| 1 |
See p. 129. |
| 2 |
For Tunstall manor see p. 86. |
| 3 |
See p. 249. |
| 4 |
See pp. 248–9. |
| 5 |
Ward, Stoke, 286–7. E.g. exemption from tithes, ch.
rates and highway rates, although c. 1840 Cobridge was
paying poor rates and was subject to the policing powers of
the Burslem Improvement Commrs. In 1850 it became
subject to the new Burslem Local Board. For the mid19th-cent. ch. at Cobridge see p. 124. |
| 6 |
Ward, Stoke, 235–6; see p. 130. |
| 7 |
6 Geo. IV, c. 131 (local and personal). Occupiers of
houses of less than £4 in value were exempted from the
rates. |
| 8 |
H.R.L., Burslem Commrs.' Mins. 1825–50, pp. 2, 6. |
| 9 |
Ibid. p. 14. |
| 10 |
Ibid. p. 22. |
| 11 |
Ibid. p. 24. |
| 12 |
Ibid. pp. 55, 58–63. |
| 13 |
Ibid. p. 116. |
| 14 |
Ibid. passim; Ward, Stoke, 255. The chair was occasionally taken by one of the assistants or the deputy:
Burslem Commrs'. Mins. pp. 52, 62, 64, 69. |
| 15 |
Burslem Commrs.' Mins. 1825–50, pp. 50, 53, 71. |
| 16 |
Ibid. p. 110. |
| 17 |
The Public Health Supplemental Act, 1850 (No. 3), 13
& 14 Vic. c. 108; Local Govt. Board's Provisional Orders
Confirmation (no. 15) Act, 1891, 54 & 55 Vic. c. 223
(local); Burslem Bd. of Health Rep. 1851, 15 (copy in H.R.L.) |
| 18 |
Burslem Bd. of Health Rep. 1851, 15. |
| 19 |
Ibid.; ibid. 1865, 9–10; Burslem Commrs'. Mins.
1825–50, p. 108. |
| 20 |
Burslem Bd. of Health Rep. 1851, 15. By 1872 the
number had dropped to 4: finance, markets and town hall;
sewers, scavenging and nuisance; highways, lighting and
improvement; free libr. and Wedgwood Institute: ibid.
1872, 4. The Wedgwood Institute Cttee. had become a
regular cttee. in 1863 (when the foundation stone of the
institute was laid), replacing the exploratory Wedgwood
memorial cttee. set up some years before: ibid. 1863, 9;
1864, 5; see p. 141. By 1878 when the board was replaced
by the borough council there were again 6 cttees.: finance,
market and town hall; sanitary; highways, lighting and
improvement; gas; Wedgwood Institute; general purposes: H.R.L., Burslem Board of Health Mins. 1878, 1 May
1878. |
| 21 |
Burslem Bd. of Health Rep. 1851, 18. |
| 22 |
Keates and Ford's Potteries Dir. (1867). |
| 23 |
39 & 40 Vic., c. 97 (local); H.R.L., Burslem Boro.
Attendance Bk. 1878–89, list for 1878; Woolley's Stoke
Boro. Almanack (1879); Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1880, 1908). |
| 24 |
H.R.L., Burslem Boro. Counc. Mins. 1878–82, 28
Aug. 1878. By 1906 there were 13 regular cttees.: general
purposes; markets, town hall, and baths; sanitary; sewage
disposal; public libraries and museum; electric lighting;
park and cemetery; gas; highways; finance; stores; isolation hospital; and, for the first time, education: ibid.
1898–1906, pp. 485–6, 487. |
| 25 |
Stoke Counc. Yr. Bk. (1915). |
| 26 |
Ward, Stoke, 234–6; White, Dir. Staffs. (1834). |
| 27 |
Burslem Bd. of Health Rep. 1851, 21–22; White,
Dir. Staffs. (1851); Staffs. Advertiser, 4 Jan. 1851. |
| 28 |
See pp. 112–13. |
| 29 |
Burslem Boro. Mins. 1878–82, pp. 266–7; Guide to Ch.
Congress, 1911, 136 (copy in H.R.L.), the chain and mace
being included in an art exhibition on the occasion of the
congress. |
| 30 |
Tunstall Ct. R. (T.N.S.F.C. lix—lxvi), passim. |
| 31 |
See p. 96. |
| 32 |
6 Geo. IV, c. 131 (local and personal). |
| 33 |
H.R.L., Burslem Commrs.' Mins. 1825–50, p. 12. |
| 34 |
Ibid. p. 28. |
| 35 |
Ibid. pp. 50, 51, 54. |
| 36 |
Ibid. pp. 67, 68. |
| 37 |
Ibid. pp. 70, 72. |
| 38 |
Ibid. pp. 74, 76, 82, 88, 93, 96, 114, 122, 150, 163. |
| 39 |
Ibid. p. 84. |
| 40 |
Ibid. pp. 144, 180. |
| 41 |
Ibid. p. 156. |
| 42 |
White, Dir. Staffs. (1834); Ward, Stoke, 236. |
| 43 |
See pp. 195, 216. |
| 44 |
Burslem Commrs.' Mins. 1825–50, p. 209. |
| 45 |
White, Dir. Staffs. (1851); Burslem Bd. of Health Rep.
1854, 12; S.R.O., Q/APs 1 (including detailed plan of
1874 extensions); O.S. Map 1/500 Staffs. xii. 9.2 (1879). |
| 46 |
Date on foundation stone; Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1940). |
| 47 |
Burslem Commrs.' Mins. 1825–50, p. 20. This was
presumably the watch house at the E. end of the town hall
mentioned by Arnold Bennett in 'The Elixir of Youth'
(Tales of the Five Towns). |
| 48 |
White, Dir. Staffs. (1834). |
| 49 |
Burslem Commrs.' Mins. 1825–50, pp. 26, 93, 98, 101,
208. |
| 50 |
Tunstall Ct. R. (T.N.S.F.C. lxvi), 114, 115. |
| 51 |
Staffs. Advertiser, 4 Jan. 1851. |
| 52 |
Act for more effectual execution of office of J.P.,
2 & 3 Vic. c. 15; Ward, Stoke, 236. |
| 53 |
Burslem Bd. of Health Rep. 1858, 13; 1859, 5; Lond.
Gaz. 1858, p. 4904. |
| 54 |
Lond. Gaz. 1880, p. 6095. |
| 55 |
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1908). |
| 56 |
Act for regulating markets in Burslem, &c., 6 Geo. IV,
c. 131 (local and personal). |
| 57 |
Printed copy of recommendations in H.R.L. |
| 58 |
Printed copy of recommendations in H.R.L. |
| 59 |
Burslem Bd. of Health Rep. 1851, 19; ibid. 1852,
4, 7; ibid. 1853, 14–16. |
| 60 |
Ibid. 1851, 25. It was reported, however, that the
crossings and footpaths in Rushton Grange were regularly swept and repaired. |
| 61 |
Original copy of the report in H.R.L. |
| 62 |
Burslem Bd. of Health Rep. 1853, 14. |
| 63 |
Ibid. 1855, 5; 1858, 5–6, 10–12, 17–18. |
| 64 |
Staffs. Sentinel, 18 Sept. 1886 (cutting in H.R.L.,
vol. of local govt. newscuttings relating especially to
Burslem); Burslem Boro. Mins. 1878–82, p. 188; O.S.
Map 1/500 Staffs. xii. 9. 19 (1879). For the sanitary arrangements of Earl Granville's new cottages at Cobridge see
p. 114. |
| 65 |
Burslem Bd. of Health Rep. 1862, 8, 11; 1866, 10;
H.R.L., Stoke Commrs.' Mins. 1855–65, 7 Sept. 1859;
see p. 196. |
| 66 |
Staffs. Sentinel, 21 Oct. 1898; Kelly's Dir. Staffs.
(1880, 1912); Souvenir of Opening of Burslem's New
Sewage Disposal Works (copy in the possession of the
City Sewage Engineer in 1959); Burslem Boro. Mins.
1878–82, p. 249; O.S. Map 6" Staffs, xi SE., xii SW.
(1900, 1925). The Boro. Sewage Farm Cttee. held its first
meeting on 28 Nov. 1879: H.R.L., Burslem Boro. Farm
Cttee. Mins. 1879–96. |
| 67 |
Staffs. Sentinel, 21 Oct. 1898. |
| 68 |
H.R.L., Burslem Boro. Electricity Cttee. Mins. 1897–
1910, pp. 62, 102. |
| 69 |
Staffs. Advertiser, 30 June, 4 Aug. 1894. A subscription bath was opened at Bycars Colliery in 1816 and was
still in use in 1824: Pitt, Staffs. 396–7; Ward, Stoke, 210;
Warrillow, Stoke, 372. |
| 70 |
Lond. Gaz. 1856, p. 2905; 1881, p. 5301. There was
some relaxation in favour of St. Paul's churchyard in 1882:
ibid. 1882, p. 483. |
| 71 |
Ibid. 1872, p. 3621; H.R.L., Burslem Burial Bd.
Mins. 1873–8, p. 1. |
| 72 |
Burslem Burial Bd. Mins. 1873–8, passim; Burslem
Boro. Mins. 1878–82, p. 218; Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1880). |
| 73 |
See p. 330. |
| 74 |
Inscriptions on E. front of building; Warrillow,
Stoke, 363–4. |
| 75 |
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1908, 1916); Warrillow, Stoke,
366. |
| 76 |
Warrillow, Stoke, 162, 177–8; W.S.L., Staffs. Views,
ii, p. 159 (c), woodcut of women waiting at the spring for
water to rise. |
| 77 |
Warrillow, Stoke, 162. |
| 78 |
Falkner, Wood Family, 81; U.C.N.S., Sneyd MSS.,
Burslem Deeds, notice concerning the removal of the vegetable market in 1816 to a spot 'below where the fountain
lately stood'. |
| 79 |
See p. 160. |
| 80 |
Ward, Stoke, 268; see p. 120. |
| 81 |
Ward, Stoke, 268. Wood had made 'the fountain in his
manufactory' available to the public free of charge during
a shortage in the summer of 1826: Warrillow, Stoke, 163. |
| 82 |
Pure and Wholesome Water for 100 Years, 1849–1949,
6, 12, 13 (copy in H.R.L.). |
| 83 |
Ibid. 13; White, Dir. Staffs. (1851); Staffs. Weekly
Sentinel, 20 July 1956; Warrillow, Stoke, 165. |
| 84 |
Pure and Wholesome Water, 13; White, Dir. Staffs.
(1851); Staffs. Weekly Sentinel, 20 July 1956. |
| 85 |
H.R.L., Burslem Commrs.' Mins. 1825–50, 14, 21, 22;
see p. 160. |
| 86 |
Ward, Stoke, 268; Act for incorporating the Burslem
and Tunstall Gas Co. 20 & 21 Vic. c. 59 (local and personal);
Burslem Commrs.' Mins. 1825–50, p. 121; White, Dir.
Staffs. (1851). |
| 87 |
Burslem Commrs.' Mins. 1825–50, pp. 117–18, 119,
125–6. |
| 88 |
Burslem Bd. of Health Rep. 1851, 18, 27–28. |
| 89 |
Ibid. 1853, 13. |
| 90 |
Burslem Local Board Gas Act, 40 & 41 Vic. c. 208
(local). |
| 91 |
Local Govt. Board's Provisional Orders Confirmation
(no. 3) Act, 8 Edw. VII, c. 144 (local); see p. 266. |
| 92 |
Warrillow, Etruria, 152, 154; White, Dir. Staffs.
(1851). |
| 93 |
See p. 97. |
| 94 |
H.R.L., Burslem Boro. Electricity Cttee. Mins. 1897–
1910, pp. 62, 100, 102; Staffs. Advertiser, 12 Mar. 1910,
supplement. |
| 95 |
Local Govt. Board's Provisional Orders Confirmation
(no. 3) Act, 8 Edw. VII, c. 144 (local); see p. 266. |
| 96 |
Burslem Commrs.' Mins. 1825–50, pp. 93, 98, 101.
The engine at Longport was mentioned in 1829 (ibid.
p. 38) and that at Burslem in 1835: ibid. p. 76. The Act of
1825 (§ 72) stated that the commrs. could keep or contract
for a fire engine. |
| 97 |
White, Dir. Staffs. (1851); Burslem Bd. of Health Rep.
1853, 15; 1858, 19; 1871, 17. |
| 98 |
Burslem Boro. Mins. 1878–82, pp. 305, 341, 407, 433,
474, 487, 493, 501; 1882–90, pp. 3, 7, 25, 29, 199. |
| 99 |
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1896). |
| 100 |
H.R.L., brochure of official opening, 17 May 1956;
The Surveyor, 1 Sept. 1956 (copy in H.R.L.). For the
organization of the fire service after 1910 see p. 267. |
| 101 |
St. John's, Burslem, Churchwardens' and Overseers'
Accts. 1700–95, p. 97; Staffs. Advertiser, 26 Mar. 1836;
Ward, Stoke, 211. |
| 102 |
Staffs. Advertiser, 26 Mar. 1836. |
| 103 |
Burslem Bd. of Health Rep. 1851, 5; Adams, Adams
Family, 185. |
| 104 |
Staffs. Sentinel (Summer Number 1910), 40, where
Stevenson's home is wrongly called Cobridge Hall; see
p. 119. |
| 105 |
S.H.C. 1934 (1), 79. |
| 106 |
Burslem Bd. of Health Rep. 1851, 5, 15, 22. |
| 107 |
See list of cttees. on p. 126. |
| 108 |
Ward, Stoke, 217–18, 467, and app. pp. xxx-xxxi; St.
John's, Burslem, Churchwardens' and Overseers' Accts.
1700–95; Staffs. Advertiser, 28 Mar. 1835. |
| 109 |
Churchwardens' and Overseers' Accts. 1700–95,
passim to p. 122. This evidence applies only to the first
three-quarters of the 18th cent. but the same system was
doubtless in force earlier since this was the ancient method
of choosing the churchwardens: Ward, Stoke, app.
pp. xxvii-xxviii. During the first year of the overseers'
accounts, 1704–5, only the overseers of Burslem and
Hulton are mentioned. |
| 110 |
Churchwardens' and Overseers' Accts. 1700–95,
p. 156. |
| 111 |
Staffs. Advertiser, 28 Mar. 1835. |
| 112 |
Ibid. 8 Apr. 1838; H.R.L., Wolstanton and Burslem
Union Mins. 1854–8, p. 36. |
| 113 |
Wolstanton and Burslem Union Mins. 1919–22,
p. 32; see p. 199. |
| 114 |
Churchwardens' and Overseers' Accts. 1700–95, p. 21. |
| 115 |
Returns on Maintenance of Poor, 1803, H.C. 175,
p. 468 (1803–4), xiii; the rates consisted of 'poor and other
rates'. |
| 116 |
Rep. Sel. Cttee. on Poor Rate Returns, 1822, H.C. 556,
p. 160 (1822), v; 1825, H.C. 334, p. 197 (1825), iv; 3rd
Ann. Rep. Poor Law Com., H.C. 546, p. 174 (1837), xxxi. |
| 117 |
Wolstanton and Burslem Union Mins. 1854–8, p. 323. |
| 118 |
Ibid. 1919–22, p. 381. |
| 119 |
Churchwardens' and Overseers' Accts. 1700–95, p. 14. |
| 120 |
Ibid. p. 15. |
| 121 |
Maintenance of Poor, 1803, 469. |
| 122 |
Staffs. Advertiser, 28 Mar. 1835. There were still two
for the parish after the union: ibid. 7 Apr. 1838. |
| 123 |
Burslem Par. Reg. i. 211, 212. |
| 124 |
5th Rep. Cttee. on Poor Laws, 1777 (Reps. of Cttees.
of H.C., 1st ser. ix), 458. |
| 125 |
Churchwardens' and Overseers' Accts. 1700–95,
p. 139; Ward, Stoke, 270, 271; Hargreaves, Map of
Staffs. Potteries. |
| 126 |
Ward, Stoke, 271. |
| 127 |
Ibid. |
| 128 |
See p. 97. |
| 129 |
Wolstanton and Burslem Union Mins. 1854–8, pp. 2,
9, 204; White, Dir. Staffs. (1851). It may have been used
as a works before that as White describes the barracks as a
converted manufactory. |
| 130 |
Wolstanton and Burslem Union Mins. 1854–8, pp. 9,
12, 24, 46, 98, 143, 211, 215, 218, 296, 333–4, 365; Jewitt,
Ceramic Art, 464. |
| 131 |
Warrillow, Stoke, 241, pl. 4. |
| 132 |
H. J. Steele, 'Social Conditions in Burslem during the
17th and 18th cents.' (T.N.S.F.C. lxxviii), 22–24; R. Plot,
Nat. Hist. Staffs. (1686), 122; see pp. 138, 139. |
| 133 |
T.N.S.F.C. lxxviii, map facing p. 16; Ward, Stoke,
225–6 and map facing p. 225 (also reproduced in Wedgwood, Wedgwood Family, facing p. 121). The two maps are
19th cent. reconstructions: T.N.S.F.C. lxxviii. 29. |
| 134 |
Ward, Stoke, 235, map facing p. 225, and app. pp.
xxxii-xxxvii. |
| 135 |
Lich. Dioc. Regy., Tithe Maps and Appt., Burslem;
Rushton Grange and much of Hulton were not tithable
and so are not included. |
| 136 |
V.C.H. Staffs. iv. 50, no. 177. |
| 137 |
See p. 251. |
| 138 |
Close R. 1234–7, 35. |
| 139 |
See p. 251. |
| 140 |
T.N.S.F.C. lxxviii. 24; U.C.N.S., Sneyd MSS.,
Burslem Deeds; see p. 97. |
| 141 |
Ward, Stoke, 206. |
| 142 |
Tunstall Ct. R. (T.N.S.F.C. lxi), 35; ibid. lxiii. 44. |
| 143 |
Ibid. lxxviii, map facing p. 16. |
| 144 |
Wedgwood, Wedgwood Family, 315; see p. 200. |
| 145 |
Ward, Stoke, 206. |
| 146 |
Ibid. 235–6; U.C.N.S., Sneyd MSS., Burslem
Deeds; see p. 126. |
| 147 |
Ward, Stoke, 236; J. Aikin, Country Around Manchester (1795), 519. |
| 148 |
U.C.N.S., Sneyd MSS., Burslem Deeds. |
| 149 |
Ward, Stoke, 252. |
| 150 |
Ibid. 253. |
| 151 |
Ibid. 253–6; White, Dir. Staffs. (1851). For details
of these powers see p. 125. |
| 152 |
Ward, Stoke, 256–7, plate facing p. 257, and groundplan facing p. 225; Staffs. Advertiser, 5 Dec. 1835; Act
for regulating markets in Burslem, &c., 6 Geo. IV, c. 131
(local and personal); see p. 119. |
| 153 |
Warrillow, Stoke, 400. For a description of the building see p. 113. |
| 154 |
White, Dir. Staffs. (1851). |
| 155 |
Ibid.; Staffs. Advertiser, 4 Jan. 1851; Burslem Bd. of
Health Rep. 1851, 21. |
| 156 |
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1880); H.R.L., Burslem Boro.
Mins. 1878–82, p. 25. |
| 157 |
Burslem in Days Gone By (copy in H.R.L.), stating,
c. 1932, that many people then remembered this market. |
| 158 |
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1940). |
| 159 |
Stoke Official Handbk. [1958 and previous edn.]. |
| 160 |
Aikin, Country Around Manchester, 519; Univ. Brit.
Dir. (1791), iv. 105–6. |
| 161 |
Ward, Stoke, 258. In 1834 the dates were given as
8 Feb., 29 Mar., 17 May, 28 June, 13 Sept., and 26 Dec.:
White, Dir. Staffs. (1834). |
| 162 |
Ward, Stoke, 258. |
| 163 |
They are not mentioned in White, Dir. Staffs. (1851). |
| 164 |
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1908). |
| 165 |
Ibid. (1940). |
| 166 |
Tunstall Ct. R. (T.N.S.F.C. lix), 76. |
| 167 |
S.H.C. n.s. xi. 242. |
| 168 |
Tunstall Ct. R. (T.N.S.F.C. lix), 46, 83, 84; ibid. lxi.
32; U.C.N.S., Sneyd MSS., Burslem Deeds; W.S.L.,
D. 1790/33, compotus of Audley, Horton and Tunstall
10–11 Edw. IV. |
| 169 |
U.C.N.S., Sneyd MSS., Keele Deeds, Sneyd v.
tenants of Tunstall Manor, no. 15. |
| 170 |
Harper, Bygone Tunstall, 70. |
| 171 |
Ibid.; see p. 101. |
| 172 |
Harper, Bygone Tunstall, 71; H. Wedgwood, Staffs.:
Up and Down the County (1881), iii. 51, 67, mentions the
mill as no longer in use. |
| 173 |
Tunstall Ct. R. (T.N.S.F.C. lxi), 32. |
| 174 |
U.C.N.S., Sneyd MSS., Burslem Deeds. |
| 175 |
Ibid. |
| 176 |
Tunstall Ct. R. (T.N.S.F.C. lxvi), 142. |
| 177 |
F. Falkner, The Wood Family of Burslem, 80; Ralph
worked Bell's Mill at Shelton and a mill at Cheddleton at
the same time, spending 2 days a week at each of the 3
mills. |
| 178 |
U.C.N.S., Sneyd MSS., Burslem Deeds. |
| 179 |
Ibid. |
| 180 |
Lich. Dioc. Regy., Tithe Maps and Appt., Burslem. |
| 181 |
P.O. Dir. Staffs. (1854). |
| 182 |
Staffs. Advertiser, 22 Aug. 1857. |
| 183 |
Parson and Bradshaw, Dir. Staffs. (1818); Keates's
Potteries Dir. (1873–4, 1875–6); Burslem Bd. of Health Rep.
1857, 13. |
| 184 |
Local inf. |
| 185 |
Lich. Dioc. Regy., Tithe Maps and Appt., Burslem;
Ward, Stoke, 160. |
| 186 |
O.S. Map 6" Staffs. xi SE. (1890). |
| 187 |
Wedgwood, Staffs.: Up and Down the County, iii. 51. |
| 188 |
Lich. Dioc. Regy., Tithe Maps and Appt., Burslem;
White, Dir. Staffs. (1851); P.O. Dir. Staffs. (1854). |
| 189 |
P.O. Dir. Staffs. (1860); Keates and Ford's Potteries
Dir. (1865–6). |
| 190 |
P.O. Dir. Staffs. (1868); Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1924). |
| 191 |
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1928, 1940); local inf. |
| 192 |
P.O. Dir. Staffs. (1860), sub Williams; (1876), sub
Jones; Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1880), sub Jones. |
| 193 |
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1892), sub Jones. |
| 194 |
T.N.S.F.C. lxxxix. 84–85; xci. 85–86; exhibits at the
City Mus., Hanley. |
| 195 |
Procs. before J.P.s in 14th and 15th Cents. ed. Bertha
Putnam, 305, 317. |
| 196 |
Adams, Adams Family, 15. An old kiln and very coarse
saggars were found in a field near the Hamil early in the
18th cent.: Shaw, Staffs. Potteries, 7. No evidence is given
for the statement by Adams (op. cit. 15) that the monks of
Hulton Abbey produced pottery and that their works was
taken over by the Adams family at the Dissolution. |
| 197 |
In his will proved 1563 he left his best 'yron chymney'
to his son Wm. and his other chimney to his daughter
Ellen: Adams, Adams Family, 56. |
| 198 |
Ibid. 57, 58. |
| 199 |
Ibid. 104. |
| 200 |
T.N.S.F.C. xci. 94. These fragments are preserved in
the City Mus., Hanley. Another branch of the Daniel
family was making pottery at the Nook on the S. side of
what was later Queen Street by the mid-17th cent.: S.H.C.
4th ser. ii. 94. |
| 201 |
S.R.O., Q/SR Trans. 1682. |
| 202 |
T.N.S.F.C. xci. 95. |
| 203 |
Ibid. lxxiv. 66–67. A mug with hard-fired coarse body
very recently found on this site may date from c. 1600:
Evening Sentinel, 17 Feb. 1960. |
| 204 |
Wedgwood, Wedgwood Family, 88, 89. |
| 205 |
T.N.S.F.C. lxxxix. 85–86. |
| 206 |
R. Plot, Nat. Hist. Staffs. (1686), 422. |
| 207 |
Adams, Adams Family, 111. |
| 208 |
Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 207. |
| 209 |
See pp. 106, 108, 110. |
| 210 |
Allbut, Staffs. Pottery Dir. (1802). |
| 211 |
Ward, Stoke, 159, 259, 264–6, 286. |
| 212 |
Pottery Gaz. Dir. (1960). |
| 213 |
Ibid. |
| 214 |
P. W. L. Adams, Notes on Some N. Staffs. Families,
77; Adams Family, 348. This end of Hamil Rd. was called
Knowle St. in 1832: Hargreaves, Map of Staffs. Potteries.
See p. 120 for the Malkins' Jackfield estate. |
| 215 |
Wedgwood, Wedgwood Family, map facing p. 121. A
Robt. Malkin, potter, was in trouble in 1679 for 'digging
and making caverns in the waste of the lord' and removing
the soil from the road at Small Bridge Bank: Tunstall Ct. R.
(T.N.S.F.C. lxvi), 109. Isaac Malkin had a pottery at
Greenhead c. 1710 (Wedgwood, Wedgwood Family, 125
and map facing p. 121), and Thos. Malkin another at Jackfield: see p. 120. Sam. Malkin (1688–1741) had a pottery
in Nile St., apparently by 1712, and this was called the
Knowle Works about the time of his death: Mankowitz
and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 139; Wedgwood, Wedgwood
Family, map facing p. 121, which, however, shows in
Hamil Rd. only a house belonging to a Joseph Malkin.
Samuel's work can be seen in the City Mus., Hanley. |
| 216 |
Adams, Adams Family, 348; Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 438. |
| 217 |
Adams, N. Staffs. Families, 74; Adams Family, 348;
see p. 91. |
| 218 |
Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 74, 75, 77, 78, 170, 218. |
| 219 |
O.S. Map 6" Staffs. xii SW. (1900). |
| 220 |
Adams, Adams Family, 126–7; Wedgwood, Wedgwood Family, map facing p. 121; see p. 117. |
| 221 |
Adams, Adams Family, 108–9, where it is also stated
that John's father Robt. (d. 1654) established the works. |
| 222 |
Ibid. 111. |
| 223 |
Ibid. 114, 115, 118. |
| 224 |
Ibid. 122, 124. Ralph lived until 1766: ibid. 118. |
| 225 |
Ibid. 125, 126; Wedgwood, Wedgwood Family, 168;
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 186, 233. |
| 226 |
Adams, Adams Family, 127. |
| 227 |
Ibid. |
| 228 |
Ibid. 125–6. |
| 229 |
Ibid. 126–7; Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 441; Meigh, 'Staffs.
Potters', 21, 22, 35, 36, 207; photographs before demolition at H.R.L. |
| 230 |
Wedgwood, Wedgwood Family, 88, 89, 108, 111, 112
and n., and map facing p. 121. |
| 231 |
See p. 118. |
| 232 |
E. Meteyard, Life of Josiah Wedgwood, ii. 272 and n. 2;
Wedgwood, Wedgwood Family, 136, 137, 175, and pedigrees following pp. 136, 164; Burslem Par. Reg. ii. 461. |
| 233 |
Ll. Jewitt, The Wedgwoods, 99, but the statement there
quoted that Josiah's brother John owned the works from
1787 is wrong since John d. 1767 (Wedgwood, Wedgwood
Family, 132); Stoke-upon-Trent Par. Reg. iii. 794; Wedgwood, Wedgwood Family, 175. |
| 234 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 439; Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 91,
115, 116, 119, 146, 175, 192, 200, 214. The works was
unoccupied c. 1840: Ward, Stoke, 266. |
| 235 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 439–40; Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters',
40, 41. They also worked the Phoenix Pottery in Tunstall:
ibid. 41. |
| 236 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 440; Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 54,
77, 125, 214, 217. |
| 237 |
See p. 315. |
| 238 |
His will mentions 'the serviceyard and the kilneyard':
Wedgwood, Wedgwood Family, 81. For the estate see p. 120. |
| 239 |
Adams, N. Staffs. Families, 50. The Malkins had a
house and potworks at Greenhead, near the Overhouse,
early in the 18th cent.: Wedgwood, Wedgwood Family, 125,
and map facing p. 121. |
| 240 |
Wedgwood, Wedgwood Family, 111–14. |
| 241 |
Ibid. 110; Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 207. |
| 242 |
Wedgwood, Wedgwood Family, 117, 118, 120. It is not
clear from the list of Burslem potters c. 1710 (ibid. 124–5)
whether the works was that held by Ric. and described as
in the centre of the town, that held by Thos. Taylor and
described as 'later Mrs. Wedgwood's', or that not then being
worked but with the name John Wedgwood attached to
it, John of the Overhouse having died in 1705 and not
having mentioned a potworks in his will of that year: ibid.
119. Ric. and his brother Thos. are said to have introduced
flint into Burslem pottery: see n. 70 below. |
| 243 |
See p. 120. |
| 244 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 433. |
| 245 |
Wedgwood, Wedgwood Family, 137. |
| 246 |
Ibid. 138. |
| 247 |
Tablet on facade. |
| 248 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 459; Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters',
7, 51, 157. |
| 249 |
Tablet on facade; Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 459. |
| 250 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 459, where it is also stated that
Hammersley started at the new works on its opening in
1870; Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 9, where Hammersley's
first date is given as 1880, with (p. 171) Robinson, Kirkham & Co. in 1870–2. Gater, Hall & Co. were there by
1907: ibid. 84. |
| 251 |
Pottery Gaz. Dir. (1959). |
| 252 |
Wedgwood, Wedgwood Family, 142. In 1688 Thos.
son of Aaron Wedgwood was in trouble for digging pits
at Brownhills: Tunstall Ct. R. (T.N.S.F.C. lxvi), 127. |
| 253 |
Wedgwood, Wedgwood Family, 125, 151, and map
facing p. 121; Hargreaves, Map of Staffs. Potteries. Aaron
the elder had left all his potworks to his youngest son Ric.,
tenant of the Overhouse, who was working 'in the middle
of the town' c. 1710: Wedgwood, Wedgwood Family, 125.
The eldest son Thos. (who had bought the Red Lion Inn
next to the potworks of Aaron the younger) or his son
Thos. (who later became noted for his salt-glazing) at this
time held the lease of a works nearby on the W. side of the
present Wedgwood St.: ibid. 125, 146–7, 149–50. According to Josiah Wedgwood Thos. of the 'Red Lion' and Ric.
of the Overhouse introduced flint into Burslem pottery,
using it in their white ware which was fired in an oven on
the Bournes' estate at Chell: ibid. 324. |
| 254 |
Wedgwood, Wedgwood Family, 151, 153–6. |
| 255 |
Ibid. 154, 155, and map facing p. 121; Meteyard,
Wedgwood, i. 181, 277–82, although the date 1758 appears
to be too late. |
| 256 |
Hargreaves, Map of Staffs. Potteries; Meteyard,
Wedgwood, i. 281. |
| 257 |
See p. 117. |
| 258 |
Wedgwood, Wedgwood Family, 157, 159; Jewitt,
Ceramic Art, 442. |
| 259 |
Wedgwood, Wedgwood Family, 159; Meigh, 'Staffs.
Potters', 215. |
| 260 |
Ward, Stoke, 266. |
| 261 |
Jewitt, The Wedgwoods, 160; Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 442. |
| 262 |
See p. 119. |
| 263 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 124; Jewitt,
Ceramic Art, 443–4; Adams, Adams Family, add. and
corr., p. X; Adams, North Staffs. Families, 11, where the
date of sale is given as 1793; Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 123,
158; H.R.L., EMT 11–793 (a, b), 11–795. |
| 264 |
Adams, Adams Family, add. and corr., p. X. The
pottery was held by a Wm. Dawson c. 1800: Allbut, Staffs.
Pottery Dir. (1802). |
| 265 |
Adams, Adams Family, 328, 330, 331, 340–1; Meigh,
'Staffs. Potters', 100, 155, 216. It seems to have been
known as the Furlong Pottery at this time: ibid. 100, 155. |
| 266 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 466; Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 29,
36, 104; H.R.L., EMT 15–863. |
| 267 |
Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 74, 75, 131, 178. |
| 268 |
Ex inf. W. R. Midwinter Ltd. (1959); Survey of Stokeon-Trent (Brit. Bull. of Commerce, Nov. 1954), 27 (copy
in H.R.L.); Pottery Gaz. Dir. (1959). |
| 269 |
Adams, Adams Family, 111. |
| 270 |
W.S.L., D. 1788, P. 34, B. 1. |
| 271 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 155; F. Falkner,
The Wood Family of Burslem, 26–27; H. Wedgwood,
Staffs.: Up and Down the County, ii. 20, 27–28; Wedgwood,
Wedgwood Family, map c. 1750 facing p. 121, which,
however, shows Thos. Mitchell at Hill Top and John
on the adjoining site to the E. |
| 272 |
Wedgwood, Staffs.: Up and Down the County, ii. 28,
31, 32; Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 170; see p. 290. |
| 273 |
Ward, Stoke, 264–5; Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng.
Pottery, 6; Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 5, 170; inscription
'Hill Pottery' on building; 1st Rep. Factories Com. H.C.
450, p. B2, 35 (1833), xx. The other two factories were
John Riley's Hill Works opposite and Wm. Taylor's works
situated apparently to the east. Ward (p. 265) mentions
the absorption or demolition of 'three of the better sort
of houses of the last century . . . to make room for buildings
of trade'. |
| 274 |
2nd Rep. Com. Employment of Children [431], p. c 53,
H.C. (1843), xiv. |
| 275 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 6, 7, 9; Jewitt,
Ceramic Art, 459. |
| 276 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 459–60. |
| 277 |
Ibid. 460; Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery 27;
Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 30. |
| 278 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 460; Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 47. |
| 279 |
Ward, Stoke, 265 and plate facing. |
| 280 |
Bk. i, chap. xiv. |
| 281 |
See p. 119. |
| 282 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 465; Mankowitz and Haggar,
Eng. Pottery, 242–3. |
| 283 |
Allbut, Staffs. Pottery Dir. (1802). |
| 284 |
Ward, Stoke, 264; Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 465; Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 192; inscription on
building; see plate facing p. 294. |
| 285 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 192; Jewitt,
Ceramic Art, 465. |
| 286 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 465; C. Bunt, Brit. Potters and
Pottery To-day, 54; Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 10, 217;
Pottery Gaz. Dir. (1959). |
| 287 |
Ward, Stoke, 259–60, 267; Mankowitz and Haggar,
Eng. Pottery, 242; see plates facing pp. 105, 136. |
| 288 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 243; 1st Rep.
Factories Com. p. B2, 15. |
| 289 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 242. |
| 290 |
Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 14, 39, 54, 57, 84, 89, 108,
110, 138, 139, 155, 156, 174, 180; Falkner, Wood Family,
82; see p. 105. |
| 291 |
Survey of Stoke-on-Trent (Brit. Bull. of Commerce,
Dec. 1954), 27 (copy in H.R.L.). |
| 292 |
Warrillow, Stoke, 363. |
| 293 |
Ward, Stoke, 260. |
| 294 |
Shaw, Staffs. Potteries, 31; Parson and Bradshaw,
Dir. Staffs. (1818); P.O. Dir. Staffs. (1860); Keates's
Potteries Dir. (1882). |
| 295 |
Ward, Stoke, view of E. front facing p. 267. |
| 296 |
Ibid., W. view facing p. 266; see plate on facing p. |
| 297 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 448; Allbut, Staffs. Pottery Dir.
(1802). |
| 298 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 448; Mankowitz and Haggar,
Eng. Pottery, 60. |
| 299 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 448; Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 14,
169; W.S.L. 136/40. |
| 300 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 448; Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 155.
Pinder, Bourne and Hope were working there in 1860:
ibid. |
| 301 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 76, 78. |
| 302 |
Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 31, 46, 74, 99, 109, 112, 135,
137, 152, 213; Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 456, 465, 466; Allbut,
Staffs. Pottery Dir. (1802); Descriptive Acct. of the Potteries (1893), 53 (copy in H.R.L.). |
| 303 |
Stoke Official Handbk. [1958], 95. |
| 304 |
Ward, Stoke, 156, giving 1794 as the date of Davenport's acquisition of the works; Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 467,
giving 1793. |
| 305 |
Ward, Stoke, 156–7; Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng.
Pottery, 67–68. |
| 306 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 450; Ward, Stoke, 157; Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 67. The works was for
sale in 1804: ibid. |
| 307 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 468; Ward, Stoke, 156. |
| 308 |
Ward, Stoke, 156, 157. |
| 309 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 450; Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 61;
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 80–81; Pottery Gaz.
Dir. (1959); Survey of Stoke-on-Trent (Brit. Bull. of Commerce, Dec. 1954), 32 (copy in H.R.L.). A. J. Wilkinson
had been in association with Davenport at Newport; his
brother-in-law Arthur Shorter had taken over his business in 1894: ibid. |
| 310 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 468, 471; Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters',
66; Pottery Gaz. 1 Oct. 1881, 1 Feb., 2 July 1888. |
| 311 |
Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 66; see plate facing p. 172. |
| 312 |
See p. 118. Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 127, states that
Littler was Wood's precursor there for a few years about
the mid-18th cent. before he went to Longton Hall (see
p. 239) |
| 313 |
Allbut, Staffs. Pottery Dir. (1802). |
| 314 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 141. |
| 315 |
Ibid. 32; Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 470; Meigh, 'Staffs.
Potters', 36. |
| 316 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 470–1; Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters',
44. |
| 317 |
Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 44, 54; Pottery Gaz. Dir. (1959). |
| 318 |
Adams, Adams Family, 136 and add. and corr., p. K;
H.R.L., EMT 10–769, 10–783, 11–780; see p. 119.
Another of Sampson's potworks at Cobridge was sold to
Wm. in 1787: H.R.L., EMT 1–787(b). A Ralph Daniel of
Cobridge introduced the use of plaster moulds to England
c. 1745: Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 66. |
| 319 |
Adams, Adams Family, 127, 328. |
| 320 |
Allbut, Staffs. Pottery Dir. (1802). |
| 321 |
Adams, Adams Family, 142, 164, 165; H.R.L., EM
26–866, plan of 1866. Ric. Adams, belonging to another
branch of the family, had a works at Cobridge c. 1759–
90. He possibly learnt the art from his great-uncle at a
works in Holden Lane: Adams, Adams Family, 315–17
and add. and corr., p. K. |
| 322 |
Adams, Adams Family, add. and corr., p. C. |
| 323 |
Ibid. |
| 324 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 26, 72; Meigh,
'Staffs. Potters', 70. |
| 325 |
Allbut, Staffs. Pottery Dir. (1802). |
| 326 |
Adams, Adams Family, add. and corr., p. K; Meigh,
'Staffs. Potters', 15, 26, 29, 55, 56, 86, 100, 112; T.
Roberts, 'Old Roads of Burslem' (Stoke Bi-monthly Review,
Feb. 1953), 3, stating that there had been an alternative
proposal to run Waterloo Rd. along the course of the
present Remer St., thus saving the works. |
| 327 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 210; Jewitt,
Ceramic Art, 472; Adams, Adams Family, add. and corr.,
p. K. The Bucknall family were making pottery at Cobridge
and possibly Hot Lane in the 18th cent: Meigh, 'Staffs.
Potters', 46. |
| 328 |
Ward, Stoke, 286; Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng.
Pottery, 55; S.R.O., D. 206/M4. |
| 329 |
2nd Rep. Com. Employment of Children, p. c58. |
| 330 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 192. |
| 331 |
Ibid. 38, 192. |
| 332 |
Adams, Adams Family, add. and corr., p. K.; Meigh,
'Staffs. Potters', 148. |
| 333 |
Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 204; Adams, Adams Family,
add. and corr., p. K; Allbut, Staffs. Pottery Dir. (1802);
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 230–1. Peter Warburton (1773–1813) built the Bleak Hill Works (still standing between Elder and Waterloo Roads) early in the
19th cent.: ibid. 231. |
| 334 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 478; Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 112,
117, 119, 203, 217; White, Dir. Staffs. (1834). |
| 335 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 478; Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters',
50. |
| 336 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 210; Ward,
Stoke, 286; Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 5; H.R.L., EMT
1–836(a). In the early 1830's 600 hands were employed
there: 1st Rep. Factories Com., p. B2, 20. |
| 337 |
Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 5, 185; Survey of Stoke-onTrent (Brit. Bull. of Commerce, Dec. 1954), 15. |
| 338 |
Brit. Bull. of Commerce, Dec. 1954, 15. |
| 339 |
White, Dir. Staffs. (1851); P.O. Dir. Staffs. (1872);
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1884, 1912); tablets on buildings; ex
inf. Alfred Meakin (Tunstall) Ltd. Howard and Ric. Haywood and John Goodwin held a flint mill in Beech's Lane in
1844 (H.R.L., EMT 15–844), and Goodwin held the
Furlong Mill in 1851. |
| 340 |
See p. 104. |
| 341 |
Survey of Stoke-on-Trent (Brit. Bull. of Commerce,
vol. 16 n.s. no. 7), 11; Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1932, 1940).
A flint mill variously described as in Hot Lane, North
Rd., and Flint St., was worked by Edw. Corn between
at least 1865 and 1892: Keates and Ford's Potteries Dir.
(1865–6); Keates's Potteries Dir. (1873–4, 1875–6, 1882,
1892–3). |
| 342 |
Pigot's Nat. Com. Dir. (1828–9); P.O. Dir. Staffs.
(1872); Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1884, 1896, 1924, 1940); O.S.
Map 6" Staffs. xi SE. (1890, 1900, 1926). |
| 343 |
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1896, 1908, 1916); Barrett's Stoke
City Dir. [1959]. Wm. Bowers had a mill at Middleport
in 1851: White, Dir. Staffs. (1851). |
| 344 |
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1896, 1908, 1916, 1924, 1940);
Stoke City Dir. [1959], which does not mention Mellor's;
O.S. Map 6" Staffs. xii SW. (1900, 1926). |
| 345 |
White, Dir. Staffs. (1834, 1851); Mining Jnl. and
Commercial Gaz., 22 July 1871, 637 (copy in H.R.L.);
Malabar, Map of Tunstall; O.S. Map 6" Staffs. xii NW.
(1890). |
| 346 |
W.S.L., D. 1797; Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1896, 1908,
1924); O.S. Map 6" Staffs. xi NE. (1925). |
| 347 |
See p. 131. |
| 348 |
S.H.C. n.s. xi. 261. For mining within Tunstall
manor generally see p. 101. |
| 349 |
S.H.C. n.s. xi. 246, mentioning a mine in Tunstall
manor in 1282. |
| 350 |
Tunstall Ct. R. (T.N.S.F.C. lix), 58, 84; W.S.L.,
D. 1490/33; S.C. 6/Hen. VII/679, m. 5; see p. 139. |
| 351 |
Bodl. MS. 36911, Thos. Endon's Plan of Coal Mines
in Sneyd Hamlet, May 1683 (photostat copy in H.R.L.);
Ward, Stoke, 209; Wedgwood, Wedgwood Family, 275,
290; C. J. Homer, 'N. Staffs. Coalfield' (Trans. N. Staffs.
Inst. Mining Engineers, i), 105. The seams worked included
the Great Row which provides a coal well suited to the
needs of the pottery industry: [J. O'N. Millott], Coal
Seams of N. Staffs. (D.S.I.R. Pamph., H.M.S.O. 1937),
44. For present-day outcropping in the centre of Burslem,
see p. 105, n. 5. |
| 352 |
Wedgwood, Wedgwood Family, 308. |
| 353 |
Staffs. Sentinel, 26 Apr. 1890; O.S. Map 6" Staffs.
xii SW. (1890, 1926). |
| 354 |
Census, 1871, Staffs. |
| 355 |
Staffs. Advertiser, 22 Jan., 23 July 1870; Mining Jnl.
11 May, 10 and 22 June, 4 Nov. 1871 (copy of relevant
extracts in H.R.L.); Staffs. Sentinel, 26 Apr. 1890. |
| 356 |
O.S. Map 6" Staffs. xii NW., SW. (1890). |
| 357 |
Parson and Bradshaw, Dir. Staffs. (1818); Pigot's Nat.
Com. Dir. (1828–9); Staffs. Advertiser, 22 Jan. 1870;
O.S. Map 6" Staffs. xii SW. (1890). |
| 358 |
Rep. Insp. Mines, N. Staffs., 1888 [C. 5779], p. 14,
H.C. (1889), xxiv. |
| 359 |
Slater's Com. Dir. (1862); Jones's Potteries Dir. (1864);
Keates's Potteries Dir. (1873–4); O.S. Map 6" Staffs. xii
SW. (1890). |
| 360 |
Keates's Potteries Dir. (1873–4, 1892–3); Rep. Insp.
Mines, Stafford, 1896 [C. 8450], p. 54, H.C. (1897), xx;
ibid. 1902 [Cd. 1590], p. 265, H.C. (1903), xv; O.S. Map
6" Staffs. xii NW. (1890). |
| 361 |
Slater's Com. Dir. (1862); Jones's Potteries Dir. (1864);
Keates's Potteries Dir. (1875–6; 1882); Rep. Insp. Mines,
N. Staffs., 1888, 14, which describes it as 'standing';
Warrillow, Stoke, 330. |
| 362 |
Ward, Stoke, 209. |
| 363 |
Adams, Adams Family, 16–17, 18–19, 31, 33, 37–38;
W.S.L., D. 1490/33; S.C. 6/Hen. VII/679, m. 5. |
| 364 |
Wedgwood, Wedgwood Family, 286. |
| 365 |
Ibid. 251–2, 253, 254, 273. |
| 366 |
Ibid. 252, 253, 275, 285. |
| 367 |
Ibid. 270–1, 279. |
| 368 |
Adams, Adams Family, 39; Wedgwood, Wedgwood
Family, 78, 279, 285; U.C.N.S., Sneyd MSS., Hulton
Deeds (4 Oct. 22 Jas. I); Bodl. MS. 36911. |
| 369 |
Wedgwood, Wedgwood Family, 78, 81–82, 85, 110,
114; U.C.N.S., Sneyd MSS., Burslem Deeds (29 July,
1 Aug. 1678). |
| 370 |
Ward, Stoke, 209, 599; see p. 120. |
| 371 |
Parson and Bradshaw, Dir. Staffs. (1818); Pigot's Nat.
Com. Dir. (1828–9); Ward, Stoke, 210; White, Dir. Staffs.
(1834, 1851); P.O. Dir. Staffs. (1854); Keates and Ford's
Potteries Dir. (1865–6); Keates's Potteries Dir. (1873–4).
A brickworks there was still mentioned in Kelly's Dir.
Staffs. (1940), but it is no longer in operation: Guide to the
Coalfields (1960). |
| 372 |
Staffs. Sentinel, 26 Apr. 1890; S.R.O., D. 321/M/13/72.
An old working 60 ft. deep was reopened by the co. in 1890
to obtain the pillars of coal left standing there: Staffs.
Sentinel, 26 Apr. 1890. |
| 373 |
The Sandbach and Grange Collieries were closed
about then. |
| 374 |
Guide to the Coalfields (1960). |
| 375 |
Ward, Stoke, 210. A subscription swimming-bath
supplied with warm water from the colliery's engine was
built nearby in 1816 but remained in use only a few years:
ibid. |
| 376 |
White, Dir. Staffs. (1834); Parson and Bradshaw, Dir.
Staffs. (1818). Two collieries at the Hamil are shown on
Hargreaves, Map of Staffs. Potteries (1832). |
| 377 |
Keates's Potteries Dir. (1882); Staffs. Sentinel, 26 Apr.
1890; O.S. Map 6" Staffs. xii NW. (1890). They do not
appear on the list of collieries in Rep. Insp. Mines, N. Staffs.,
1888, 14. The Cobridge Brick and Sanitary Pipes Co. was
digging fireclay at Bycars by 1902: Rep. Insp. Mines,
Stafford, 1902, 265. |
| 378 |
Pigot's Nat. Com. Dir. (1828–9); White, Dir. Staffs.
(1834, 1851); R. Malabar, Map of Tunstall (surveyed
1863); Keates and Ford's Potteries Dir. (1865–6); Staffs.
Advertiser, 22 Jan., 23 July 1870. |
| 379 |
Rep. Insp. Mines, N. Staffs., 1888, 14. It does not
occur in the list in Rep. Insp. Mines, N. Staffs., 1890
[C. 6346], H.C. (1890–1), xxii. |
| 380 |
Hargreaves, Map of Staffs. Potteries; Pigot's Nat.
Com. Dir. (1841); White, Dir. Staffs. (1834, 1851); Ward,
Stoke, 210; Keates's Potteries Dir. (1882); Rep. Insp.
Mines, N. Staffs., 1888, 14; Staffs. Sentinel, 26 Apr. 1890. |
| 381 |
Rep. Insp. Mines, 1856 [2270], p. 79, H.C. (1857,
sess. 2), xvi; Keates's Potteries Dir. (1882); Staffs. Sentinel,
26 Apr. 1890. It does not appear in Kelly's Dir. Staffs.
(1884) or in the list in Rep. Insp. Mines, N. Staffs., 1888. |
| 382 |
Staffs. Sentinel, 26 Apr. 1890. The Bank Top site
was being used as a brickworks by the end of the cent.:
O.S. Map 6" Staffs. xii SW. (1890). |
| 383 |
Adams, Adams Family, 128–9, 138, 219–20; see p. 118.
For mining in the Birches Head and Sneyd Green areas
see p. 252. |
| 384 |
Adams, Adams Family, 128–9, 135, 138; H.R.L.,
EMT 11–786; U.C.N.S., Sneyd MSS., Burslem Deeds
(28 Feb. 1810). |
| 385 |
Adams, Adams Family, 129 note. Ann and Mary were
described as working a mine at Sneyd Green in 1852–3
(Slater's Birmingham District Dir. 1852–3), and the Misses
Adams still owned a colliery on the Cobridge Hall Estate
in 1857, although it was by then leased out: Staffs. Advertiser, 13 June 1857. |
| 386 |
Parson and Bradshaw, Dir. Staffs. (1818). |
| 387 |
White, Dir. Staffs. (1834, 1851); Pigot's Nat. Com.
Dir. (1841); Rep. Insp. Mines, 1857 [2433], p. 60, H.C.
(1857–8), xxxii; Keates and Ford's Potteries Dir. (1865–6);
Keates's Potteries Dir. (1873–4); Rep. Insp. Mines, N.
Staffs., 1893 [C. 7339], p. 32, H.C. (1894), xxiv; ibid. 1894
[C. 7667], p. 42, H.C. (1895), xxii. |
| 388 |
Rep. Insp. Mines, 1856, 79. It was last mentioned in
Rep. Insp. Mines, N. Staffs., 1889 [C. 6015], p. 48, H.C.
(1890), xxiii, and was still closed in 1898; O.S. Map
6" Staffs. xii SW. (1900). |
| 389 |
Rep. Insp. Mines, Stafford, 1902, 269; Kelly's Dir.
Staffs. (1916). It is not shown on O.S. Map 6" Staffs. xii
SW. (1926). |
| 390 |
Slater's Com. Dir. (1862), where it is evidently
identifiable with the Cobridge Colliery; Jones's Potteries
Dir. (1864); Keates and Ford's Potteries Dir. (1865–6,
1869–70); Rep. Insp. Mines, N. Staffs., 1888, 13; O.S. Map
6" Staffs. xii SW. (1890, 1900). |
| 391 |
Keates and Ford's Potteries Dir. (1869–70); O.S. Map
6" Staffs. xii SW. (1890); Rep. Insp. Mines, N. Staffs.,
1894, 43; Rep. Insp. Mines, Stafford, 1902, 267. |
| 392 |
Ex inf. Mr. W. Jack, Norton-in-the-Moors (1959);
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1916); O.S. Map 6" Staffs. xii SW.
(1926). |
| 393 |
Ward, Stoke, 210. |
| 394 |
Burslem Bd. of Health Rep. 1856, 7 (copy in H.R.L.). |
| 395 |
Census, 1871, Staffs. |
| 396 |
Staffs. Advertiser, 26 Apr. 1890. The extensive
flooding of the collieries in the area (see above) affected the
coal industry much more than the iron, presumably because
the ironstone pits were much shallower than the coal pits:
Mining Jnl. 1 Apr. 1871 (copy of relevant extract in H.R.L.). |
| 397 |
Rep. Insp. Mines, N. Staffs., 1893, 33, 37; ibid. 1894,
41, 43, 47. |
| 398 |
Adams, Adams Family, 139–40. For the production of
tiles at Hulton Abbey see p. 252. |
| 399 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 457; White, Dir. Staffs. (1834,
1851); P.O. Dir. Staffs. (1872). |
| 400 |
White, Dir. Staffs. (1851). |
| 401 |
Keates's Potteries Dir. (1892–3). |
| 402 |
Barrett's City of Stoke Dir. [1959]. |
| 403 |
Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 201. |
| 404 |
See p. 104. |
| 405 |
O.S. Map 6" Staffs. xii SW. (1890). One was presumably worked by the Bryan St. Brick and Marl Co. of
1895, and perhaps the other also: Rep. Insp. Mines, N.
Staffs., 1895 [C. 8074], p. 61, H.C. (1896), xxii. For the
brickworks at the Sneyd Colliery see p. 139. |
| 406 |
O.S. Map 6" Staffs. xii SW. (1900). |
| 407 |
Keates and Ford's Potteries Dir. (1865–6). |
| 408 |
Evening Sentinel Survey of Industry and Commerce,
1959, 2 June 1959, p. xiv (copy in H.R.L.). |
| 409 |
Rules and Orders of the Burslem and Tunstall Literary
and Scientific Soc. (copy in H.R.L.). |
| 410 |
R. G. Haggar, Some Adult Educ. Institutions in
N. Staffs. (Rewley House Papers, iii, no. 6), 6 (copy in
H.R.L.); White, Dir. Staffs. (1851); P.O. Dir. Staffs.
(1854, 1872); Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1880). |
| 411 |
P.O. Dir. Staffs. (1854). |
| 412 |
Burslem Bd. of Health Rep. 1864, 3, 18–21; 1869,
8–10; Staffs. Sentinel, 17 Sept. 1892: R. G. Haggar, A
Cent. of Art Educ. in the Potteries, 15, 17 (copy in H.R.L.). |
| 413 |
Burslem Bd. of Health Rep. 1870, 6; F. Falkner, The
Wood Family of Burslem, 91; Haggar, Cent. Art Educ. in
Potteries, 20, 23. |
| 414 |
Staffs. Advertiser, 13 Sept. 1879; H.R.L., Burslem
Borough Mins. 1878–92, p. 217. |
| 415 |
Haggar, Cent. Art Educ. in Potteries, 10–11. |
| 416 |
Inscription on building; Falkner, Wood Family, 91. |
| 417 |
Haggar, Cent. Art Educ. in Potteries, 33–36. |
| 418 |
White, Dir. Staffs. (1834, 1851); P.O. Dir. Staffs.
(1868). |
| 419 |
Ward, Stoke, 269. |
| 420 |
Ibid. 269–70. |
| 421 |
J. Leighton, 'Pots and Potters' (T.N.S.F.C. xci), 29. |
| 422 |
Burslem Board of Health Rep. 1852, 5. |
| 423 |
Lond. Gaz. 1879, p. 4089; Keates's Potteries Dir.
(1892–3), 100, which misprints the date as 1870; Charity:
two sermons preached May 1879 by the Rector of Burslem
(copy in H.R.L., pamphlets vol. 45). See p. 104 for a
similar move at Tunstall. |
| 424 |
H.R.L., Burslem Boro. Mins. 1878–82, p. 366; 1898–
1906, pp. 465–6, 474, 478; Keates's Potteries Dir. (1892–3),
100; H. V. Stuart, Reminiscences (1926), 5 (copy among
W.S.L. pamphlets sub Stoke). |
| 425 |
Book i, chap. iv. |
| 426 |
J. Edge, Burslem of 50 Years Ago (lecture given 1868),
20 (copy in H.R.L.); Ward, Stoke, 269; Arnold Bennett,
'The Elixir of Youth' (Tales of the Five Towns); Burslem in
Days Gone By (copy in H.R.L.); printed description of
Burslem Wakes in 1820 among W.S.L. Pamphs. (vol.
xv, no. 13). |
| 427 |
Adams, Adams Family, 216; see p. 119. |
| 428 |
H. J. Steele, 'Social Conditions in Burslem during
the 17th and 18th Cents.' (T.N.S.F.C. lxxviii), 28, 34;
Wedgwood, Wedgwood Family, map facing p. 121. |
| 429 |
Port Vale 1876–1950 (copy in H.R.L.); W. E. Tate,
Inns and Inn Signs in and near Burslem, 28, 29 (copy in
H.R.L.). |
| 430 |
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1880). |
| 431 |
Ibid. (1924, 1928). |
| 432 |
H.R.L., Burslem Boro. Mins. 1898–1906, pp. 241, 430;
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1912, where it is called the Wedgwood
Theatre and Hippodrome, 1924, 1932, 1940): Evening Sentinel, 20 Dec. 1947; E. J. D. Warrillow, 'Bennett Memorials'
(Staffs. Life, iii), 26; ex inf. Mr. R. G. Nettel (1960). |
| 433 |
Hanley Jubilee Souvenir (1907), 28. |
| 434 |
Ibid. 31–32; R. G. Nettel, Music in the Five Towns,
1840–1914, 9–10. |
| 435 |
Nettel, Music in the Five Towns, 71–72, 81–83. |
| 436 |
Warrillow, Stoke, 388–9. |
| 437 |
The articles were prepared in 1821 but not signed till
1826; the mins., however, date from 1822; inf. from the secretary (1962). |
| 438 |
Clayhanger, bk. iii, chaps. xiii and xv. |
| 439 |
D.N.B.; Stoke Official Handbk. (1960), 38, 39; The
Guardian, 25 Mar. 1960; J. R. Ford, Bennett Country
(H.R.L. Information Pamph., no. 5). |