Broseley Local
History Society |
THE
JOURNAL OF THE WILKINSON SOCIETY No
5, 1977 Programme
of Events for 1977.-8
MARKERS
IN BENTHALL HISTORY by TONY HERBERT
THE
SEVERN IN SOUTH SHROPSHIRE by RALPH PEE
GILBERT
GILPIN, 1766-1827; AGENT, TRADE CORRESPONDENT AND CHAIN MAKER by N. J. CLARKE.
Boatbuilding
in the Ironbridge
Gorge
INDEX
OF MAIN ARTICLES., 1972-77
Editor:
N. J. Clarke The
Wilkinson Society
The Society was
formed in 1972 to meet the demand for an organisation
to preserve the material and documentary evidence of Broseley's industrial past.
Since an important part in this industrial past was played by John Wilkinson,
who lived for a time at "the Lawns"; it, was decided that the
organisation should be known as The Wilkinson Society. The aims of the
Society are:-
Administration
of the Society is by an annually elected committee. Membership is open to anyone
interested in the Society's aims and activities. These activities include
illustrated lectures, social evenings, researching and exhibiting the collection
field trips and coach tours. Members are kept informed by newsletters; and this
annual Journal presents articles on the history of the Broseley area; John
Wilkinson, and industrial archaeology in general. NOTES
AND NEWS
The Year's ActivitiesThe
Fourth Annual General Meeting was held at "The Lawns" on Friday
22nd October 1976. Your officers and
the serving committee were re-elected "en bloc" by a unanimous vote.
The Chairman, in his report. thanked specially all those who had helped with the
museum reorganisation and redecoration. The Treasurer, in his report, pointed
out that there were outstanding loans for £49-50 arising from this work,
which it was expected would be cleared within 12 months Anthony
Mugridge, a student member, was elected Assistant Museum Curator. After
the formal part of the meeting,
Messrs Griffiths and. Hawes gave an illustrated account of their trip to Wilkinson
Sites in Cumbria in June 1976. On
Friday 12th. November 1976 we held our customary joint meeting with The Friends
of The Ironbridge Gorge Museum, again at "The Lawns", Dr. Ivor Brown,
the well-known local expert on mining matters, spoke on "Old Mines, Miners
and Mining Machinery on the Banks of the Severn Gorge.' The evening was held to
be most interesting, and the slides were greatly appreciated. There
was an involuntary gap in the Society's activities during January and February
1977, due to the illness of our regular hostess, Mrs. Dora Pee. Eventually
a Social Evening was arranged for Friday 18th. March 1977, at Broseley Hall, by
the kind invitation of Mr. and Mrs. M. Silvester. The theme this year was
"Broseley Pipes", and special thanks were due to Mr. Ivor Southorn for
sending a number of most interesting exhibits relating to Southorns Pipe Works and
to Miss Fox-Edwards for bringing her drawings and a real
"Churchwarden", which the Secretary was pleased to demonstrate in
action. The raffle prizes, of Jackfield decorative tiles, were won by Mrs. Diana
Clarke, Mr. Chris Whall and Mr. Tony Herbert. The
month of May 1977 proved to be the most hectic in the life of the Society to
date; for, in addition to visits to the Coalport Museum (May 20th) and the Dyson
Perrins Museum at Worcester (May 28th), this was the month that saw your
officials involved in discussions at local, county and national level over the
proposed sale by the Willey Estates
Company of the two remaining buildings on the New Willey Furnace Site, together
with the land immediately adjacent to them. The
visits were both very successful, being well-attended and financially
self-supporting; and the Worcester outing was also blessed by wonderful summer
weather. The
New Willey properties were offered for auction at the "Forester Arms"'
Broseley on Wednesday June 1st. Your Society was represented at the sale, but
we were not able to purchase either of the properties for the prices your
Committee had in mind. However, we were pleased that, in the sale-room, the
historic importance of the Site was made clear to potential purchasers by
reference to a letter from the Department of the Environment to Lord Forester,
dated 27th May 1977. The
final event of the 1976/7 Season was our third annual Celebrity Lecture, held in
association with the Broseley and District Arts Union, on Friday 26th . August.
Mr. Roy Beard, the well-known Shrewsbury architect, spoke wittily and
entertainingly on "The English Village", illustrating his theme with
slides `of nationwide coverage. In
addition to the activities outlined above, Committee Meetings were held on 5th .
April, 14th May and 29th . May
1977. The latter two meetings were special meetings in connection with the then
proposed sale of the New Willey Furnace properties. Programme
of Events for 1977.-8
14th
October
Illustrated talk
–“The Ceramic Industry in the Severn
Gorge, 1750-1820” -
by Mr. D.B. Roberts, 11th
November
Fifth A.G.M. followed by a
short illustrated talk .- “The Severn Navigation” by Mr N. J. Clarke. 9th
December
Joint meeting with the Friends
of the Ironbridge Gorge Museum – a tape-slide presentation with spoken
commentary – “Exports from Ironbridge” arranged by Peter Green, Hilary
Green, Tony Herbert, Peter Martin and Barrie Trinder.
At the Severn Warehouse, Ironbridge. 24th
February
Members Evening at "The Lawns". 31st
March
Illustrated talk - "George Maw, Botanist, Gardener and Plant
Hunter" – by Sir Paul Benthall, F.L.S. 20th
May
Summer Outing to the Avoncroft Museum of Buildings,
near Bromsgrove, and
Evesham. 1st
September
Fourth, Annual Celebrity Lecture in association with the
Broseley and District Arts Union: Mr.
Henry Sandon, Curator of the Dyson Perins Museum at the Worcester Porcelain
Works, will speak on “Caughley and Worcester Porcelain.” The
Museum
For
the 1978 season the Museum will normally be open on, Saturday and Sunday
afternoons (2.00 – 6.00 p.m.) between Easter and. September; or by special
arrangement with the Curator. The.
Reorganisation of the Museum was described in the last
issue of this Journal, The
Journal.
To
celebrate this, the fifth issue of the Journal we have listed the main articles
published since 1972. They make an impressive list; and the Journal is beginning
to command the attention of both local and national institutions (see
Correspondence). We
are grateful to our Secretary for the typing of this issue. Further copies and
some back numbers may be obtained from the Secretary at 18, Salop Street,
Bridgnorth, Salop, price 25p each
including postage Contributions
to future issues of the Journal would be welcome, and should be sent to the
Editor, N. J. Clarke, "Cranleigh"; Little Wenlock, Telford. MARKERS
IN BENTHALL HISTORY by TONY HERBERT
The name of George Maw is usually associated with the manufacture of decorative tiles. His lesser claims to fame are in the fields of botany and geology and it is interesting to speculate on just how these widely differing enthusiasms may have affected each other. The
link between the geological study of clays from all over Britain and the use of
clays to make decorative tiles is easy to appreciate. Indeed, geology grew up as
a practical field subject whose theories were worked out in new railway
cuttings, well borings or mine workings, rather than the hushed atmosphere of an
academic library. It
is also perhaps not too fanciful to suggest that George Maw's knowledge of
flowers (especially crocuses) may have influenced his approach to tile design.
Certainly there are plenty of examples of Maws tiles bearing floral designs of
remarkable botanical accuracy. But it is George Maw's patent plant labels that
provide the best example of a new idea emerging from the eclectic mind of a
Victorian polymath. Necessity
is often said to be the mother of invention and it is not difficult to picture
the young George Maw arriving back at his home at Benthall Hall in the 1860's
laden with new plants for his. fine garden perhaps collected on a recent trip
abroad. His strict taxonomic approach to botany would make it imperative that
each species should be accurately and permanently labelled. Imagine his
frustration with the existing labels at that time of wood or metal which would
rot or corrode. It is therefore perfectly natural that his inventive talent
should have combined a knowledge of clays, opportunity for ceramic manufacture
and an appreciation of the needs of botanists and gardeners to result in Maws
patent plant labels. The
provisional specification for his invention was left by George Maw at the Office
of the Commissioners of Patents on 6th June 1868. It reads as follows: 'I,
George Maw, of Benthall, Broseley, in the county of Salop, Manufacturer, do
hereby declare the nature of the said invention for ' Improvements in the
Manufacture of Garden Tallies, or Plant Labels or Markers' to be as follows,
that is to say:- My
improvements in the manufacture of the articles above named and which are
usually formed of wood or metal, consist in making them of burnt earthenware,
either composed of pulverised clay by Prosser's process or of plastic clay. The
blank forms so produced may be either glazed or left plain, and when glazed they
may be lettered or inscribed by the ordinary processes of porcelain and
earthenware printing, painting, or writing either upon or beneath the glaze.
When unglazed tallies or markers are used, they may be written upon with paint
or black lead, composition or metallic pencil, either with or without the
surface being previously or subsequently oiled, painted, or varnished, or coated
with other suitable composition. The
patent was sealed on 24th November 1868 and dated 6th June 1868, bearing the
number 1861. The
new plant, labels met with immediate success and in the summer of 1868 were
commended by such worthy people as The Editor of the 'Gardener's Chronicle', Sir
Joseph Hooker, The Director of the Royal (Botanic) Gardens, Kew and the Floral
Committee of the Royal Horticultural Society. Maw and Co.'s catalogues were soon
extolling the virtues of these new 'Imperishable terra cotta plant markers and
garden tallies' as 'a cheap and permanent substitute for wooden and zinc
tallies, for the labelling of plants in pots and in the open border, and for
suspending to Roses, Orchids, Ferns, Fruit Trees, etc. These labels, unlike wood
and Zinc, combine perfect durability with a lasting legible inscription, and
form an elegant adjunct to the Garden and Conservatory for the naming of
Horticultural and. Botanical collections. They are also invaluable for the
labelling of wine cellars, and for employment in any position where other
materials would be perishable by damp. Nearly
twenty different types were available in cream or buff colour, some provided
with holes for suspending, others upright with spikes for inserting in ground
Other larger sizes were available mounted on iron shanks (cast at
Coalbrookdale?) for use in Arboretums and Botanical Gardens. The
works at Benthall offered a special service of black enamel writing on the
labels ('in various styles of writing') which had the appearance of jet black
ink, but perfectly permanent. In addition, 'consecutive sets of Numerals printed
on the Labels, with Enamel, and Label's for Wine Bins were kept in stock, and
could be obtained 'at the -manufactory' or through any nurseryman, Seedsman, or
Ironmonger.' Several
of George Maw's own plant labels have been found from time to time in the
gardens of Benthall Hall and all are still perfectly legible. Time
has proved that the claims made by George Maw for his new plant labels were
indeed justified and have earned their mark in Benthall History. Tony
Herbert
THE
SEVERN IN SOUTH SHROPSHIRE by RALPH PEE
Josiah John GuestAfter
reading the article in Journal No. 4, and being a resident of King Street, I
contacted our oldest and most knowledgeable resident - Mr. Bob Thomas. I
thought, if anyone could throw any light on the matter (of Guest Meadow) he
could and sure enough, he did. Mr.
Thomas tells me that the meadow near the bottom of our garden belonged to
the Guest family until about 1906 when it was sold to Mr. George Keay who lived in the King's Head Public Mr.
Keay bequeathed the meadow to Mr. Len Walmsley, who lives in Bridgnorth Road,
from whom it was purchased by Mr. Thomas and. his brother Will (who lives next
door to him) in 1927. It is still in their possession and these details are,
of course, recorded in their deeds. Mrs.
F.V. Francis, Holly House, Broseley. April 1977 (Another letter on this subject, from Mr. Frank Selkirk of Church Street.,
Broseley, adds that the sitting-room of Mr. Billy Thomas' house - 29,King St., -
"hardly changed for some 150 years....is also of interest"; and that
the Jubilee book of the Birchmeadow Chapel contains further information on the
Guest family. - Ed.) Boatbuilding
in the Ironbridge
Gorge
.With
reference to the article in Journal No. 4, Griffiths of Coalport operated two
such yards: (i) a
canal boat and repair yard beside the Shropshire Canal near Blists Hill
ironworks, where the canal separates the brick and tile works; and (ii)
a
yard where river boats were constructed or repaired, situated somewhere in the
angle between the Coalport road from Madeley and the riverside road from
Coalport village. T.C.
Hancox, Woollam Road, Wellington.,
May 1977 (Soon
after receiving this letter, we heard. of the death of "T.C.H",.In
our early days the Society received a lot of encouragement from Mr. Hancox, and
his original research on glassmaking in Broseley appeared in two parts in
issues 3 and 4 of this Journal. A full appreciation of his contribution to local
history in Shropshire appeared in the newsletter of the Friends of the
Ironbridge Gorge Museum, No.29, Nov.1977 - Ed.) Pottery
Workers
We
are writing to you to seek permission to use information contained in your
Journal No. 2, 1974. We are preparing a publication on slipware and would like
to include references to the item on 'The Migration of Pottery Workers between
Stoke-on-Trent and the Broseley area in the 18th Century' by Maurice Hawes. We
would also be interested to learn if Mr. Hawes has any further published
information or whether his extra-mural group published a report of their work A.
R. Mountford, Director, City
Museum and Art Gallery, Hanley, Stoke-on-Trent. December
1977 (Permission
was of course given, and Mr. Mountford's query passed to Mr. Hawes. It is
gratifying to see the work of contributors to the Journal recognised in this
way. We can also claim the Science Museum of London as a recent subscriber to
the Journal - Ed.) INDEX OF MAIN ARTICLES., 1972-77Boat-building
in the Ironbridge Gorge-, by N. J. Clarke; No.4, pp:7-8 The
Broseley home of John Wilkinson, by Ralph Pee; No.1, PP-5-6 Churches
of the Broseley area, by Dennis Mason; No. 2, PP-3-5 Gilbert
Gilpin, 1766-1827: agent, trade correspondent and chain-maker, by N .J. Clarke;
No 5, pp,9-12 Glassmaking
in Broseley, by T. C. Hancox; No. 3, pp,3-4, No.4, pp 4-6 The Hawarden Bridge Iron and Steel Work, Shotton, near Chester: a study in entrepreneurial history; by P. S. Richards; No 3, pp. 9-11 King
of the Ironmasters, by Wayne Turner; No.1, pp. 3-4 John
Wilkinson's Trade Tokens, by Wayne Turner; No.2,pp.10-12 Josiah
John Guest, 1785--1852., ed by N. J, Clarke; No.4, pp.11-12 Markers
in Benthall history, by Tony Herbert; No.5, pp.4-5 The
Migration of pottery workers between Stoke-on-Trent and the Broseley area in
the 18th century, by Maurice Hawes; No.2, pp.7-9 Richard
Trevithick and the Hazledine Foundry at Bridgnorth, by Maurice Hawes ; No. 3.,
pp. 7-8. The
Severn in South Shropshire, part 1, by Ralph Pee; N0.5, pp~6--8 Working
at the Blists Hill mine forty years ago; by Frank Turner; No-3, pp. 5-6
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