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The other works at Worcester, Grainger &amp; Co., formerly,
-when first established, merely painted and finished ware
-manufactured at Caughley.&nbsp; The China so sent was marked with
-the letter &ldquo;C.&rdquo; for Caughley; sometimes
-&ldquo;S.&rdquo; for Salopian.</p>
-<p>Among the chief workmen were the following:&mdash;Dontil,
-painter; Muss and Silk, who afterwards attained great celebrity
-in London, as painters on enamel, were landscape painters.&nbsp;
-Thomas Fennell, and Edward Jones flower painters, Thomas Martin
-Randall, bird painter, Edward Randall, gold decorator, Adams,
-blue painter, De Vivy and Stephan, modellers.</p>
-<p>Perry, one of the workmen who was apprenticed to Mr. Turner,
-states that in 1797 they had four printing presses at Caughley,
-introduced by Davis; the patterns at that time and for years
-previously being birds and blue panels; that Turner had been an
-engraver at Worcester; that he recollects a slab on the front of
-one of the arches of the building at Caughley, stating the date
-of its foundation, 1772, which would be the time he succeeded Mr.
-Gallimore, and that it was not finished for some time after.</p>
-<p>In the Salopian Mag. we gave an engraving of the old works,
-from a view in the possession of Mr. Hubert Smith, the only
-lineal descendent of Mr. Turner; and also of a &ldquo;puzzle
-jug,&rdquo; now in <a name="page34"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-34</span>the possession of Mr. E. Thursfield, of
-Bridgnorth.&nbsp; It is eight inches in height, and is formed of
-the usual body of these works.&nbsp; It is decorated with blue
-sprigs, and bears on its front the name, in an oval border,
-of</p>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center">John Geary<br />
-Cleak of the<br />
-Old Church<br />
-Brosley<br />
-1789.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>On the bottom is written in blue &ldquo;Mathew th v &amp;
-16,&rdquo; though one would fail to see any allusion in the text
-here referred to either to the vessel or to its purpose.</p>
-<p>The first specimens of Caughley are but little removed from
-earthenware, but the material speedily improved, as did the
-manipulation or potting; the latter to an extent as regards shape
-and outline so much so as to render many of them superior to the
-same class of articles of the present day.&nbsp; Their excellence
-in this respect is so self-evident as still to render Caughley
-china a great favourite.&nbsp; Choice articles of this
-manufacture are carefully guarded by Shropshire families, with
-whom they have become heirlooms; they are carefully stored in
-corner cupboards and on kitchen shelves, where they were once
-kept in countenance by rows of shining pewter, and are only
-produced at christenings and weddings, and on such red-letter
-days and rare occasions.&nbsp; Every year will add to their
-value, to the veneration in <a name="page35"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 35</span>which they are held; and at distant
-periods, and when compared even with the ordinary productions of
-our factories at the present day, they will serve to show how
-successful were the well-directed efforts at the Caughley Works
-to produce a porcelain which should take high rank and maintain
-it.</p>
-<p>The buildings of the old factory have been razed to the
-ground; the plough passes over where they stood, and a few
-pitchers turned up now and then are the only indications obtained
-of these interesting works.&nbsp; But a class of clever men were
-educated there; some of whom&mdash;as the late Herbert
-Minton&rsquo;s father, John Rose, and others&mdash;have done much
-to raise the character of our English productions.</p>
-<h2><span class="smcap">Coalport Porcelain Works</span>.</h2>
-<p>The first works at Coalport were we believe founded and
-carried on by William Reynolds, Thomas Rose, Robert Horton, and
-Robert Anstice; the former William Reynolds, being then Lord of
-the Manor.&nbsp; The buildings, or a good portion occupied by
-them are still standing.</p>
-<p>Mr. Thomas Rose, and Mr. John Rose, were sons of a respectable
-farmer living at Sweeney.&nbsp; The latter was a clerk under Mr.
-Turner, at Caughley, and left him to take the Jackfield works
-about the year, it is said, 1780.&nbsp; Having carried them on
-for a few years, in conjunction with Mr. Blakeway, during which
-time he greatly improved <a name="page36"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 36</span>the quality of the article
-manufactured there, he established the present Coalport works on
-the side of the canal, then recently opened, and opposite to
-those of Reynolds, Horton, Thomas Rose, and Robert Anstice.&nbsp;
-On Mr. Turner retiring from the Caughley works in 1799, Mr. Rose
-and the new company he had formed purchased them, and by means of
-increased capital shortly afterwards removed both plant and
-materials from Caughley and Jackfield to the more advantageous
-position they now occupy, on the banks of the canal and the
-Severn.&nbsp; Even the buildings were pulled down and the bricks
-and timber removed to the opposite side of the Severn, where they
-were used in constructing the cottages now standing opposite to
-the present Coalport Works.</p>
-<p>A staff of excellent work-people had been obtained from
-Caughley and Jackfield works combined, but an accident occurred
-on the night of the 23rd of October in that year by the capsizing
-of the ferry, as the work-people were crossing the Severn, by
-which twenty-eight were drowned, some among them being the best
-hands employed at the works.&nbsp; It was a dark night, the boat
-was crowded, and the man at the helm, not having been accustomed
-to put the boat over allowed the vessel to swing round in the
-channel where, with a strong tide running, it was drawn under by
-the rope which went from the mast to a rock in the bed of the
-river.&nbsp; Some managed to scramble out on the Broseley side of
-the stream; but the following <a name="page37"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 37</span>were lost, notwithstanding the
-efforts of those who rushed to the river side on hearing the
-despairing cries raised to save them.&nbsp; Jane Burns, Sarah
-Burns, Ann Burns, Mary Burgess, Elizabeth Fletcher, Mary
-Fletcher, Elizabeth Beard, Jane Boden, Elizabeth Ward, Sarah
-Bagnall, Sophia Banks, Mary Miles, Elizabeth Evans, Catherine
-Lowe, Jane Leigh, Charles Walker, George Lynn, James Farnworth,
-George Sheat, John Chell, Robert Lowe, William Beard, John Jones,
-Benjamin Gosnall, Benjamin Wyld, Richard Mountford, Joseph Poole,
-and another.&nbsp; The twenty-eight lost included some of the
-best artists; and an unfinished piece of work, left by Charles
-Walker but a few minutes before he lost his life, was till within
-a few years ago reverently kept in the warehouse as a memento of
-the unfortunate event.</p>
-<p>The event, as may be expected, created a great sensation at
-the time, and was thus commemorated, by Mr. Dyas, one of the
-Coalport workmen:</p>
-<p class="poetry">Alas! Alas! the fated night<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; Of cold October twenty third,<br />
-In seventeen hundred ninety-nine;<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; What cries, what lamentation heard,<br />
-The hour nine, when from yon pile,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; Where fair porcelain takes her form,<br />
-Where energy with genius joins,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; To robe her in those matchless charms,<br />
-A wearied band of artists rose,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; Males and females, old and young,<br />
-Their toil suspend, to seek repose,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; Their homes to gain, they bent along.<br />
-<a name="page38"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-38</span>Sabrina&rsquo;s stream was near to pass,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; And she her frowning waves upraised,<br />
-Her mist condensed to darksome haze<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; Which mocked the light; no star appeared.<br />
-Yon boat, which o&rsquo;er her bosom rides,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; Enveloped in the heavy gloom,<br />
-Convulsive stretch&rsquo;d along her sides,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; To snatch the victims to their doom.<br />
-Soon e&rsquo;er on board their faltering feet<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; A monster fell who grasped the helm,<br />
-Hove from the shore the distressed crew,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; And so the dreadful overwhelm,<br />
-Swift horror&rsquo;s wings o&rsquo;er spread the tides,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; They sink! they rise! they shriek! they cling!<br />
-Again they sink; alarm soon flies,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; Along their shores dread clamours rise,<br />
-But Oh, the bleakest night preventing<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; Every means to save their breath,<br />
-Helpless, hopeless, life despairing<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; Twenty-eight sunk down in death.<br />
-Alas small time for Heaven&rsquo;s implorings,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; Quick sealed their everlasting state,<br />
-Or, in misery, or in glory,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; The last tribunal will relate,<br />
-Here fold, O muse thy feeble wings,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; Hope where thou canst, but not decide,<br />
-Dare not approach those hidden things,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; With mercy, justice, these abide.<br />
-Return with sympathetic breath,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; See yon distracted mother stands,<br />
-Three daughters lost, to heaven she lifts<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; Her streaming eyes and wringing hands,<br />
-Hark! from those dells how deep the wailings,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; Fathers, Mothers, join their moans,<br />
-Widows, orphans, friends and lovers,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; Swell the air with poignant groans;<br />
-Recluse in grief, those worthy masters<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; Silent drop the mournful tear.<br />
-Distress pervades surrounding hamlets,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; Sorrow weeps to every ear,<br />
-Sleepless sighings hail the morning,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp; Morning brings no soothing ray.</p>
-<p><a name="page39"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 39</span>The
-author of these verses, Mr. Dyas, was a very clever carver on
-stone and on wood.&nbsp; He engraved the blocks for a work
-printed by Mr. Edmonds at Madeley, entitled
-&ldquo;Alexander&rsquo;s Expedition down the Hydaspes and the
-Indus to the Indian Ocean.&rdquo;&nbsp; He was the author too of
-an invention world-wide in its benefits, that of the
-printers&rsquo; roller; an invention second only to the art of
-printing itself, and infinitely superior to thousands of others
-out of which vast fortunes have been made.</p>
-<p>In 1804 the company consisted of Cuthbert Johnson, William
-Clarke, John Wootton, and John Rose.&nbsp; In 1811 it was John
-Rose, William Clarke and Charles Maddison.&nbsp; In 1820 they
-bought the famous Swansea works and entered into an agreement
-with Messrs. Billingsley and Walker to make a superior kind of
-porcelain made by them, first at Nantgarw in Glamorganshire, and
-afterwards at the Cambrian Pottery, Swansea, in the same
-county.&nbsp; This was a pure soft paste porcelain, superior to
-any at present produced in the kingdom, and second only to the
-famous <i>pate tendre</i> of Sevres at the very best period of
-its manufacture.&nbsp; This china was first made in 1813 by
-Billingsley, who went from Derby to Worcester, and from there to
-South Wales.&nbsp; He was an artist, and understood the
-manufacture in all its branches.&nbsp; He produced a fret body,
-by mixing the materials, firing them in order to blend them
-together, then <a name="page40"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-40</span>reducing the vitrified substance into clay&mdash;a
-process which was carried on at Old Sevres during the reign of
-Louis XV.&mdash;and thereby produced an article fine in texture,
-beautifully transparent, and of a delicate waxy hue, very
-superior to the dingy blue tinge given to much of the best china
-of that day.&nbsp; Connoisseurs were at once attracted by it, and
-Mr. Mortlock went down and entered into an engagement to purchase
-all that Billingsley and his son-in-law could make.&nbsp; Mr.
-John Rose finding he had lost a customer, whilst orders he was
-wont to receive were going to South Wales, went over, bought the
-plant, moulds, and everything, and entered into an agreement with
-Walker and Billingsley for a period of seven years to make the
-same quality of china at Coalport.&nbsp; The process however was
-an expensive one, from the difficulty of working the clay, which
-wanted plasticity, and also from the loss in the burning, as
-being a soft body it was apt to melt or warp, and to go out of
-shape, if it had a little too much fire in the biscuit
-kiln.&nbsp; About that time, too, Mr. Ryan discovered a very pure
-felspar in the Middleton, one of the Briedden hills, the true
-<i>Kaolin</i>, to which the Chinese were indebted for the quality
-of their egg-shell and other first class china.&nbsp; The fret
-body was therefore abandoned, the <i>pate tendre</i> for a
-<i>pate dure</i>, as the French say, and by adding pure felspar
-to the Cornish stone and clay which contains a large percentage,
-a good transparent body was obtained <a name="page41"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 41</span>at a less cost than by using a
-<i>fret body</i>.&nbsp; About this time also the Society of Arts
-offered a prize to any one who should find a substitute for lead
-in the glaze, the deleterious effects of which told upon the
-dippers, and produced paralysis; and Mr. Rose by applying felspar
-to the glaze succeeded in obtaining it.&nbsp; He was awarded the
-Gold Medal of the Society; and from that time following, for some
-years, a badge was either attached to the ware or engraved upon
-it as follows:&mdash;&ldquo;Coalport Felspar Porcelain, J. Rose
-&amp; Co: the Gold Medal awarded May 30, 1820; Patronised by the
-Society of Arts.&rdquo;&nbsp; The Devonports and other
-manufacturers competed for the prize.</p>
-<p>The felspar porcelain however never equalled the original
-Nantgarw fret body ware for purity and transparency, a white
-plate of which would at the present time fetch a couple of
-guineas.&nbsp; It cannot be said that any new element was
-introduced by using felspar, because the kaolin, contained in
-Cornish stone and clay, as discovered by Cookworthy in 1768, had
-been, and was now used at Plymouth, Derby, Worcester, Caughley,
-and Coalport; and by a judicious admixture of this and a free use
-of bone (phosphate of lime) a good serviceable china was
-produced.&nbsp; The former gave mellowness, and the latter
-whiteness, which approached in a degree the qualities of old and
-Oriental china.&nbsp; In fact Mr. Rose, who had the sole
-management of the works, spared neither <a
-name="page42"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 42</span>pains nor
-expense in raising the character of the productions of the
-Coalport Works, which were now by far the largest porcelain works
-in the kingdom, if not in the world.&nbsp; Like Minton, he was a
-man of wonderful energy, being strong in body, having a clear
-head, a cool judgment, and gifted with remarkable
-perseverance.</p>
-<p>The works were now in a state of prosperity; warehouses were
-opened in Manchester, London, Sheffield, and Shrewsbury, and a
-large trade was being done with dealers all over the
-kingdom.&nbsp; There was plenty of employment, and a good
-understanding generally prevailed between masters and their work
-people.&nbsp; Both before and after the strike there were at
-Coalport, as at other works of the kind elsewhere, an intelligent
-class of men, among potters and painters, as well as in other
-departments.&nbsp; Painters, especially, had good opportunities
-for mental culture and obtaining information.&nbsp; Numbers
-worked together in a room, one sometimes reading for the benefit
-of the others, daily papers were taken, discussions were often
-raised, and in politics the sharp features of party were as
-defined as in the House of Commons itself.&nbsp; The rooms were
-nicely warmed, and a woman appointed to sweep up, to bring coals,
-to keep the tables clean, to wash up dishes, peel potatoes, and
-fetch water for those who, not living near, brought their meals
-with them.&nbsp; It is not surprising, therefore, that men,
-having such advantages, should sometimes rise to higher
-situations.&nbsp; Some became <a name="page43"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 43</span>linguists, some schoolmasters,
-engineers, and contractors; one, breakfasting with a bishop,
-whose daughter he afterwards married, saw upon the table, some
-time since, a service painted by himself when a workman at
-Coalport.&nbsp; Some were singular characters: old Jocky Hill
-kept his hunter; John Crowther, a very amiable fellow,
-exceedingly good natured, and always ready to do a favour to any
-one who asked him, lived quite a recluse, studying algebra and
-mechanics.&nbsp; He has suggested many improvements in
-locomotives, steam paddles, breaks, &amp;c., &amp;c., and had the
-honour of submitting to the Government the plan of terminating
-annuities, by which money at that time was raised to carry on the
-war, and by which we have been saved the burden&mdash;so
-far&mdash;of a permanent debt; also of making other suggestions,
-which have been likewise adopted.&nbsp; He also invented a most
-ingenious almanack applicable to all time.</p>
-<p>Coalport men were usually great politicians; Hunt,
-Hethrington, Richard Carlile, Sir Francis Burdett, and Cobbett,
-had their disciples and admirers; and such was the eagerness to
-get the Register, with its familiar gridiron on the cover, that a
-man has been despatched to Birmingham for it from one of the
-rooms, his shopmates undertaking to do his work for him whilst he
-was away.</p>
-<p>The works themselves are ill designed and badly constructed,
-the greater portion of them having <a name="page44"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 44</span>been put up at the latter end of the
-past and beginning of the present centuries, whilst other
-portions were added from time to time, with no regard to
-ventilation or other requirements of health.&nbsp; Consequently
-there are the most curious ins and outs, dropsical looking roofs,
-bulging walls, and drooping floors, which have to be propped
-underneath, to support half a century&rsquo;s accumulations of
-china, accumulations amounting to hundreds and hundreds of tons
-in weight.&nbsp; In entering some of these unhealthy
-<i>ateliers</i> and passages strangers have to look well to their
-craniums.&nbsp; Some work-rooms have very stifling atmospheres,
-charged with clay or flint; the biscuit room notably so.&nbsp; We
-have said that a good understanding prevailed generally between
-masters and workmen.&nbsp; There was one notable exception, the
-great &ldquo;strike&rdquo; as it was called, which occurred
-somewhere in November, 1833; a memorable event in the history of
-the works, so much so that in speaking of occurrences it is usual
-to the present time to ask in case of doubt if it happened before
-or subsequent to the strike.&nbsp; The men had their
-&ldquo;Pitcher,&rdquo; a well conducted sick society; and a
-&ldquo;Travelling Society,&rdquo; for assisting those in search
-of employment, with branches in all centres of the trade.&nbsp;
-Trades unions, however, were just then coming to the front.&nbsp;
-The Combination Laws had been repealed eleven years previously;
-otherwise, such was the temper of the Shropshire magistrates, <a
-name="page45"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 45</span>and the
-feeling generally in relation to the trades unions, that had they
-existed on the statute book not a few would have had to have
-experienced the penal consequences of their acts.&nbsp; With the
-men who still adhered to the masters the works continued to be
-carried on to a limited extent; after much suffering and
-privation some of the hands returned, whilst some obtained
-employment elsewhere.&nbsp; The course taken by Mr. John Rose, in
-resisting the men was warmly approved of by his neighbours, who
-subscribed for a handsome silver cup, which is now in the
-possession of Mr. Charles Pugh, who married Miss Martha Rose,
-daughter of Mr. Thomas, and niece of Mr. John Rose.&nbsp; It is a
-large and massive piece of plate.&nbsp; A vine stem entwines
-around the foot and forms the handles, a vine border with grapes
-also forms a border round the rim of the cover.&nbsp; On one side
-is the following inscription:</p>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center">Presented to John Rose
-Esqr.,<br />
-of<br />
-Coalport China Manufactory,<br />
-By his<br />
-Friends and Neighbours<br />
-March 3rd<br />
-1834.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>On the reverse side is the following:</p>
-<blockquote><p style="text-align: center">Tribute of respect<br
-/>
-to his<br />
-Public and Private Character<br />
-<a name="page46"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 46</span>and to
-the<br />
-uncompromising firmness<br />
-with which<br />
-he has recently resisted the<br />
-demands of an illegal<br />
-conspiracy.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>We have lived to see trades unions legalized, and trade
-combinations adopted by masters as well as men.</p>
-<p>Mr. Walker had invented a maroon colour dip for grounds, which
-was used with much success.&nbsp; A good deal was done too about
-this time in imitation of the <i>Sevres</i> style of decoration,
-and thousands of pounds were spent in endeavouring to make the
-famous torquoise of the French; but a pale imitation, called
-celest, only was obtained; some years afterwards however a much
-better colour was produced, first by Mr. Harvey, secondly by Mr.
-Bagshaw, thirdly by Mr. Hancock.</p>
-<p>In 1839 the late William Pugh became one of the firm, it then
-being John Rose, Charles Maddison, and William Pugh.&nbsp; In
-1841 it was Charles Maddison, William Pugh, Thomas Rose, and
-William Frederick Rose.&nbsp; In 1843 William Pugh, and William
-F. Rose were the proprietors.&nbsp; In 1845 the Messrs. Daniell
-received the command of the Queen to prepare a dessert service as
-a present by herself to the Emperor Nicholas, and it was
-manufactured at the works.&nbsp; It was a magnificent service of
-<i>bleu de roi</i>, and had the <a name="page47"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 47</span>various orders of the Russian Empire
-enamelled in compartments, with the order of St. Nicholas, and
-the Russian and Polish eagles in the centre.&nbsp; In 1850 the
-famous Rose-du-Barry was discovered.&nbsp; The attempt to do so
-had been suggested by the Messrs. Daniell, in 1849; and after
-repeated experiments by Mr. George Hancock, who is still the
-colour-maker at the works, it was produced.&nbsp; This colour, so
-named after Mdme du Barry, one of the mistresses of Louis XV, had
-been formerly made at the Sevres Works, but the art had been
-lost, and its reproduction created a demand for very rich dessert
-services and ornaments of the colour.&nbsp; Very costly services
-of it were produced for the Messrs. Daniell, Mortlock, Phillips,
-Goode, and other London dealers, which attracted considerable
-attention at the Exhibition of 1851.&nbsp; One splendid dessert
-service of it was purchased by Lord Ashburton; others also, after
-special models and designs, of this colour were subsequently
-produced for the head of the State, for the Emperor of the
-French, and for noblemen like the duke of Northumberland, the
-Marquis of Lansdowne and others.</p>
-<p>The following are the remarks of the Jurors on that
-occasion:&mdash;&ldquo;Rose J., and Co., Coalbrook Dale,
-Shropshire (47, p. 727), have exhibited porcelain services and
-other articles, which have attracted the special attention of the
-Jury.&nbsp; A dessert service of a rose ground is in particular
-remarkable, not <a name="page48"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-48</span>only as being the nearest approach we have seen to the
-famous colour which it is designed to imitate, but for the
-excellence of the flower-painting, gilding, and other
-decorations, and the hardness and transparency of glaze.&nbsp;
-The same observation applies to other porcelain articles
-exhibited by this firm.&nbsp; The Jury have awarded to Messrs.
-Rose and Co. a Prize Medal.&rdquo;&nbsp; The company also
-obtained medals at the French Exhibition in 1855, and at that of
-London in 1862.</p>
-<p>A good deal has been done of late years in the Sevres style of
-decoration on vases, the moulds of which came direct from Sevres
-manufactory.&nbsp; It is a pleasing incident, and one worth
-mentioning, that some years ago Mr. W. F. Rose in company with
-Mr. Daniell visited Paris, and of course went to Sevres.&nbsp;
-Mr. Daniell was at once taken round the works, but Mr. Rose
-feeling some delicacy remained outside.&nbsp; Mr. Daniell
-mentioned the delicacy of his friend, and the manager at once
-sent for him in, and shewed him the greatest respect.&nbsp; He
-told him he might send his best artists to copy any thing he saw,
-or employ theirs to do so: and sometime after he sent over the
-moulds themselves to Coalport.</p>
-<p>In 1862 Mr. Pugh became sole proprietor of the works, and
-continued so to his death, in June 1875.&nbsp; Mr. Charles Pugh,
-brother of the deceased, and Mr. Edmund Ratcliff, brother-in-law,
-were left executors; and for an adjustment of claims by <a
-name="page49"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 49</span>them and
-others the estate was thrown into Chancery and a receiver and
-manager, Mr. Gelson was appointed.&nbsp; The stock which is
-immense and had been accumulating for half a century is being
-brought into the market.&nbsp; Hundreds of dozens of one pattern,
-&ldquo;India tree,&rdquo; for example, which had remained out of
-sight for forty years, are being brought to light.&nbsp; In some
-instances a hundred dozen or so of saucers, (printed,) are found
-stowed away, without cups to match; whilst scores of piles of
-plates and dishes, sixteen or eighteen feet high, may be seen
-(white) in others, which had been sorted and put on one side from
-some defect or other.&nbsp; It speaks well for the quality of the
-china that the biscuit and glazed are both sound and good.&nbsp;
-In some cases the floors are literally giving way from the
-immense weight of stock they have to sustain.&nbsp; In one place
-a quantity of old Caughley China was discovered; whilst in
-another were found a number of Caughley copper plates engraved by
-the late Herbert Minton&rsquo;s father.</p>
-<p>It may excite surprise that so large a stock should have been
-allowed to accumulate, but much was the result of a wish to keep
-the men employed.&nbsp; The fact of a number of copper plates
-being found with his name on, confirms what we have previously
-said about Thomas Minton, who founded the important commercial
-house bearing his name and that of his son at Stoke, having been
-employed <a name="page50"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-50</span>as an engraver at Caughley.&nbsp; M. Digby Wyatt, also,
-in his paper read before the Society of Arts and reported in the
-Society&rsquo;s Journal, May 28th, 1858, on the influence
-exercised on ceramic art by the late Herbert Minton,
-says:&mdash;&ldquo;Mr. Thomas Minton was a native of Shropshire,
-and he was brought up at the Caughley works, near Broseley, as an
-engraver.&nbsp; He then went to town and worked for Spode, at his
-London House of business.&rdquo;&nbsp; In 1788 he went to Stoke,
-bought land, and built the house and works which have since
-become so celebrated.&nbsp; Up to 1798 however he only made
-earthenware which was printed and ornamented in blue, similar to
-that at Caughley.</p>
-<p>Mr. Wyatt, in the paper just quoted, speaking of John Rose and
-of the late Herbert Minton admitted that in the excellent, rapid,
-and cheap production of porcelain for Mr. Minton to have stood
-still for a moment would have been to have lost his lead in the
-trade.&nbsp; And Mr. Daniell, in the discussion which followed,
-said:&mdash;&ldquo;With reference to Mr. Minton&rsquo;s
-predecessors in this branch of art, he might remind the society
-of one whose name was upon their records as the recipient of the
-society&rsquo;s gold medal for china and porcelain manufactures
-long before Mr. Herbert Minton&rsquo;s time.&nbsp; He referred to
-John Rose, of Coalport, who made more china in his day than all
-those who were mentioned in the paper.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It will be seen from what we have written that <a
-name="page51"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 51</span>Thomas
-Turner, of Caughley, and J. Rose, of Coalport, were the creators,
-so to speak, of new industries which drew around them large
-populations and gave employment to thousands who otherwise might
-have sought for it in vain, or have found it under less
-advantageous circumstances.&nbsp; It will be seen also that not
-only were they benefactors contributing materially to the common
-stock of national prosperity themselves, but that their energies
-and abilities inspired others who in turn became industrial
-organisers, and through various channels carried on the work of
-progress.</p>
-<h2>MADELEY CHINA WORKS.</h2>
-<p><span class="smcap">Excepting</span> to the trade, and to some
-of the old inhabitants, it is not generally known that Martin
-Randall established China Works at Madeley, and made porcelain
-similar to that of Nantgarw and little if at all inferior to old
-Sevres porcelain.&nbsp; He and his brother Edward were Caughley
-men; he left there to go to Derby.&nbsp; He afterwards went to
-Pinxton, and thence with Mr. Robins, a Pinxton man, to London,
-where they entered into partnership and carried on
-business.&nbsp; They were supplied with Nantgarw white china by
-Mr. Mortlock, till Mr. Rose cut off the supply from the Welsh
-Works, by engaging <a name="page52"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
-52</span>Billingsley and Walker to make it for himself alone at
-the Coalport Works.&nbsp; They still continued to carry on
-business at Islington, where they erected buildings suitable, and
-fired the ware in box kilns with charcoal.</p>
-<p>About this time the demand was great with connoisseurs among
-the aristocracy for old Sevres china; and the London dealers,
-finding that it was not obtainable in sufficient quantities to
-meet the demand for highly decorated specimens, hit upon the
-expedient of employing agents in Paris to buy up Sevres china in
-white for the purpose of having it painted in London, as Nantgarw
-had been, and selling it to their customers as the bona fide
-productions of Sevres.&nbsp; Slightly painted patterns too were
-procured, and the colours got off with fluoric acid, and rich and
-expensive paintings, grounds, and gilding substituted.</p>
-<p>About the year 1826 they dissolved partnership and Mr. Randall
-came to Madeley, where he occupied a house in Park Lane, now the
-residence of the Wesleyan minister.&nbsp; He then took more
-commodious premises at the lower end of Madeley, where he erected
-enamelling, biscuit, and other kilns, and made and finished his
-own ware.&nbsp; Thomas Wheeler, William Roberts, and F. Brewer,
-were his potters; Philip Ballard, Robert Grey, and the present
-writer, were painters there, and Enos Raby was ground
-layer.&nbsp; John Fox of Coalbrookdale, William Dorsett, of
-Madeley, also were with <a name="page53"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 53</span>Mr. Randall for a short time.&nbsp;
-Not having had experience in the making of china, great mistaken
-were committed, and heavy losses sustained.&nbsp; We have known a
-biscuit kiln fired till tea-pots and cups and saucers were melted
-into a mass before a trial was drawn, crow bars being necessary
-to remove them; in some instances they assumed the most fantastic
-forms.&nbsp; At other times the ware would be short fired in the
-biscuit kiln and would take up so much glaze that on coming out
-of the glaze kiln it would fly off in splinters.&nbsp; These
-wastrels were buried, broken up, or thrown into the canal, to be
-out of sight.</p>
-<p>Mr. Randall however, as the result of repeated and persevering
-experiments, succeeded in producing a fret body with a rich glaze
-which bore so close a resemblance to old Sevres china that
-connoisseurs and famous judges failed to distinguish them.&nbsp;
-He refused however, from conscientious motives, to put the Sevres
-mark, the initials of Louis.&nbsp; Louis, crossed at the bottom,
-which was done with less hesitation at Coalport with much more
-feeble imitations.&nbsp; When introduced on one occasion to a
-London dealer, of the name of Frost, who had a shop in the
-Strand, as Mr. Martin Randall&rsquo;s nephew, the dealer in old
-china observed that the old Quaker made the best imitation of
-Sevres that ever was made, but added, &ldquo;he never could be
-got to put the double L on it, and we cannot sell it as
-Sevres.&rdquo;&nbsp; We remarked that he was &ldquo;too <a
-name="page54"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 54</span>conscientious
-to do so,&rdquo; upon which he replied, &ldquo;O, d&mdash;n
-conscience; there is no conscience in business.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Mr. Randall had less hesitation however in putting the Sevres
-mark on what was known to be Sevres; and he did very much for
-Mortlock, Jarman, and Baldock, who had agents in Paris, attending
-all sales where old Sevres was to be sold, in redecorating it in
-the most elaborate and costly manner.&nbsp; The less scrupulous
-London agents however did not hesitate to pass it off as being
-really the work throughout of Sevres artists.&nbsp; Indeed they
-have been known to have boxes of china going up from Madeley,
-sent on to Dover, to be redirected as coming from France,
-inviting connoisseurs to come and witness them being unpacked on
-their arrival, as they represented, from Paris.&nbsp; A little
-entertainment would be got up, and supposing themselves to be the
-first whose eyes looked on the rich goods after they left the
-French capital, where it would be represented, perhaps, that they
-had been bought of the Duc-de&mdash;or of Madame some one, after
-having been in the possession of royalty, they would buy
-freely.</p>
-<p>Sevres porcelain fetched high prices then, but it has risen
-higher in the market, even since, and has gone on rising to the
-present time.&nbsp; In 1850 cups and saucers fetched from
-&pound;25 to &pound;30 each, and bowls &pound;66 or
-&pound;70.&nbsp; Three oval vases and <a name="page55"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 55</span>covers at Lord Pembroke&rsquo;s sale
-fetched &pound;1020.&nbsp; Prices have however since gone up; and
-at Mr. Bernal&rsquo;s sale a pair of rose Dubarry vases sold for
-1850 guineas; and cups and saucers for &pound;100.&nbsp; Single
-plates have since sold for &pound;200; vases for 500 or 600
-guineas each, and cups and saucers for 150 guineas.&nbsp; A year
-ago a set of three Jardiniers fetched at Christie&rsquo;s, by
-auction, &pound;10,000!</p>
-<p>We remember seeing an ornament at the Marquis of
-Anglesey&rsquo;s at <i>Beau Desert</i> which we were assured was
-old Sevres, and had been purchased at a great price on the
-continent, but which we recognised as one of our own painting at
-Madeley.&nbsp; A man can always tell his own painting; but it is
-not an easy matter for another however experienced sometimes to
-do so.&nbsp; An amusing instance occurred at Coalport.&nbsp; Mr.
-F. W. Rose who had been conversant from a child with china, on
-one occasion bought a vase, painted with birds, believing it to
-be old Sevres, but which was made at the Coalport Works and
-painted by the present writer at Madeley.&nbsp; Mr. Rose, sending
-for us down to the office said, &ldquo;here, Randall, is a vase I
-have given a good price for, which is the right thing; can you do
-anything like it?&rdquo;&nbsp; Our reply was, it would be strange
-if we could not, as we did that when a lad, adding that it was
-made at his own manufactory, that it was modelled by George
-Aston, and purchased out of the warehouse, in the white, by T.
-Martin Randall.&nbsp; We need <a name="page56"></a><span
-class="pagenum">p. 56</span>scarcely say that he was very much
-astonished on finding he had been duped by a London china dealer
-with a piece of his own ware.&nbsp; It was put out of sight; but
-the late Mr. Pugh did not forget occasionally to remind his
-partner of the incident.</p>
-<p>Mr. Randall removed from Madeley to Shelton, in the Potteries,
-for the greater convenience of carrying on his works.&nbsp; He
-was invited by the late Herbert Minton to become a partner, and
-to make his ware for the benefit of both at his extensive works
-at Stoke.&nbsp; Age however, and a longing for retirement led him
-to decline, and he soon afterwards retired to a cottage at
-Barleston, where he died, and was buried, in a sunny spot of his
-own choosing, within sound of the murmuring waters of the
-Trent.&nbsp; He was a good man; one holding large and liberal
-views, and one who took an active part in various social and
-religious movements of the day, being an active promoter more
-particularly of Temperance Societies, when first established in
-this country.&nbsp; Specimens of his ware are much prized and
-sought after by collectors.&nbsp; A fine specimen with torquoise
-ground is in the possession of Henry Dickinson Esq.</p>
-<p>The chief beauty of Mr. Randall&rsquo;s porcelain, like that
-of other fret bodies, or <i>pate tendre</i> china, was that it
-admitted of a complete amalgamation of the painting with the
-glaze, and also of a richness and depth of colour, as in the case
-of torquoise, not to be produced on ordinary china.</p>
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
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