CONTENTS

ChapterI.[The Creation of the Potteries.]
II.[A Peasant Industry.]
III.[Elers and Art.]
IV.[The Salt Glaze Potters.]
V.[The Beginning of the Factory.]
VI.[Wedgwood and Cream Colour.]
VII.[The End of the Eighteenth Century.]
VIII.[Spode and Blue Printing.]
IX.[Methodism and the Capitalists.]
X.[Steam Power and Strikes.]
XI.[Minton Tiles and China.]
XII.[Modern Men and Methods.]

PREFACE

This account of the potting industry in North Staffordshire will be of interest chiefly to the people of North Staffordshire. They and their fathers before them have grown up with, lived with, made and developed the English pottery trade. The pot-bank and the shard ruck are, to them, as familiar, and as full of old associations, as the cowshed to the countryman or the nets along the links to the fishing population. To them any history of the development of their industry will be welcome.

But potting is such a specialized industry, so confined to and associated with North Staffordshire, that it is possible to study very clearly in the case of this industry the cause of its localization, and its gradual change from a home to a factory business. The rise of capitalism, the attempts at revolt on the part of the workers, the increase of machinery and steam power, all these can be studied very closely in the potting industry, just because the history of the district is the history of potting and of the inhabitants’ whole lives. So that I venture to hope that many students of history and of sociology will find such a trade history as this of some value in their researches.

The collector, too, may I hope find his special studies assisted by the identification and linking together of the relationships of the old master-potters, of their inventions, and factory sites and dates.