Object number
2009/15
Collection
Creator
Description
A biscuit barrel, Carlton Ware, part of a set known as 'cottage ware', made by Wiltshaw and Robinson, of Stoke-on-Trent. 1932.
This biscuit barrel is a piece of Carlton Ware, part of a set known as 'cottage ware', made by the pottery firm Wiltshaw and Robinson, of Stoke-on-Trent. The registered design number on the barrel (778973) dates it to 1932. The barrel is shaped to look like a traditional thatched cottage.
Physical description
With lid and handle intact; registered design no. 778973 printed on base.
Archival history
MERL 'Handwritten accession' form (Museum of English Rural Life) – 'Carlton Ware biscuit barrel, part of a set // Known as cottage ware. Made by Wiltshaw and Robinson of Stoke on Trent. // Design no. printed on base - 778973 - (1932). // Complete with lid and handle. // Purchased for £90 // Purchased as part of the Collecting 20th c Rural Culture project. // References // 'A Pocket Guide to Carlton Ware' A. C. Kosniowski.', MERL OLIB database note – 'This is a piece of Carlton Ware, part of a set known as cottage ware which included a honey pot, cheese dish, milk jug etc along with the biscuit barrel. Carlton Ware was originally a trade name of the pottery firm Wiltshaw and Robinson which was founded in Stoke on Trent in 1890 and subsequently changed its name to Carlton Ware in 1958. Between the two World Wars, supplementing their high end output, the firm found a good deal of success with novelty and other ranges of bright and cheerful tableware aimed at the popular end of the market. The registered design number on the biscuit barrel (778973) puts it to 1932. // There can be few more iconic symbols of the English countryside than the thatched cottage and its associations with the rural picturesque that go back beyond the nineteenth century. In truth, it was a humble, poor man's dwelling but yet an object of desire when viewed from an urban perspective. The reality of teh coutryside in the early 1930s, deep in the agricultural depression, was that many thatched cottages were falling into ruin but yet the cosy symbolism remained. Thatched roofing today scores highly on status value, the more so as interest in sustainable materials has increased. It is also high maintenance and not without controversy as owners, conservationists, planners and thatchers argue about the ethics of using cheaper and more convenient imported materials, instead of the home grown and 'traditional'.
Production place
Stoke-on-Trent
Production date
1932 - 1932
Object name
Material
Dimensions
- Height 220 mm
- Length 150 mm
- Width 110 mm
Associated subject