Information on "The Potters"


Down load interactive information on the Potteries.


Stoke-on-Trent
Potters
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Museums
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Ceramic Search

 

Historical Background on Famous Potters

Josiah Spode
The successful development of bone china by the Spode factory at Stoke-on-Trent (1776-present), for wares of outstanding beauty and economy in the Regency style of the early 1800s, ensured its preeminence among commercial producers.

Josiah Wedgwood
Josiah Wedgwood, (1730-1795), English potter, whose works are among the finest examples of ceramic art.

Henry Minton
Thomas Minton founded his factory in 1793/6 in Stoke-upon-Trent. Minton was Spode's nearest rival. He was famous for a cream-coloured and blue-printed earthenware majolica, bone china, and Parian porcelain.

The Wood Family
… a major force in the development of Staffordshire wares from peasant pottery to an organised industry, they were a celebrated family of potters.

Royal Doulton
In 1901 King Edward VII conferred on the company the double honour of the royal warrant and the specific right to use the title "Royal".

More on famous potters:  


 

OTHER POTTERS PAGES:

Bottle Kilns
The City of Stoke-on-Trent
The development of the Potteries
Types of Pottery ware
Potteries Dialect
The "Willow Pattern"
Gladstone Museum
Thomas Whieldon

 

Questions / comments? email: Steve Birks