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Bilston and Bradley PotteriesFrank Sharmanpage 3 |
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Ivor Noel Hume has produced a neat explanation of these dates and names. He suggests that Bew leased the pottery from the Myatt family, sometime before 1845, who took it back when Bew gave up the lease early in 1851. Noel can also fill in much important information for this period. He now has in his possession two jugs, the information on and from which he has, with the assistance of much further research, been able to interpret.
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Large jug by John Bacon.
(The hunting mug is a standard size and shows how large the mug
is). It has a capacity of 2 gallons. The base of the jug has an incised mark: "1842 / A present / From John Bacon / Potter Bradley / Nr Bilston / Stafordordshire" (sic). photo by courtesy of Ivor Noel Hume |
The actual potter of these two jugs was one John Bacon: he signed them. The suggestion is that Bew was primarily a chemist, not a potter. He took the lease of the pottery as a going concern. It is possible that John Bacon, who was born in Normanton, Derbyshire, had served his apprenticeship under Benjamin Myatt and was a practising potter when Bew took over. Bew put Bacon in charge and he remained in charge until some time before 1860 when he was married in Nuneaton, Warwickshire. (In the 1881 census he was still living and described as "Potter (Earth Mfr)" suggesting that he had set up on his own account, perhaps on his marriage and move to Nuneaton).
Huge jug by John Bacon.
(The one pint jug is shown for comparison of size). It has a
capacity of 4 gallons. The jug is marked on the base "Made by John Bacon / at Bradley Pottrey / 1849" (sic) (photo by courtesy of Ivor Noel Hume) |
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Noel has analysed the details of these
mugs and has identified the people for whom they were made. This
interesting information will appear in his article in Ceramics in
America in 2005.There is a third
item to mention. This is a mug held by the Ashmolean Museum, who
had received it as "perhaps Fulham, Mortlake or Lambeth" but later
attributed it to Bristol. Noel's analysis of the details of this
mug have lead to the Ashmolean's accepting that it was Bilston made by
John Bacon.
Noel reminds us that "There
can be no doubt that between the years 1842 and 1849 John Bacon produced
much else at the Bradley Pottery that was unmarked and still
unidentified". Of Bacon's 1842 jug
Noel says the work was "a highly accomplished creation both in its
shaping and in the evenness of its firing". His conclusion on the
identified works as a whole is that: "Both the grandeur of the dated
jugs and the quality of the Cockayne mug strongly suggest that Bacon's
run-of-the-kiln output was the equal of anything then being made by the
competitors at Mortlake, Lambeth, Fulham or Bristol while his best
ennobles him as a prince among potters".
Since this page first appeared on this site Ivor Noel Hue has published an excellent and beautifully illustrated article on John Bacon: Ivor Noel Hume, John Bacon, Prince of Potters, in Ceramics in America 2005, The Chipstone Foundation, 2005, at pp. 20 - 36.