Thomas Wood & Co Thomas Wood & Sons |
Location and period of operation:
Thomas Wood & Co |
Burslem |
1885 |
1896 |
Thomas Wood & Sons |
Burslem |
1896 (92?) |
1897 |
Earthenware
manufacturer at the Wedgwood Pottery and then (probably from 1886) at the Queen Street Potteries, Burslem,
Stoke-on-Trent, England.
|
Subsequently: Wood & Barker Ltd.
Thomas Wood & Co
Wedgwood Pottery, Burslem, Staffordshire
Pottery Gazette, January 1885
Examples of Thomas Wood & Co ware:
plate in a typical Gaudy Welsh style pattern |
T.W. & Co The Registration Number indicates that the pattern was design was registered around 1889 |
platter in the Poppy pattern |
T.W. & Co POPPY is the pattern name |
the MAY pattern transferware pattern in the aesthetic style |
T. W. & Co MAY is the pattern name |
photos courtesy: Chris Burgess
the MAY pattern with hand colouring a transferware pattern in the aesthetic style |
T. W. & Co |
photos courtesy: Dan Rohde
Examples of Thomas Wood & Sons ware:
The
patterns introduced by Thomas Wood & Co were continued
by Thomas Wood & Sons
the MAY pattern transferware pattern in the aesthetic style |
T. W. & S MAY is the pattern name - first introduced by Thomas Wood & Co. |
Initials
& marks used as
identification:
T. W. & CO
T. W. & S
T. W. & Co c. 1885-96 |
T. W. & S c. 1896 (92?) - 1897 |
typical
'belt' mark used by Thomas Wood & Co and continued by
Thomas Wood & Sons
1879 map showing the location
of the Queen Street Works
Queen Street was named after the pottery ware Wedgwood made for Queen Charlotte in 1765.
The Queen Street Works were demolished around 1904 to provide the site for the Burslem School of Art. |
Questions, comments, contributions? email: Steve Birks