| 1 |
Since this account was written, minutes of the Improvement Commrs. 1847–58 and an extensive set of
borough minutes from 1857 onwards have been found;
they are now available at H.R.L. |
| 2 |
Ward, Stoke, 467–8. Shelton being the larger in the
early 18th century, it then served the offices of churchwarden and overseer of the poor twice for every once that
Hanley served: W.S.L., D. 1788, P. 67, B. 11. |
| 3 |
See pp. 151, 184–5. |
| 4 |
See p. 162. |
| 5 |
6 Geo. IV, c. 73 (local and personal). For the Burslem
Act see p. 125. |
| 6 |
9 Geo. IV, c. 28 (local and personal). |
| 7 |
H.R.L., printed copy of the Charter of Incorporation
of Hanley and Shelton 1857; Staffs. Advertiser, 22 Aug.,
5 Sept 1857; P.O. Dir. Staffs. (1860). By an oversight the
charter did not mention the exclusion of the Stoke glebe
land in Shelton, and this area had to be excluded by a
special Act: Act to amend the charter, 20 & 21 Vic. c. 10
(local and personal). |
| 8 |
Lond. Gaz. 1859, p. 415; Staffs. Advertiser, 11 May
1907; 21 & 22 Vic., c. 25. The execution of this Act was
vested in local boards with powers for regulating sewerage,
scavenging, buildings, highways, streets, markets, and
water-supply; boroughs were empowered to adopt the Act. |
| 9 |
Act to confirm provisional orders under the Local
Govt. Act, 25 & 26 Vic. c. 25 (local); see p. 162. |
| 10 |
K. D. Miller, Brief Chronology of Local Govt. in Stokeon-Trent (1st edn.), 12–18; Local Govt. Act 1888, 51 & 52
Vic. c. 41; see p. 254. |
| 11 |
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1896). |
| 12 |
Hanley Boro. Year Bk. 1886–7 (copy in H.R.L.). |
| 13 |
Ibid. 1903–4, 1909–10. |
| 14 |
Ibid. 1900–1, 1909–10. The rateable value for the
general district rate was £229,416 in 1900–1 and £241,262
in 1909–10: ibid. |
| 15 |
Stoke Counc. Year Bk. (1915). |
| 16 |
Ancient Corp. of Hanley, ed. W. D. Spanton, 109; see
p. 162. For a description see p. 149. |
| 17 |
Ancient Corp. Hanley, 111; Staffs. Advertiser, 24 Dec.
1869, 10 July 1886; Staffs. Sentinel, 21 May 1927; Ward,
Stoke, 383. For a description of the building see p. 149. |
| 18 |
Warrillow, Stoke, 223. |
| 19 |
Staffs. Advertiser, 18 May 1907; ticket of admission to
laying of foundation stone 1887 and programme of opening
ceremony 1888 (copies in H.R.L.). |
| 20 |
Staffs. Advertiser, 12 Mar. 1910; see p. 259. |
| 21 |
T. Pape, 'Early Armorials of the Pottery Towns',
Cox's Potteries Annual (1925), 21, 23. |
| 22 |
Hanley Boro. Year Bk. 1903–4, 8, 9. |
| 23 |
D.L. 30/228/1. |
| 24 |
S.H.C. x (1), 93–94; ibid. 1921, 164. The constablewick also included Lane End, Botteslow, and Normacot
Grange: ibid. |
| 25 |
See p. 195. |
| 26 |
D.L. 30/228/5. |
| 27 |
6 Geo. IV, c. 73 (local and personal). |
| 28 |
Staffs. Advertiser, 10 Oct. 1829. This lists the constables, &c. for various parts of the manor who were
'sworn in or appointed'. |
| 29 |
Ward, Stoke, 362; Hanley Jubilee Souvenir (1907),
25–26, 47. Warrillow, Stoke, 386, states that the lock-up
was established in 1790 and that the stocks formerly stood
in front of St. John's Church. |
| 30 |
White, Dir. Staffs. (1834); Huntbach, Hanley, 14, 19. |
| 31 |
P.O. Dir. Staffs. (1854); which, however, wrongly gives
the date of the riots as 1849; White, Dir. Staffs. (1851);
Huntbach, Hanley, 14. For an acct. of the riots see Ward,
Stoke, 584–9. |
| 32 |
Staffs. Advertiser, 11 May 1907; P.O. Dir. Staffs.
(1872). The Hanley police themselves eventually became
the fire brigade until the creation of a volunteer force in
1913: see pp. 161, 267. |
| 33 |
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1884). |
| 34 |
Act for more effectual execution of office of J.P., 2 and
3 Vic., c. 15. |
| 35 |
Lond. Gaz. 1847, p. 1012; White, Dir. Staffs. (1851). |
| 36 |
Staffs. Advertiser, 11 May 1907. The boro. court min.
bks. 1864–6 and 1868–1915 and the registers of the court
of summary jurisdiction 1880, 1887–8, 1893–4, and 1901
survive in S.R.O., D. 26/P/1–53. |
| 37 |
R. Rawlinson, Rep. to Bd. of Health on Stoke Par.
(1850; copy in H.R.L.), on which the rest of this paragraph
is based. |
| 38 |
Ibid. 45; ibid. (1853), 7. |
| 39 |
H.R.L., Stoke Commrs.' Mins. 1865–74, pp. 4, 8, 78,
149. |
| 40 |
Ibid. pp. 155–6, 159, 162–3. |
| 41 |
W. H. Makepeace, Hanley's Sewage Disposal Works
(copy with the City Sewage Engineer, 1959); J. Lobley,
Hanley Sewage Works (1878; copy in H.R.L. Pamphs.,
vol. 45); Rep. of Meeting of Assoc. of Municipal and Sanitary Engineers and Surveyors at Hanley, 1881 (copy in
H.R.L. Pamphs., vol. 45); Warrillow, Stoke, 189; H.R.L.,
Stoke Boro. Mins. 1893–5, p. 34; 1895–8, p. 442; 1898–
1900, pp. 531, 532; 1903–5, pp. 563–4. |
| 42 |
Hanley M.O.H. Reps. 1887, 1898–1907. |
| 43 |
Lond. Gaz. 1856, p. 2904; 1865, p. 127. |
| 44 |
Ibid. 1865, pp. 127, 1880. |
| 45 |
Ibid. 1858, p. 1842. |
| 46 |
Ancient Corp. of Hanley, 110; Lich. Dioc. Regy.,
Bp.'s Reg. Q, pp. 378–81; Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1908). |
| 47 |
White, Dir. Staffs. (1851); Warrillow, Stoke, 372. |
| 48 |
Warrillow, Stoke, 372. |
| 49 |
Date on building. |
| 50 |
R. Hordley, N. Staffs. Infirmary and Eye Hospital
1802–1902, 8, 9 (copy in H.R.L.); Warrillow, Etruria,
153, 224–6, 232; Ward, Stoke, 390–2; Hargreaves, Map of
Staffs. Potteries. |
| 51 |
Hordley, N. Staffs. Infirmary, 9–12; Warrillow,
Etruria, 153, 226–30. A copy of the statutes of the infirmary, which describe it as estab. in 1815, is in W.S.L.
Pamphlets (vol. v, no. 4). |
| 52 |
Staffs. Advertiser, 24 May, 22 Nov. 1828; Hordley, N.
Staffs. Infirmary, 13, 14; Ward, Stoke, 390; Warrillow,
Etruria, 230. |
| 53 |
Warrillow, Etruria, 156, 229; Ward, Stoke, 391–2. |
| 54 |
Hordley, N. Staffs. Infirmary, 15–17, 38; Warrillow,
Etruria, 230–1; see pp. 169–70, 197. The move to Hartshill was originally planned in 1862 but opposition from subscribers in the northern part of the Potteries to the choice
of a site in the south delayed the move until 1866: Hordley, op. cit. 22–23. |
| 55 |
Warrillow, Etruria, 228, 231; see p. 145. For a description of the building see p. 150. |
| 56 |
The Deaf and Dumb in N. Staffs. (copy in H.R.L.).
A Roman Catholic chapel was opened there in 1957: Hear
Here (Nov. 1957), 8 (copy in H.R.L.). |
| 57 |
Ward, Stoke, 378; Pure and Wholesome Water for 100
Years, 1849–1949, 7 (copy in H.R.L.). |
| 58 |
Pure and Wholesome Water, 8. |
| 59 |
Ibid. 7; Ward, Stoke, 377–8; Shaw, Staffs. Potteries,
42; Hargreaves, Map of Staffs. Potteries. |
| 60 |
Ward, Stoke, 378; Pure and Wholesome Water, 7. |
| 61 |
Warrillow, Stoke, 161. |
| 62 |
Pure and Wholesome Water, 12. |
| 63 |
Ibid. 11, 13. |
| 64 |
Warrillow, Etruria, 151–4; Ward, Stoke, 379–80; Hargreaves, Map of Staffs. Potteries. |
| 65 |
Warrillow, Etruria, 152, 154, 155; White, Dir. Staffs.
(1851); H.R.L., scrapbk. relating to Hanley Boro.'s gas
transactions; see p. 128. |
| 66 |
29 & 30 Vic. c. 119 (local and personal). |
| 67 |
Staffs. Sentinel, 21 Nov. 1863, which also pointed out
that the equivalent charge in Liverpool was 3s. 5d., in
Birmingham 3s. 4d., and in Wolverhampton 3s. |
| 68 |
43 & 44 Vic. c. 120 (local). |
| 69 |
58 & 59 Vic. c. 18. (local). |
| 70 |
Warrillow, Etruria, 156–7. |
| 71 |
Ibid. 157, 162–3. |
| 72 |
Ibid. 155, 162. |
| 73 |
Ibid. 165, 166; see p. 266. |
| 74 |
Warrillow, Etruria, 163, 165, 171, 181. |
| 75 |
Ibid. 172, 174, 176, 177. |
| 76 |
Staffs. Advertiser, 28 July 1894; Staffs. Sentinel Potteries, Newcastle and District Dir. (1907); Stoke Official
Handbk. (1960), 63; J. Lobley, Rep. on Hanley Lighting
(1893; copy in H.R.L. Pamphlets, vol. 38.); Electric Lighting Orders Confirmation (no. 1) Act, 1891, 54 & 55 Vic.
c. 49 (local); O.S. Map 6" Staffs. xii SW. (1900). It was
originally intended to link Bethesda Rd. with Bethesda
St.: Staffs. Advertiser, 24 Feb. 1894. |
| 77 |
See p. 266. |
| 78 |
Warrillow, Etruria, 323. |
| 79 |
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1892); Staffs. Advertiser, 11 May
1907. |
| 80 |
Warrillow, Etruria, 320, 322. |
| 81 |
H.R.L., Hanley Highway Surveyors' Mins. 1817–41,
pp. 4, 5; Ward, Stoke, 364. |
| 82 |
H.R.L., Hanley Highway Surveyors' Mins. 1817–41,
22 Mar. 1823. |
| 83 |
Ibid. 22 Sept. 1824, 22 Sept. 1825. |
| 84 |
Ibid. 22 Sept. 1826 and accts. for 1826–7, 1827–8. |
| 85 |
Ibid. 22 Sept. 1829, 22 Sept. 1830 and accts. for 1828–9,
1829–30. |
| 86 |
Ibid. 22 Sept. 1832, 22 Sept. 1833, 22 Sept. 1834,
26 Oct. 1835, 25 Mar. 1836, and accts. for 1832–7. |
| 87 |
Ibid. 25 Mar. 1837. Except for a special meeting in
1839 at the Sea Lion Inn (where an adjourned meeting had
been held in 1829: ibid. 22 Sept. 1829), the inhabs. met
in the vestry at St. John's until at least 1840: ibid. 1838–40.
The board at first met in the vestry but after March 1838
moved to 'The Sea Lion' and in 1839 to the police office:
ibid. 3 Apr. 1837 and later; Huntbach, Hanley, 109. |
| 88 |
Hanley Highway Surveyors' Mins., 3 Apr. 1837,
5 Mar. 1838, 28 Mar. 1839, 31 Mar. 1840. In 1839 the
general meeting of the inhabs. withdrew its confidence
from the existing surveyor and a new official was appointed
by the board: ibid. 25 and 28 Mar. 1839. |
| 89 |
Ibid. 3 and 17 Apr. 1837. |
| 90 |
Ibid. 31 Mar. 1840. |
| 91 |
Ibid. 8 May 1839; P.O. Dir. Staffs. (1854). |
| 92 |
Rawlinson, Rep. to Bd. of Health (1850), 45; ibid.
(1853), 7. |
| 93 |
Ibid. (1850), 43. |
| 94 |
See p. 158. |
| 95 |
S.R.O., Q/AH, bdle. 3. |
| 96 |
Cal. Inq. Misc. i, p. 153. |
| 97 |
Cal. Inq. p.m. iii, p. 290; S.H.C. 1911, 244–5. These
are complementary versions of the relevant parts of
C 133/81/6. For villein socage in Penkhull see p. 200. |
| 98 |
S.H.C. 1911, 245. |
| 99 |
Ibid. |
| 100 |
T. Pape, Medieval Newcastle-under-Lyme, 118. |
| 101 |
S.H.C. 1912, 218. |
| 102 |
Ward, Stoke, app., p. xlvi. In 1622 the Meire family's
estate in Shelton and Hanley was described as part freehold and part copyhold: C 3/367/23. Shelton Mill was
freehold. |
| 103 |
Ward, Stoke, 348; W.S.L. 423/28. |
| 104 |
Ward, Stoke, 348. |
| 105 |
Cal. Inq. Misc. i, p. 153. By 1297 over 60 a. of assart
were held by tenants at will: see above. |
| 106 |
S.H.C. 1911, 245. |
| 107 |
Ward, Stoke, app. p. xlii. |
| 108 |
D.L. 43/8/32; see p. 200. |
| 109 |
Huntbach, Hanley, 109; Staffs. Advertiser, 18 May
1907. In 1893 there was a pound by the Trent near Havelock St., evidently on the Hanley side of the Stoke-Hanley
boundary: H.R.L., Stoke Boro. Mins. 1893–5, p. 150. |
| 110 |
Huntbach, Hanley, 10. Ward, Stoke, 361, however,
mentions only a lease of the site to trustees in 1791. |
| 111 |
Univ. Brit. Dir. (1791), iv. 107; J. Aikin, The Country
around Manchester (1795), 520. |
| 112 |
Ward, Stoke, 362. |
| 113 |
Aikin, Country around Manchester, 520; Huntbach,
Hanley, 13; White, Dir. Staffs. (1851). In Burslem, however, a corn mkt. Was estab. in 1848: see p. 130. |
| 114 |
Ward, Stoke, 361–2; 53 Geo. III, c. 115 (local and
personal). |
| 115 |
Ward, Stoket, 362. |
| 116 |
Ibid. 363 and n.; H.R.L., Hanley Market Trustees'
Mins. 1845–62, 17 Oct. 1861. The custom of paying an
organist's salary out of the market tolls also prevailed at
Burslem: see p. 122. |
| 117 |
Ward, Stoke, 362–3; White, Dir. Staffs. (1834). For a
description of the building see p. 149. |
| 118 |
White, Dir. Staffs. (1834); Ward, Stoke, 363. |
| 119 |
See p. 158. |
| 120 |
Hanley Market Trustees' Mins. 1845–62, pp. 2, 10,
20–21, 59, 81; White, Dir. Staffs. (1851); Ward, Stoke,
363; E. J. D. Warrillow, 'Two Old Inns' (Staffs. Life, ii),
140; Ancient Corp. of Hanley, ed. W. D. Spanton, 110;
Staffs. Advertiser, 23 Apr. 1938. The 'Swan' had been
chosen as the site of the meat market by 1829, but the owner
had then refused to sell at the price offered: ibid. 30 May
1829. For a description of the 1849 market building see
p. 149. |
| 121 |
Huntbach, Hanley, 12; Act to confirm orders under
the Local Government Act of 1858, 25 & 26 Vic. c. 25
(local and personal); Hanley Market Trustees' Mins.
1845–62, 5 Sept. 1862. |
| 122 |
White, Dir. Staffs. (1851). |
| 123 |
Hanley Market Trustees' Mins. 1845–62, pp. 116, 126,
135, 143. |
| 124 |
Ibid. pp. 144, 154; Ancient Corp. of Hanley. 110; O.S.
Map 1/500 Staffs. xi. 15. 10 (survey of 1866); O.S. Map 6"
Staffs. xii SW. (1890), showing the hide and skin market
there. |
| 125 |
It is mentioned in Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1924) but not in
the edn. for 1928. |
| 126 |
Stoke Classified Telephone Dir. (Dec. 1959); local inf.
(1960); see p. 201. |
| 127 |
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1924). |
| 128 |
Ibid. (1928). |
| 129 |
Stoke Official Handbk. [1958 and previous edn.] |
| 130 |
Staffs. Advertiser, 23 Apr. 1938. The lack of alternative accommodation was 'an old and growing evil' even in
1910: Huntbach, Hanlev, 12. |
| 131 |
White, Dir. Staffs. (1834). |
| 132 |
P.O. Dir. Staffs. (1850). |
| 133 |
Cal. Inq. Misc. i, p. 153; Cal. Lib. 1251–60, 436; D.L.
42/4, f. 179a. |
| 134 |
Ward, Stoke, 410–11. |
| 135 |
Ibid. app. p. xlvi. |
| 136 |
W.S.L., D. 1788, P. 44, B. 8 (copy of relevant court
rolls). |
| 137 |
Public Rec. Office, MS. Calendar of Duchy of Lanc.
Particulars for Grants, f. 50b—Round Room, 27 (94). |
| 138 |
S.R.O., D. 260/M/box 25, bdle. k, f. 84b. |
| 139 |
W.S.L., D. 1788, P. 44, B. 8, endorsement on 1679
copy of ct. roll. |
| 140 |
C.P. 43/500, rot. 16. |
| 141 |
Ward, Stoke, 410; H. Wedgwood, Romance of Staffs.
86–87; Warrillow, Etruria, 190, 193; Stoke-upon-Trent
Par. Reg. iii. 494, 594; O.S. Map 1", lxxii NW. (1837).
It was one of the 3 mills worked by Ralph Wood, greatgrandfather of Enoch Wood of Burslem, probably in the
early 18th cent.: see p. 131 and n. 93. |
| 142 |
Warrillow, Etruria, 49, 190, 384; Wedgwood, Romance
of Staffs. 86; O.S. Map 6" Staffs. xii SW. (1890); see p. 169.
Homer, Plan of Hanley and Shelton, 1857, shows the mill
apparently as part of the ironworks. |
| 143 |
J. T. Wilkinson, Hugh Bourne, 22 (Hugh Bourne being
involved in its building); Hargreaves, Map of Staffs. Potteries. |
| 144 |
O.S. Map 1", lxxii NW. (1837). |
| 145 |
Huntbach, Hanley, 110; P.O. Dir. Staffs. (1850);
White, Dir. Staffs. (1851). Dodd lived there. |
| 146 |
P.O. Dir. Staffs. (1854). |
| 147 |
Homer, Plan of Hanley and Shelton, 1857. |
| 148 |
Descript. Acct. of the Potteries (1893), 42 (copy in
H.R.L.); Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1896); Lich. Dioc. Regy.
Bp.'s Reg. OA, p. 202 and plan facing (1847). |
| 149 |
See p. 153. |
| 150 |
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1924); date on building which is
now occupied by a firm of woodworkers; Warrillow,
Etruria, 199. |
| 151 |
Barrett's City of Stoke Dir. [1959]. |
| 152 |
C 1/955/52. |
| 153 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 104, 222–3. |
| 154 |
S.R.O., Q/SR Trans. 1682. In 1679 John Stanley and
John Bryan were presented at Newcastle manor court for
digging holes, presumably for clay, in the 'common way'
at Hanley: D.L. 30/242/3. |
| 155 |
R. Plot, Nat. Hist. Staffs. (1686), 121. |
| 156 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 480; Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 142;
A. Huntbach, Hanley, 47. Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng.
Pottery, 150 (following S. Shaw, Staffs. Potteries, 109),
states that there were 2 potters of this name, one making
brown ware at Miles Bank and the other white ware elsewhere in Shelton. |
| 157 |
E. Meteyard, Life of Josiah Wedgwood, i. 192. |
| 158 |
Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 8, which also mentions Wm.
Astbury of Shelton c. 1720. |
| 159 |
Shaw, Staffs. Potteries, 126, 128–30; Staffs. Sentinel
Summer No. 1911, 21; Huntbach, Hanley, 34–35; Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 10. An entry in the commonplace book of Josiah Wedgwood (I) suggests a confusion or alias between Astbury and Heath in connexion
with the introduction of flint (Wedgwood, Wedgwood
Family, 324); the name, however, is given as Joshua Astbury or Heath (see note 87 below). It was certainly a Thos.
Heath who owned the Ivy House flint mill in the early
18th cent.: see p. 153. |
| 160 |
Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 8; Mankowitz and Haggar,
Eng. Pottery, 10; W.S.L., D. 1788, P. 45, B. 5. |
| 161 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 480, 487; Mankowitz and Haggar,
Eng. Pottery, 227; W.S.L., D. 1742/348. Both Astbury and
Twyford are stated by Shaw, Staffs. Potteries, 119, to have
secured the secrets of the Elers brothers at Bradwell Wood,
Wolstanton, Astbury by feigning idiocy and Twyford indifference. |
| 162 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 150; W.S.L.,
D. 1788, P. 61, B. 41. A Joshua Astbury of Shelton, gent.,
son and heir of Joshua Astbury of Shelton, deceased, occurs
in 1740: ibid. P. 42, B. 11; and see n. 84 above. |
| 163 |
Allbut, Staffs. Pottery Dir. (1802). |
| 164 |
Ward, Stoke, 372–6, 443–4. |
| 165 |
Ibid. 373–4, 376. |
| 166 |
2nd Rep. Com. on Employment of Children [431], pp.
c12, 13, H.C. (1843), xiv. |
| 167 |
Huntbach, Hanley, 54. |
| 168 |
Pottery Gas. Dir. (1960). |
| 169 |
Information from Twyfords Ltd. (1959); Stoke Official
Handbk. (1960), 170, 171; dates on buildings. The Twyford family began making sanitary ware at a works in Bath
St., Hanley, c. 1850: ex inf. Twyfords. The 1953 factory
is in Etruscan St. opposite the main Cliffe Vale works. |
| 170 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 96–97; Huntbach, Hanley, 42; Meteyard, Josiah Wedgwood, i. 192.
Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 86, gives c. 1670 as the earliest ref.
to Joseph Glass. |
| 171 |
Ward, Stoke, 375; Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 487, 504;
Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 139, 140, 193; B. Hollowood,
J. and G. Meakin (copy in H.R.L.). |
| 172 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 12; Huntbach,
Hanley, 35; Allbut, Staffs. Pottery Dir. (1802). A pottery
in Shelton lately held by 'Widow Astbury' was let to a
Thos. Taylor by John Fenton of Newcastle in 1749:
W.S.L., D. 1788, P. 44, B. 9. Baddeley carried on a flintgrinding business at Stone: ibid. P. 27, B. 20, which also
shows him bankrupt in 1761 and evidently extricating himself by a partnership with John Fletcher of Newcastle. |
| 173 |
Seep. 153. |
| 174 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 12. |
| 175 |
Ibid. 12–13 (1802 given as the date when Hicks and
Boon took over), 27 (1805 being given as the date); Jewitt,
Ceramic Art, 499; Staffs. Advertiser, 7 Nov. 1801, 27 Feb.
and 6 Mar. 1802; W.S.L. 130/47, ff. 36, 42, 46, 91. Ralph
Baddeley was still working the flint mill in 1792: W.S.L.,
D. 1792, bdle. 61. |
| 176 |
H.R.L., EMT 7–807 (b), showing Hicks and Meigh
in possession of the works by 1807 and Hicks then living
at the house; Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 108,
148; Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 491; 1st Rep. Factories Com.
H.C. 450, pp. B2, 38, 42 (1833), xx. Hicks was still living
at the house c. 1840 (Ward, Stoke, 383), and Mrs. Hicks
was living there in 1850 and 1851: P.O. Dir. Staffs. (1850);
White, Dir. Staffs. (1851). |
| 177 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 108, 142, 157;
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 491. |
| 178 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 9–10; Pottery
Gaz. Dir. (1960). |
| 179 |
The date was found on a beam inside the front range. |
| 180 |
Ex. inf. Mr. J. V. Goddard (1960); see p. 172. |
| 181 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 481; Mankowitz and Haggar,
Eng. Pottery, 169–70; Adams, Adams Family, 187, 197,
and add. and corr. no. 3, p. 2. John Voyez, the modeller,
who was brought to Staffs. from London by Wedgwood in
1768, was imprisoned in Stafford Gaol for 3 months in
1769 after being sacked by Wedgwood for stealing models,
clay and moulds, and worked for Palmer for a time after
his release, subsequently returning to London; his work
included imitations of Wedgwood, and he is said to have
forged the mark of Wedgwood and Bentley: Mankowitz
and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 228–9; N. Hudson Moore,
Wedgwood and his Imitators, 95–100; R. J. Charleston,
'Jean Voyez' (Trans. Eng. Ceramic Circle, v), 12. |
| 182 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 170. |
| 183 |
Ibid. 162–3; Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 481–2. |
| 184 |
Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 148, 213–14; Mankowitz and
Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 162, 241; Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 482. |
| 185 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 145, 174;
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 482. |
| 186 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 482; Huntbach, Hanley, 46. |
| 187 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 482, 500; Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 1, 191. The Bedford Rd. works was held
by Ridgways until c. 1952: Pottery Gaz. Dir. (1953). |
| 188 |
Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 29, 160. |
| 189 |
Adams, Adams Family, add. and corr. no. 3, p. 2. A
fragment of the early factory buildings is still (1960) standing. |
| 190 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 498; Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1896).
Geo. Edwards also had a flint mill in Nelson Pl. between
at least 1884 and 1912: ibid. (1884, 1912). |
| 191 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 81, 150; Jewitt,
Ceramic Art, 480–1; see p. 164. |
| 192 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 190–1; Meigh,
'Staffs. Potters', 167, 168. |
| 193 |
The house bore the inscription 'GR 1805': ex inf. Mr.
R. G. Haggar (1960). |
| 194 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 500; Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 54. |
| 195 |
Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 23, 62; Kelly's Dir. Staffs.
(1924, 1940). |
| 196 |
O.S. Map 1/1,250, SJ 8847 SW. (1951, surveyed 1950). |
| 197 |
See p. 270. |
| 198 |
Warrillow, Stoke, 332 (ii, v.). |
| 199 |
See pp. 144, 150, 152. |
| 200 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 233, 234; see
PP. 133, 135. |
| 201 |
Meteyard, Josiah Wedgwood, ii. 29–31, 210. Even in
1769, however, Darwin had been confident that it would be
made obsolete by the use of steam power. |
| 202 |
J. Thomas, 'The Econ. Development of the N. Staffs.
Potteries since 1730' (London Univ. Ph.D. thesis, 1934),
235–41. |
| 203 |
Ibid. 242–6. |
| 204 |
ibid. 251–3. |
| 205 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 234–5. Jewitt,
Ceramic Art, 526, gives 1808 or 1809 to 1815 as the dates
when Josiah (II) was making bone china; Warrillow,
Etruria, 124, gives 1812 to 1815. |
| 206 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 235; Warrillow,
Etruria, 359–61. |
| 207 |
Ex inf. Josiah Wedgwood & Sons Ltd. (1959). |
| 208 |
For details of the original layout, buildings, and
equipment see Meteyard, Wedgwood, i. 494–6; ii. 82–84,
110–14, 234–9; Warrillow, Etruria, chaps, ii and xiv; for
plans see Wedgwood Mus. Barlaston, plans of 1805, 1826,
1844, and 1866; for views see Meteyard, Wedgwood, ii.
111, 235, 237, 238; Warrillow, Etruria, 24, 30, 40, 127;
series of 26 drawings made 1947–51 by L. G. Brammer
and now at Barlaston. |
| 209 |
Warrillow, Etruria, 26. |
| 210 |
Eight cottages were advertised in a sale catalogue of
1844: ibid. 311. All but one were replaced by a later
extension to the works. |
| 211 |
See plate on facing page. |
| 212 |
Wedgwood Mus. Barlaston, Survey of Etruria Works
made in 1805 by Adam MacPhail (20 ft. to 1 inch). |
| 213 |
Wedgwood Mus. Barlaston, Plan of Etruria Estate by
Chas. Heaton (1826). |
| 214 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 47, 59, 163;
G. E. Stringer, New Hall Porcelain, passim. |
| 215 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 164; Jewitt,
Ceramic Art, 484; Stringer, New Hall Porcelain, 12, 56–
57, 60; see p. 100. The name New Hall was used by at least
1801, presumably to avoid confusion with the Old Hall in
Hanley and the other 2 halls in Shelton: Stringer, New
Hall Porcelain, 42; see pp. 152, 153. |
| 216 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 164; Jewitt,
Ceramic Art, 484–5; Stringer, New Hall Porcelain, 33–34,58. |
| 217 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 164–5; Jewitt,
Ceramic Art, 485; Ward, Stoke, 373. |
| 218 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 485; Stringer, New Hall Porcelain,
42–43. |
| 219 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 485; Mankowitz and Haggar,
Eng. Pottery, 165; Stringer, New Hall Porcelain, 43. |
| 220 |
Stringer, New Hall Porcelain, 42. |
| 221 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 165. |
| 222 |
Stringer, New Hall Porcelain, 56; Parson and Bradshaw, Dir. Staffs. (1818); Pigot's Nat. Com. Dir. (1828–9);
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1896). It was also a colour mill c. 1840:
Ward, Stoke, 381. For the co.'s tenancy of the mill at
Hulton see p. 252. |
| 223 |
Stringer, New Hall Porcelain, 57. |
| 224 |
Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 210–11; Jewitt, Ceramic Art,
488–9;see p. 152. |
| 225 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 148, 167. |
| 226 |
2nd Rep. Com. on Employment of Children, p. c29. |
| 227 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 167; Jewitt,
Ceramic Art, 489, giving 1861 as the date of the formation
of the Old Hall Earthenware Co. |
| 228 |
Huntbach, Hanley, 47–48. |
| 229 |
H.R.L., EMT 15–863. |
| 230 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 492, stating that the business was
founded c. 1794 and that the Cauldon Place Works was
built in 1802; Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery,
190–1, giving 1802 as the date of building. An inscription
on the building—apparently not placed there until much
later as the date 1882 also appears—reads 'J R 1798' but no
works on the site is shown on the map in Allbut, Staffs.
Pottery Dir. (1802). |
| 231 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 190–1; Ward,
Stoke, 375. |
| 232 |
2nd Rep. Com. on Employment of Children, p. c24. |
| 233 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 38, 191; Huntbach, Hanley, 39; Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 45, 51; Staffs.
Sentinel, 15 July 1899. |
| 234 |
Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 51, 55, 161, 170, 205; Compton Mackenzie, The House of Coalport, 98. In 1924 the
Cauldon Potteries Ltd. took over the Coalport China Co.
whose works was moved from Salop, to Shelton in 1926
and to the present Crescent Works in Stoke c. 1936: ibid.
86, 98; Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 56–57. For
F. and R. Pratt at Fenton see p. 220. |
| 235 |
Staffs. Sentinel, 27 July 1938. A proposal to house the
city museum there was rejected: ibid. |
| 236 |
News Chron., 10 Nov. 1954 (copy of relevant article in
H.R.L.) |
| 237 |
Seep. 171. |
| 238 |
Descript. Acct. of Potteries (1893), 10 (copy in H.R.L.). |
| 239 |
A gilt phoenix was placed in the pediment of the 1845
frontage: see below and plate facing p. 172. |
| 240 |
Allbut, Staffs. Pottery Dir. (1802); Meigh, 'Staffs.
Potters', 97. |
| 241 |
Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 117; Ward, Stoke, 375. |
| 242 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 499–500; Mankowitz and Haggar,
Eng. Pottery, 55. |
| 243 |
2nd Rep. Com. on Employment of Children, p. c27. |
| 244 |
Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 55; date on
building. |
| 245 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 499; H.R.L., EMT 7–844 (b),
7–846 (a, b). |
| 246 |
The Baddeleys had held it from at least the 1780's until
1807 when it was conveyed to Geo. Taylor; it passed on
his death in 1811 to Hicks and Meigh, who also held the
adjoining works to the W., formerly Ralph Baddeley's
(now Ashworth's: see above), and it was held in the 1820's
by John Mare: Mankowitz and Haggar, Eng. Pottery, 12,
13; Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 105, 133, 193; Allbut, Staffs.
Pottery Dir. (1802); H.R.L., EMT 7–807 (b), 7–844 (b),
11–807, 11–844. |
| 247 |
Jewitt, Ceramic Art, 500. |
| 248 |
Meigh, 'Staffs. Potters', 54. |
| 249 |
O.S. Map 1/1,250, SJ 8847 SW. (1951); Kelly's Dir.
Staffs. (1924); Barrett's City of Stoke Dir. [1959]. |
| 250 |
In 1841 it was stated that 'there are three or four
establishments on the outskirts of the town for boiling and
calcining bones on a large scale, which frequently inundate
the neighbourhood with very offensive odours'; it was added,
however, that they had not been found to be a cause of
disease: 2nd Rep. Com. on Employment of Children, p. c12. |
| 251 |
W.S.L., D. 1788, vol. 95; W.S.L., D. 1742, bdle. 61;
Yates, Map of Staffs. (1775, 1799); Hargreaves, Map of
Staffs. Potteries; White, Dir. Staffs. (1834, 1851); Kelly's
Dir. Staffs. (1884, 1896, 1908); O.S. Map 6" Staffs. xviii
NW. (1890; 1925); W. Campbell, Street Map of Hanlely,
Burslem, Tunstall and Newcastle-under-Lyme (1912). The
directories do not distinguish the 2 Botteslow mills, one of
which was a bone mill in 1834 (White, Dir. Staffs. 1834),
but both were again flint mills by the 1860's: O.S. Map
1/500 Staffs, xvi. 4. 8 (1866). |
| 252 |
Adams, Adams Family, 265; Stoke Official Handbk.
(1960), 86, 133, 135; C. J. H. Homer, Plan of Hanley and
Shelton, 1857 (copy in S.R.O., Z/M/7). |
| 253 |
White, Dir. Staffs. (1834, 1851); Ward, Stoke, 381.
The family held a steam-driven flint mill in Hill St. in
1818 and 1819: Parson and Bradshaw, Dir. Staffs. (1818);
H.R.L., EMT 11–819. The Dresden Mill was a colour
mill by the 1870's: O.S. Map 6" Staffs. xii SW. (1890). |
| 254 |
White, Dir. Staffs. (1834, 1851); P.O. Dir. Staffs.
(1872); Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1884, 1928); Barrett's City of
Stoke Dir. [1959]; Warrillow, Etruria, 198–9. |
| 255 |
Sign on building; O.S. Map 6" Staffs. xviii NW.
(1890); Barrett's City of Stoke Dir. [1959]. |
| 256 |
Warrillow, Etruria, 196, 198; White, Dir. Staffs.
(1851); tablet on building. |
| 257 |
For the Association's laboratories at Penkhull see p. 204. |
| 258 |
C. J. H. Homer, 'The N. Staffs. Coalfield' (Trans.
Inst. N. Staffs. Mining Engineers, i), 105. Two or three cartloads of surface coal were removed when a cellar was being
excavated at the top of Piccadilly early in the present
century: Huntbach, Hanley, 32. |
| 259 |
S.H.C. 1911, 245. |
| 260 |
Ibid. n.s. ix. 106; D.L. 5/25, ff. 566, 599. |
| 261 |
S.H.C. n.s. ix. 137. |
| 262 |
S.R.O., D. 260/M/box 25, bdle. k, Royalist Compositions, f. 84b. |
| 263 |
E 317/Staffs. 38, 39. |
| 264 |
Cal. S.P. Dom. 1675–6, 212. |
| 265 |
R. Plot, Nat. Hist. Staffs. (1686), 212. Shaw, Staffs.
Potteries, 43, states that peacock coal was formerly dug on
the Ivy House estate. |
| 266 |
D.L. 42/27, ff. 23b, 24a. Burslem's lease was for 26½ yrs.
from Mich. 1717; the lease to Lord Gower, however, was
to be for 19 yrs. from 25 Mar. 1743. |
| 267 |
Census, 1861, 1871, Staffs.; see p. 170. |
| 268 |
Staffs. Advertiser. 10 July 1886, reporting a meeting
of the Association of Municipal and Sanitary Engineers; it
was then said that 'almost the entire town is honey-combed'. |
| 269 |
W. Scarratt, Old Times in the Potteries, 163; Huntbach, Hanley, 31–32. |
| 270 |
W.S.L. 241/26, pp. 1, 11, 21, 37, [48], [62]. Smith's
lease was for 29 yrs. |
| 271 |
B.M. Ch. Br. xxxi. 3; see p. 154. |
| 272 |
Parson and Bradshaw, Dir. Staffs. (1818); Staffs.
Advertiser, 3 Oct. 1829; White, Dir. Staffs. (1834, 1851);
Ward, Stoke, 379; Hargreaves, Map of Staffs. Potteries;
Homer, Plan of Hanley and Shelton, 1857; O.S. Map 6"
Staffs. xii SW. (1890). These pits included Bell's Mill Pit
south of Mill St. where there was a strike in 1851, the men
there receiving only 3s. 6d. a day and having to find their
own tools and gunpowder, whereas the standard wage in
N. Staffs. was 4s. as well as equipment; the men at other
local pits came out in sympathy: The Lever, 27 Sept.
1851, 276–7 (copy in H.R.L.). |
| 273 |
Rep. Insp. Mines, N. Staffs., 1888 [C. 5779], p. 13,
H.C. (1889), xxiv; 1889 [C. 6015], p. 13, H.C. (1890),
xxiii; 1890 [C. 6346], p. 29, H.C. (1890–1), xxii. In 1888
there was a disused pit belonging to the earl at Joiner's
Square where there had been a colliery in at least the 1820's
and early 1830's: Shaw, Staffs. Potteries, 46; Hargreaves,
Map of Staffs. Potteries. |
| 274 |
Rep. Insp. Mines, Stafford, 1902 [C. 1590], p. 270,
H.C. (1903), xv; Scarratt, Old Times in the Potteries, 163;
W. Campbell, Street Map of Hanley, Burslem, Tunstall,
and Newcastle (1907; copy in H.R.L.). The tip at Tinkersclough which resulted from these workings (Warrillow,
Stoke, 263) is still (1960) in existence. |
| 275 |
Rep. Insp. Mines [1994], p. 107, H.C. (1854–5), xv;
Homer, Plan of Hanley and Shelton, 1857; T.N.S.F.C.
(1869), 4–5; Scarratt, Old Times in the Potteries, 162. There
was also the Clayholes Pit nearby, to the E. of Providence
Sq.: Homer, Plan of Hanley and Shelton, 1857; O.S.
Map 1/500 Staffs. xi. 16. 7 (1866). |
| 276 |
Rep. Insp. Mines, N. Staffs. 1894 [C. 7667], p. 46,
H.C. (1895), xxii; Rep. Insp. Mines, 1902, 270; Guide to
the Coalfields (1960). |
| 277 |
Scarratt, Old Times in the Potteries, 162, 169; Rep.
Insp. Mines, N. Staffs. 1894, 46; Rep. Insp. Mines,
Stafford, 1901 [Cd. 1062], p. 29, H.C. (1902), xvii; ex inf.
Mr. W. Jack, Norton-in-the-Moors (1959). |
| 278 |
Pigot's Nat. Com. Dir. (1841); Slater's Birmingham
District Dir. (1852–3); Rep. Insp. Mines (1854–5), 108;
Rep. Insp. Mines, N. Staffs. 1888, 13. It does not occur in
the list for 1890: ibid. 1890. |
| 279 |
White, Dir. Staffs. (1851); S.R.O., D. 321/M/B/62,
65, 66; Homer, Plan of Hanley and Shelton, 1857.
|
| 280 |
S.R.O., D. 321/M/B/66. |
| 281 |
It was not mentioned in Keates and Ford's Potteries
Dir .(1865–6). The Hallfield Brickworks had been established
nearby by 1866: O.S. Map 1/500 Staffs. xi. 16. 13 (1866). |
| 282 |
Keates and Ford's Potteries Dir. (1865–6); S.R.O.,
D. 321/M/B/75; Rep. Insp. Mines, Stafford, 1902, 269;
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1916); O.S. Map 6" Staffs. xii SW.
(1890; 1926). |
| 283 |
See pp. 167, 252. |
| 284 |
Ward, Stoke, 378–9; Staffs. Advertiser, 25 Mar. 1816. |
| 285 |
Ward, Stoke, 379; Warrillow, Etruria, 179, 182, 203;
Keates's Potteries Dir. (1892–3), 72–73. |
| 286 |
R.Meade, The Coal and Iron Industries of the U.K., 506. |
| 287 |
Keates's Potteries Dir. (1892–3), 73; Homer, Plan of
Hanley and Shelton, 1857; O.S. Map 1/500 Staffs. xi. 15,
18 and 20 (1866). |
| 288 |
Census, 1861, 1871, Staffs. |
| 289 |
Keates's Potteries Dir. (1892–3); see p. 152. |
| 290 |
White, Dir. Staffs. (1834); Hargreaves, Map of Staffs.
Potteries. |
| 291 |
Keates's Potteries Dir. (1892–3). |
| 292 |
Barrett's City of Stoke Dir. [1959]. |
| 293 |
O.S. Map 1/500 Staffs. xi. 16. 13 (1866). |
| 294 |
Ibid. 6" Staffs. xii SW. (1900). |
| 295 |
See p. 104. |
| 296 |
Ward, Stoke, 376–7; Brittains Ltd., Paper Craftsmanship (copy among W.S.L. pamphs. sub Industries); inf.
from Brittains Ltd. (1960); V. Brittain, Testament of
Youth, chap. i; O.S. Map 6" Staffs. xii SW. (1890). |
| 297 |
Ward, Stoke, 380; Staffs. Mercury, 4 Apr. 1829. |
| 298 |
White, Dir. Staffs. (1834, 1851); Keates and Ford's
Potteries Dir. (1865–6); Keates's Potteries Dir. (1873–4,
1882 which also mentions the Etruria Brewery, Salem St.,
1892–3). |
| 299 |
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1908, 1928 which shows the
Shelton Brewery in the hands of Parker's Burslem Brewery,
1932); S.R.O., D. 206/4. |
| 300 |
Ward, Stoke, 408. |
| 301 |
Ibid.; P.O. Dir. Staffs. (1860). |
| 302 |
Rules and Catalogue of the Shelton Subscription Library
(1830; copy in W.S.L. Pamphs., vol. vii, no. 19). |
| 303 |
White, Dir. Staffs. (1851); P.O. Dir. Staffs. (1876).
There was a second newsroom in Piccadilly in 1860 (ibid.
1860), possibly identifiable with the Protestant Conservative Assoc.'s newsroom there in 1868: ibid. 1868. |
| 304 |
Staffs. Advertiser, 18 Dec. 1886; ibid. 14 Dec. 1887;
Staffs. Sentinel, 1 and 15 Oct. 1892. |
| 305 |
See pp. 149, 270, 316. |
| 306 |
Staffs. Sentinel, 26 Oct. 1892; ibid. 17 Oct. 1893; 12
Mar. 1898. |
| 307 |
R. G. Haggar, Some Adult Educ. Institutions in N. Staffs.
(Rewley Ho. Papers, iii, no. 6), 1 (copy in H.R.L.). |
| 308 |
Ibid. 3–4; Ward, Stoke, 392–3. |
| 309 |
Ward, Stoke, 393; Staffs. Advertiser, 10 Oct. 1835. |
| 310 |
White, Dir. Staffs. (1851); see p. 156. The museum
was being planned c. 1838: Ward, Stoke, 393. |
| 311 |
Haggar, Some Adult Educ. Institutions, 9–10. There is
a copy of a plan (never carried out) for the new building
in H.R.L. For a description of the actual building see
p. 149. |
| 312 |
White, Dir. Staffs. (1851); The Lever (1851), p. 101
(copy in H.R.L.). Plans for a library, reading-rooms and
classrooms had not been carried out: ibid. 23 Aug. 1851,
pp. 225–6. |
| 313 |
White, Dir. Staffs. (1851). |
| 314 |
The Lever (1851), pp. 225–6, 253–4. |
| 315 |
R. G. Haggar, A Cent. of Art Educ. in the Potteries, 5. |
| 316 |
Ibid. 5–6, 12; Staffs. Potteries Schs. of Design (rep. of
first annual general meeting of the friends of the Potteries
Schools of Design; copy in W.S.L. Pamphs., vol. vi,
no. 12). |
| 317 |
Haggar, Art Educ. in the Potteries, 8–9. |
| 318 |
Ibid. 24, 31–32, 40. |
| 319 |
Ibid. 33–35. For a description of the building see p. 149. |
| 320 |
H.R.L., Hanley Boro. Gen. Purposes Cttee. Mins.,
24 July 1891; Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1892); Staffs. Sentinel,
8 Nov. 1890; Huntbach, Hanley, 84; Hanley Boro. Yr.
Bk. 1908–9; G. Bemrose, 'Some Notable Museums' (The
North-western Naturalist, June 1936), 107 (copy in
H.R.L.); inf. from the librarian, H.R.L. (1960). For the
museum and art gallery since 1910 see p. 270. |
| 321 |
Staffs. Sentinel, 23 Sept. 1915; inscriptions on Station
Rd. frontage and in hall of College of Ceramics; ex inf. the
Principal, N. Staffs. Technical College (1959); Staffs.
Advertiser, 25 Apr. 1914. |
| 322 |
News Chron. 10 Nov. 1954; ex inf. the Principal, N.
Staffs. Technical College (1959); local inf. (1960); see
p. 167. |
| 323 |
H.R.L., Hanley and Shelton Anti-slavery Soc. Proc.
1830–9. |
| 324 |
See p. 205. A September wake, still held in 1822,
was started in connexion with the founding of St. John's:
Staffs. Advertiser, 14 Sept. 1822. |
| 325 |
Hanley Jubilee Souvenir (1907), 19; Staffs. Sentinel,
3 Mar. 1919; Staffs. Advertiser, 11 Aug. 1923. |
| 326 |
Warrillow, Stoke, 394. |
| 327 |
Staffs. Advertiser, 24 and 31 July, 7 Aug. 1824; ibid.
6 and 13 Aug. 1825; Ward, Stoke, 392, where 1825 is
wrongly given as the first year; Warrillow, Etruria, 187–8,
315; Hanley Jubilee Souvenir (1907), 27–28; Hargreaves,
Map of Staffs. Potteries. |
| 328 |
Staffs. Advertiser, 7 Aug. 1841; ibid. 13 Aug. 1842. |
| 329 |
See p. 205. |
| 330 |
See p. 169. |
| 331 |
Port Vale 1876–1950 (copy in H.R.L.); O.S. Map
6" Staffs. xii SW. (1926); see p. 141. |
| 332 |
Huntbach, Hanley, 101. |
| 333 |
Old and New Hall Potteries, 2 (copy among W.S.L.
Pamphs. sub Ceramics). |
| 334 |
Huntbach, Hanley, 99. There is a Cat Inn in Keelings
Lane. |
| 335 |
Hanley Jubilee Souvenir (1907), 28; P. W. L. Adams,
John Henry Clive, 53–54; S.R.O., Q/SB Trans. 1820,
Q/SR East. 1830. |
| 336 |
P.O. Dir. Staffs. (1854); Scarratt, Old Times in the
Potteries, 196; Homer, Plan of Hanley and Shelton, 1857;
Hanley Jubilee Souvenir (1907), 28; Adams, Clive, 54–55. |
| 337 |
Ancient Corp. of Hanley, 111; Scarratt, Old Times in
the Potteries, 196. |
| 338 |
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1896). |
| 339 |
Theatre Royal, Hanley: Brochure of Re-opening 1951
(copy in H.R.L.). |
| 340 |
Staffs. Sentinel, 16 Aug. 1820; Ancient Corp. of Hanley,
111; Hanley Jubilee Souvenir (1907), 31, 32; Huntbach,
Hanley, 102; O.S. Map 1/500 Staffs. xi. 16. 2 (1866). |
| 341 |
Huntbach, Hanley, 101. |
| 342 |
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1880). |
| 343 |
Ibid. (1892). |
| 344 |
Ibid. (1900). |
| 345 |
Staffs. Advertiser, 13 Apr. 1901. |
| 346 |
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1924). |
| 347 |
Staffs. Advertiser, 27 Aug. 1898; Reg. of Defunct and
other Companies removed from Stock Exchange Official Yr.
Bk. 1956, 197. It occurs in Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1932). |
| 348 |
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1912, 1916). |
| 349 |
Ibid. (1940); see p. 157. |
| 350 |
Staffs. Eve. Sentinel, Suppl. 28 Oct. 1957. |
| 351 |
Hanley Jubilee Souvenir, 28. |
| 352 |
Ibid. 31; see p. 205. |
| 353 |
Hanley Jubilee Souvenir, 31; Staffs. Sentinel Summer
No., 1911, p. 51. |
| 354 |
Hanley Jubilee Souvenir, 32; H.R.L., News Cuttings,
iv, pp. 80–81. |
| 355 |
R. Ship, Hanley Glee and Madrigal Soc. (copy in
H.R.L.); Huntbach, Hanley, 82; R. Nettel, Music in the
Five Towns, 1840–1914, 14–31, 60. Another important
choir of the district was James Whewall's N. Staffs. District Choral Soc. which was formed in 1901 among the
miners of Red Street and since 1944 has been called the
City of Stoke-on-Trent Choral Soc.: ibid. 56–60, 89–93,
100–6; G. Thompson, City of Stoke-on-Trent Choral Soc.
(copy in H.R.L.). |
| 356 |
Warrillow, Etruria, 234–7, 239. |
| 357 |
Ibid. 240–1. |
| 358 |
Ibid. 242, 245–6; see pp. 295, 307. |
| 359 |
Hanley Jubilee Souvenir (1907), 31, 32, 35; Nettel,
Music in the Five Towns, 18, 20, 22. |
| 360 |
Nettel, op. cit. 37, 53; Hanley Jubilee Souvenir, 32. |
| 361 |
Nettel, op. cit. 37, 47–48; Staffs. Advertiser, 13 Oct.
1888; ibid. 16 Feb. 1889; 4 and 25 Oct. 1890; 28 Oct. 1899.
The loss in 1890 was blamed partly on 'the unhappy want
of unanimity of the various Pottery towns'; a rival concert
was held at Tunstall, and Stoke like Newcastle was
unsympathetic: ibid. 25 Oct. 1890. |
| 362 |
Nettel, op. cit. 41, 89, 94, 96. His last appearance in
Hanley was in 1932 for a performance of 'King Olaf': ibid.
97. |
| 363 |
Ibid. 99, 100. |
| 364 |
Ibid. 53; Hanley Jubilee Souvenir, 35; Huntbach,
Hanley, 83. |
| 365 |
Ancient Corp. of Hanley; G. Huntbach, 'Origin of the
famous Venison Feast' (Staffs. Life. 1949), 40–41, 43. |
| 366 |
Ancient Corp. of Hanley, 7. |
| 367 |
12 Oct. 1860. |
| 368 |
'The Revolver' (The Matador of the Five Towns). |
| 369 |
Ex inf. the librarian, H.R.L. |
| 370 |
Warrillow, Stoke, 387, 390; H.R.L., T/S of a declaration by the inhabs. of the Potteries for the founding of an
association for the prosecution of felons, 1792. |
| 371 |
Ex inf. the librarian, H.R.L. |