Staffordshire: English Pottery from the Potteries District
Staffordshire refers broadly to the pottery and ceramics produced in the Staffordshire Potteries district of England, centered on Stoke-on-Trent and its six towns — Tunstall, Burslem, Hanley, Stoke, Fenton, and Longton. From the 17th century onward, this region became the world's most prolific ceramic manufacturing center, producing everything from simple slipware to refined creamware, transferware, and the iconic Staffordshire figures. For collectors, "Staffordshire" most commonly refers to the figural pottery of the 19th century.
History
- 1600s: Staffordshire established as a pottery center; early slipware by Thomas Toft and others
- 1720s-1760s: White salt-glazed stoneware; Whieldon tortoiseshell ware
- 1760s: Josiah Wedgwood established Etruria; revolutionized the industry
- 1780s-1830s: Transfer-printed earthenware; blue-and-white export ware for America
- 1835-1900: Peak of Staffordshire figure production — the category most associated with the name today
- Major factories: Wedgwood, Spode, Minton, Ridgway, Davenport, Enoch Wood, Ralph Wood
Types and Categories
Staffordshire Figures (most collected)
- Flatback figures: Molded figures with flat, undecorated backs; designed for mantelpiece display
- Subjects: Dogs (spaniels are iconic), royalty, military heroes, pastoral couples, religious figures, criminals, theatrical characters
- Toby jugs: Character jugs, typically depicting a seated man with a tricorn hat
Transfer-Printed Ware
- Blue-and-white: Historical scenes, American views, romantic landscapes
- Flow blue: Blurred blue transfer decoration
- Polychrome transfers: Multi-color printed decoration
Earlier Staffordshire
- Slipware: Trailed slip decoration, 17th-18th century (Thomas Toft, Ralph Simpson)
- Salt-glazed stoneware: White salt glaze, scratch-blue, mid-18th century
- Whieldon/tortoiseshell: Mottled glaze earthenware
- Creamware: Wedgwood and contemporaries
Auction Price Ranges
| Type | Description | Typical Price Range |
|---|---|---|
| Spaniel dog pair | Standard size, 19th century | $100 - $500 |
| Flatback figure | Common subject | $50 - $200 |
| Flatback figure | Rare subject or early | $200 - $2,000+ |
| Toby jug | Standard, 19th century | $100 - $500 |
| Ralph Wood Toby | 18th century, colored glazes | $500 - $5,000+ |
| Blue transfer plate | American historical view | $100 - $1,000+ |
| Flow blue plate | Standard pattern | $30 - $100 |
| Thomas Toft slipware | 17th century, documented | $5,000 - $50,000+ |
| Salt-glazed pew group | Mid-18th century | $2,000 - $20,000+ |
| Whieldon-type piece | Tortoiseshell glaze, 18th century | $200 - $2,000 |
Condition Factors
- Paint condition: On flatback figures, original enamel paint should be intact; repainting reduces value significantly
- Chips: Rim chips on plates and chips on figures reduce value; location matters
- Cracks and repairs: Professional restoration is common on Staffordshire figures; UV light reveals most repairs
- Crazing: Fine surface cracking is expected on old earthenware; heavy crazing with staining is more problematic
- Transfer quality: Crisp, well-executed blue transfers are preferred over smudged or incomplete prints
Collecting Tips
- Staffordshire spaniels are the most iconic figures and make an excellent starting collection — they were made in enormous variety
- American historical views on blue transfer ware (by Clews, Enoch Wood, Ridgway) have a strong American collector base
- Early Staffordshire (pre-1800) is in a different value category entirely from Victorian-era figures
- Flatback figures were made in enormous quantities — rarity of subject, quality of painting, and age drive value
- The 18th-century potters (Ralph Wood, Whieldon, Astbury, early Wedgwood) represent the finest Staffordshire production
- Reproduction Staffordshire figures are common — learn to distinguish 19th-century originals from 20th-century copies by weight, paint quality, and base marks
- Flow blue has a dedicated collector base with its own reference books and collector clubs
- Condition tolerance is higher for early (pre-1800) Staffordshire than for common Victorian pieces