- Ralph Hammersley
- Stanley, c. 1860-1883
- Earthenware
- 9.375 x 9.375 in (23.81 x 23.81 cm)
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Not For Sale
Artist: Ralph Hammersley x
Plate, 9.375 inches diameter. Brown transfer. Printed maker's mark for Ralph Hammersley. The impressed "12/88" indicates a manufacture date of December 1888. This pattern features two birds perched on a flowering branch with a grapevine with fruit and leaves twined around it. In the lower right, a pastiche of ribbon cartouches contains another image of two birds, in addition to infilled geometric patterns. Flowers and leaves lay beneath the cartouches, while a butterfly floats off the right.
In 1862 Ralph Hammersley started manufacturing with a Mr. Eardley at the Church Bank Works in Tunstall. In 1868 Eardley left the business and Ralph Hammersley continued on his own at the Church Bank Works until 1870, when he moved to the newly rebuilt Over House Pottery in Burslem. “The new manufactory was opened in 1870 by Ralph Hammersley, who moved here from the Church Bank Pottery at Tunstall and who had previously been engaged for twenty years with Mr. Challinor. In [1885], the firm’s style was changed to Ralph Hammersley & Son and as such remained until sold in 1905 to T. Gater.” (Jewitt's Ceramic Art of Great Britain 1800-1900) It is probable that Ralph Hammersley died in December 1882 and the business was continued by his son Thomas Gallimore Hammersley in partnership with Margaret Hammersley and Susan Annie Corn. In November 1897 Susan Annie Corn retired from the business. The business closed in 1905 and the works were sold to Thomas Gater.
- Subject Matter: Aesthetic (Cartouche)
- Collections: Aesthetic Transferware, Ralph Hammersley