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Marks from the George Hayter Crickmay’s pottery in Weymouth, Dorset. |
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| George Hayter Crickmay (1808 – 1857 lived in Melcombe Regis and
owned a pottery in West Chickerell (both now parts of Weymouth). There is no mention of him in 1848 but Hunt’s Directory of 1851 has:
Slater’s 1852 Directory has:
1855 Directory:
1859 Directory:
George Hayter Crickmay died on January 11th 1857 and in his will dated 19/11/1856 and proved 25/07/1857 he described himself as “surveyor and potter”. His wife Esther (they married in 1829) was listed as running a lodging house in 1865 and she died in 1887. Although the works are described as “extensive” and “important”, aside from some marked bricks only two marked pieces of stoneware have been recorded. They are a small jug in the British Museum that was in the V & A Brown Muggs exhibition (catalogue page 74/183) and a loving cup in a private collection. Both items might have been considered to be from Stiff’s Lambeth pottery if they hadn’t have been marked. These confirmed Crickmay products may enable us to attribute additional unmarked “London style” items. |
Click on any image to enlarge it. |
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2 pint jug in British Museum, sprigs copied from Stiff |
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Loving cup (private collection), sprigs copied from Stiff and ?Vauxhall? |
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Unmarked 3 pint jug with sprigs that are so similar to those on the
marked loving cup that Crickmay is the likely maker. |
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Unmarked 4 pint jug. Impressed JOHN WHALLIS / CHICKERELL / 1851 |