Pountney and Co Ltd, The Bristol Pottery
NOTE: This article which follows originally appeared in a 1956 book 'British Potters and Pottery Today', is based mainly upon accounts provided mainly by the firms themselves.
At least a century
before Thomas Champion bought Cookworthy's patent and commenced to
produce porcelain at Bristol, there were potters at work in the neighbourhood
– at Brislington, producing
good tin-glazed 'Delft' wares similar to those of Lambeth and Southwark. This is
shown by the discovery,
in 1914, of
numerous potsherds on an old factory site, two at least bearing the
dates 1652 and 1653. The
discovery of this 'deposit' of kiln-wasters and fragments, which threw
much important light upon the early
ceramic history of Bristol was due to William Pountney, whose
interest in the subject was derived from his father, for forty years proprietor
of one of the Bristol
potteries and whose family name is today borne by the firm which can trace back
its history, in continuity if
not by a family tree, for over three centuries, to that very site at Brislington.
Briefly to recount its
earlier stages, we find the Bristol burgess rolls and Apprenticeship records
refer to one Edward Ward who, in 1682, took as his apprentice his son of the
same name and that he
continued at Brislington until 1697, when he transferred the pottery to Thomas
Frank. A few years
earlier, in 1683, he had built another works at Water Lane, which came to be
known as the Temple Pottery
from its proximity to the Temple Church.
At this pottery, which
continued in the Ward family until I746, Wares of excellent quality were
produced and Edward Ward died a rich man, for his fine products secured a
well-merited popularity.
In succession the works passed, first to Thomas Cantle and his son, next to William Taylor (in 1756) and then to Richard Frank, the son of Thomas referred to above, in whose hands it remained until 1785.
Up to this date the output
was entirely of 'Delft' wares. But meanwhile Wedgwood and his imitators
had been exploiting the new Queen's Ware and, at the death of Richard Frank, the
Temple Pottery, under its new owner,
Joseph Ring, switched over to the new technique. A man from
Staffordshire was engaged to help in this project and, under the Ring regime,
the factory prospered. He
was killed by the collapse of a warehouse in 1788, but his widow, with William
Taylor as Manager, carried on until
her son Joseph Ring was old enough to assume the reins. Meanwhile,
in 1791 one
Henry Carter had joined the firm, which became Taylor, Carter and Ring,
until Taylor retired in 1808.
An important milestone was the year 1802, when the factory, now the most important in the city, was re-named The Bristol Pottery, by which name it is still known. The output at this period included not only certain cream-coloured wares (Queen's Ware), but also blue-printed earthenware, which was at the time by far the most popular type of table ware for domestic use.
An important change in the management
took place in 1813, when Ring took as partners Henry
Carter and John Pountney, who had been in his counting house. Three years later
both Ring and Carter having
died, the entire control passed to Pountney, though he took as partner Edwin
Allies, a combination which endured until 1835.
At this period their parted
wares were of a quality to compare favourably with Derby, Worcester
and Staffordshire. Blue printed wares, transfer-printed from engravings by a man
from Burslem, included the
Willow Pattern, views of Bristol and its neighbourhood and scenes from the
plays of Shakespeare. Pountney
was a gifted man. He carried on the good work initiated by Ring. He improved
the technique and achieved a high
standard, not only of the Queen's Ware, but also the so-called 'Parian',
which became something of a specialty about 1850 under the care of a Hanley
potter and modeller,
Edward Raby.
From 1852, when Pountney died, there were several changes. For twenty years his widow carried on the business, then it passed to Captain Halstead Cobden and, in 1878, was bought by Patrick Johnston and a Mr. Rogers. In 1882 a nephew of the former, T. B.Johnston, joined the firm. A young man of ideas, he soon realized that the factory was out of date. He closed it down and took over other premises and, in 1887, formed a new company, Pountney and Co. with himself and a partner Charles Burn as Managing Directors. This factory was only a stop-gap, for he dreamed of premises which should be the last word in up-to-dateness.
Eventually, with
financial help from his friend W. H. Bell (who became a Director in 1900)
he was able to erect the
present works, of which the Company is justly
proud. Their new factory 'the
first of its kind in the world', was finished in 1905. Conceived entirely by
himself it is all on one
floor and designed on the straight line principle, passing from the raw
materials to the finished product
in correct and labour-saving order.
After fifty-six years in the
industry Johnston died in 1938, having been one of the first to recognise
the importance of lithographic-transfers. These he made himself. He also
introduced continuous firing
and showed that it is possible to make both domestic and sanitary wares in the
same factory.
In 1938 the first two tunnel
kilns were in operation, one, the glost oven, being fired by gas produced
from anthracite on the premises. The other is an electric kiln for enamel
colours. A roller
conveyor-system was introduced in 1946, and in 1953 an electric glazing tunnel.
The wares produced today by
The Bristol Pottery are very diverse and it may be said that, in all
branches of its output, the establishment of Pountney and Company, Ltd. is a
worthy inheritor of the
traditions initiated, as we have seen, three centuries ago in Bristol.
NOTE: This article which originally appeared in a 1956 book 'British Potters and Pottery Today', is based mainly upon accounts provided mainly by the firms themselves.
Questions, comments, contributions? email: Steve Birks